Taikodaniinari Shrine main hall (Photo: Denes Perlaky)

Taikodani Inari Shrine

One of the five most important Inari Shrines in Japan

Taikodaniinari Shrine main hall (Photo: Denes Perlaky)
Denes Perlaky   - 3分鐘閱讀時間

Taikodani Inari Shrine is the most important shrine in Tsuwano, the second most important religious site in Shimane, and one of the five most important Inari shrines in Japan. As an Inari shrine, it is dedicated to the god of agriculture, prosperity and, in Tsuwano's case, lost items. It is said that if one prays at this shrine, the lost or stolen item will find its way back to the owner.

The shrine is located up on a Shiroyama hill (lit. 'castle hill'), with a winding road leading up to the holy grounds, through 1,000 vermilion torii gates. It is about 20 min from the station to the start of the torii gates, and another 10–15 min up the hill.

When arriving, the main hall is in front, with the ceremony- and event halls on the right. There are four places to pray, and two of them are at the end of "hidden" passages, which you have to find for yourself (hints at the end of the article). Typical for Inari shrines, you'll see several foxes (consider messengers of Inari) acting as guardian spirits.

History of the shrine

The original shrine was built by the Kamei clan in 1773 to face and protect the castle. The kami (deity) was transferred from Kyoto's famous Fushimi-Inari Shrine. It was only later in the beginning of the Meiji period (1868–1913) that the current main shrines were built to face and protect the city too.

From the shrine, there is a beautiful view to the south part of the city, the mountains and the winding river. Across the Tsuwano river, one can see the elementary school, an area where once high-ranking samurai used to live. It was an artificial island, created there around 1600, with a wide moat and the river as defense lines.

Night view

The lanterns along the footpath up to the shrine are lit during the night which, from far away, look like small fireflies. From the top, the night view of the valley and the 10-meter-tall torii gate on the other side of the valley is definitely a worth a picture.

There is also night-kagura perfomance in the shrine's ceremony hall during the summer months, and the best combinations is to start walking up to the shrine before sunset, wait for the kagura theater performance, and come down to the center of the town with the bus of the Tourism Association.

The “hidden” places: one is left to the main hall: follow the stairs going up, before finding a path of stones, leading to the back of the main shrine. This is where one is closest to the deity. The other one is not that secret – it is on the right of the smaller shrine, which is next to the stairs coming up the torii gates.

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Denes Perlaky

Denes Perlaky @denes.perlaky

A Hungarian in Japan (going on 3 years), researching rural tourism. I love living in a small town, discovering its history bit by bit. I lived in Yamaguchi city for 2.5 years, and I still go there once a month for work. Now I live in Shimane, but often travel for research to Ojika island in Naga...