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Location: Sakai, Osaka, Japan

Saturday, October 03, 2020

Virtual Miura 33 Kannon Pilgrimage #9 Hosho-ji Temple

     In the back of the temple there lies the Cave of the Ancestors, the cave grave for the ancestors of the Miura Clan.  As we can find many cave graves in and around Kamakura, so, we can guess, there used to be bone-collecting-type of a burial ritual practiced in the Miura Peninsula.  Hundreds of kilometers off the peninsula, there runs the Black Current, which might have brought about the burial ritual from Taiwan or Ryukyu.

     The Japanese Archipelago has 34,600 kilometers of shoreline, which is shorter than America’s 56,700 kilometers but longer than Brazil’s 5,760 kilometers.  The islands are washed by the Black and Tsushima Currents from the south and by the Kuril Current from the north.
     The Black Current starts off Philippines, flows northward between the Formosa Island and the Ryukyu Islands, and, turning northeastward,  passes between the Ryukyu Islands and the Kyushu Island toward the south coasts of the Shikoku and Honshu Islands, transporting warm, tropical water.  The current brings not only tropical water but also fish, corals, seeds of tropical plants such as coconuts, blocks of dead aromatic trees, and culturally, sometimes even militarily, advanced alien people as well.
     Furukawa Shoken (1726-1807) was a geographer in the latter half of the Edo Period.  He compiled topographies based on his own observation, and also integrated information based on hearsay into memorandums.  “The Memorandum of Hachijo” was a latter case, and was about the Izu Islands including Hachijo Island.  The memorandum was published in 1794, and he mentioned the Black Current in it.
     “The Black Current looks as if an ink stone were rubbed on the surface of the sea.  As hundreds of swirls are mysteriously flowing past, whoever sees the current feels just dazzled.”
     Tachibana Nankei (1753-1805) was a doctor of Chinese medicine in Kyoto, and made rounds of visits to various parts of Japan intermittently from 1782 to 1788.  He published travel essays from 1795 to 1798, which would be collectively called “Journey to the East and to the West” later.  In one of the essays, he recorded a scratch of hearsay information on the Black Current.
     “They say that about 5.5 hundred kilometers off the Izu Peninsula, there are desert islands in the south.  The sea around the islands is called the Black Current.  The current is tens of kilometers wide, and runs like a large river, raging and rolling.
     “Furthermore, if you sail out southeast off Awa and Kazusa Provinces too far, you are washed away east and shall never come back, as the current turns eastward away from our islands.”
     The Miura Peninsula is located just between the Izu Peninsula and Awa Province.
     Priest Jogen dreamed a divine message and found an Arya Avalokitesvara statue along a seashore.  He enshrined the statue in a hut near the Cave of the Ancestors and named it Chokaku-ji Temple.  Chokaku literally means the sea current visitor.
     In 1575, Mori Shirozaemon put the statue on a lotus pedestal.
     When Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543-1616) moved to Edo in 1587, Hasegawa Nagatsuna (1543-1604) was appointed as an acting governor of the Miura Peninsula.  In 1594, he surveyed land in the peninsula to tax.  When he surveyed the land of Chokaku-ji Temple, he was impressed with the history of the Arya Avalokitesvara statue and officially recognized the precincts to be tax-free.  Then, the temple name was changed to Hosho-ji.

Address: 159 Kikuna, Minamishitauramachi, Miura, Kanagawa 238-0102
Phone: 046-888-1630

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