

Rie Hayashi's Home Page
Let me introduce myself. My name is Rie Hayashi.
I was born in Marugame City, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan on May 23,1984. I am a student at Kagawa Junior College. My major is Infant Education.
My hobbies are singing songs and shopping.
My home page address is
http://www.geocities.co.jp/CollegeLife-Labo/4001/2004/503043.html
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Takamatsu is the capital of Kagawa Prefecture, which has traditionally been called the gateway to shikoku, with the whole land of the prefecture jutting out into the Seto Inland Sea like a porch.
JR Takamatsu Station next to Takamatsu Harbor is the terminal of the Kotoku Line for Tokushima Pref., the Yosan Line for Ehime pref. and the Dosan Line for Kochi Pref., while serving as the bus terminal to Tokushima, Matsuyama and Kochi City. Takamatsu Chikko just opposite JR Station is the terminal of Kotoden trams to and from Kotohira, the seat of 'Kompira-san.'
The New Takamatsu Airport handles non-stop flights to and from Seoul, Korea.
Another place in Takamatsu appropriate as a gateway to Shikoku is the Takamatsu Heike Monogatari Historical Museum that features not only the famous historical literature called Heike Monogatari but also about 50 great historical figures closely associated with shikoku or native to Shikoku.
Takamatsu became the capital in 1587 with the advent of Lord Ikoma Ias governor of Sanuki Province.The castle he built on the harbor was succeeded by 4 generations of his descendants,and then by 11 generations of Matsudaira lords,governing Takamatsu Province with a fief of 120,000 koku.
One ninth of the former castle ground is preserved as Tamamo Koen Park across the street from JR Takamatsu Station.The donjon is gone, but two of the 15 turrets and Mizute Gomon Gate from the 17th century (Important Cultural Properties) survived the air raid in 1945.Admission:100yen.
Traditionally the popular sightseeing spots in Takamatsu are Ritsurin Koen Park near downtown and Yashima Plateau overlooking the city and the Inland Sea. They are accessible by bus or tram, with terminals at Takamatsu Chikko just opposite JR Station.
30 minutes' walk from JR Takamatsu Station.
The busy street in front of JR Takamatsu is the main street of downtown Takamatsu, and leads to the main gate to Ritsurin Kown Park, a National Special Scenic Spot. This spacious garden laid out with shapely mounds, cool ponds and about 160 varieties of trees and flowers provides a classic example of a Japanese garden or even a Chinese Taoist paradise fit for meditation .
Originally it belonged to a local warlord, and then to Lord Ikoma. When spent five generations developing it into a larger stroll-type garden for their villa. Seasonal charms of flowers and blossms such as ume (Japanese plum blossoms ) in February,camellias in March, Irises and water lilies in June, giant lotuses in August, and Japanese bush clover in Septenber, and brilliant maple leaves in November add to the pleasure of strolling.
Kikugetsu-tei,one of the pond-side teahouses,was originally one of the Ma
tsudairas'formal buildings. The museum just inside the main gate houses a variety of mostly local handicrafts. Then is a zoo, too, inside the gate. Open deily. Admission to the park: About300yen.
Bus:30 minutes' ride from Chikko to the terminal (Kotoden Bus for Yashima-sanjo or Yashima Hilltop).
Tram+Cable: 30 minutes' tram ride from Chikko to Yashima(Shido-sen Line )+5 minutes ' cable-car ride.
Yashima, a pine-wooded tableland to the northeast of downtown Takamatsu, is one of the world's rare lava mesas, about 290 m high, 3 km wide, jutting 5 km out into the sea.
The hilltop, overlooking the archipelago of the
Inland Sea, features Yashima-ji 1, an aquarium 2 and observatories all linked by forest promenades.
One of the observatories, Dankorei 3, commands a view of the inlet fringfd with memorials to the Gempei Yashima Battle (the second last battle in Gampei War fought between the two rival clans, the Minamotos and the Tairas. )
One a British poet, Edmund Blunden, visited Yashima and wrote a poem that was engraved on a stone here at Dankorei observatory:
Like a long roof, men say, and will they say,
This hill of warrior ghosts surmounts the plan...
In 794 Kyoto became the capital of Japan and it enjoyed peace for about 350 years (811-1155)- the longest peace Japan has ever attained in her history.
The last 30 years of this period, however, were far from peaceful. In 1156 the first battle took place in the capital, thus opening up a new era dominated by martial emotions. Two martial clans- the Minamoto and Taira clans- began to acquire greater and greater influence in politics through fighting against each other in the name of "the Emperor"or " the Ex- Emperor".
In 1159, the Tairas succeeded temporarily in staving off the Mirnamoto. The 20 years that followed saw the Tairas rise to increasingly control the Imperial Family, inviting animosity from the reigning Emperors, the Ex- Emperors, powerful priests, warriors and lords, to say nothing of the Minamotos in exile.
In 1181 the patriarch of the patriarch of the clan Taira no Kiyomori died just when the Tairas faced more battles against the Minamotos, who were gradually consolidating their power.
In 1183 the Tairas with the 6- year- old Emperor Antoku and his mother, who was Kiyomori7s daughter. They wandered far in search of supporters, while fighting losing battles.
Now in 1185, Minamoto no Yoshitsune attacked the remaining Tairas here at Yashima, then at Dan-no-ura in the westernmost corner of the Inland Sea, where the proud Taira finally fell, the noblewomen casting themselves into the sea with the child Emperor Antoku. Thus the age of ancient nobility yielded to the age of Shoguns(1185-1867).
Yashima-ji Temple treasures in its museum a folding screen depicting the Gempei no Kassen Battles.(See p.42) The bell in the belfry, cast in the defeated Tairas. But no one can strike the bell, as there is no hammer. They say, "Strike the bell,and invoke the ghosts of the Tairas."
On the last weekend in March the Gempen Yashima Festival is held, whose highlight is the Warriors' Pageant.
It was an insurrection caused by the discord be-tween Emperor Goshirakawa(1127-92) and Ex- Emperor Sutoku (1119-64). Sutoku was defeated and banished to Sanuki (Kagawa Pref.) to die a miserable death 8 ywars later. His ashes were buried at Temple 81. in 1184 the court elevated him to Shinto deity to placate his ghost. (See p. 50)
Minamoto no Yoshitsune (1159-89): By bringing about victory in the civil war, Yoshitsune had greatly helped Minamoto no Yoshitsune (1159-89):By bringing about victory in the civil war, Yoshitsune had greatly helped Minamoto no Yoritomo, his elder brother, who in 1192 was to establish the first Shogunate at Kamakura. But Yoshitsune had to spend the rest of his life escaping Yoritomo, until four years later he killed himself. His tragic life and death was so appealing to Japanese sentiment that he has taken on heroic proportion in Kabuki, Noh and Joruri plays, based on what is called Yoshitsune Literature.
Very few Japanese visit Yashima without being reminded of an episode:
It was on the afternoon of Februry 19, 1185, that Minamoto no Yoshithune mounted another surprise attack against the Tairas at the then Yashima Ialand. Frightened by the imagined immensity of enemy forces, fierce battle lasted for hours.
Now the sun was setting. Both sides began to retreat, when a fair vessel parted from the Taira legions and stopped about 80m from the cabin, produced a pole with a bright red fan on its top and beckoned to the puzzled warriors on the shore.
"what dose she mean?" said Yoshitsune.
"Perhaps she is inviting one of us to shoot the fan.
Or she may be inviting you to come out onto the front line for her archers,"said his attendand," said Yoshitsune.
Soon a young man called Nasu no Yoichi appeared on horseback with bow and arrow in his hands. The boat was tossing up and doun. The fan painted with the golden sun at its center was fluttering on the pole.
All the Tairas in the boats and all the Minamotos on the shore were watching Yoichi. What would he do? Would he succeed?
Yoichi rode into the water as far as he could. But it was still about 70 m to the target . He closed his eyes and prayed. Then the wind fell for a momend. He shot. The arrow pierced through a little about the rivent. The fan, flying up a moment or two, camefloating down, glittering in the setting sun. There was great applause from both sides.
Then a man in armor appeared in the same boat .he began to dance an elegant dance perhaps in genuine appreciation of Yoichi's archery. Then Yoichi got another order and shot down the dancing man, too. Some said, "Good shot !" But others said, "not fair ."
The Tairas were silent this time . Was it a precursor of their demise? Two months later, the Tairas finally fell.
3 minutes' walk after leaving the bus at Toshogu-men (Kotoden Bus:Yashima-sanjo Toshogu-men Chikko)
3 minutes'walk from theb cable- car station.
This is an open-air museum laid out the foot of Yashima Plateau. About 20 old rural buildings from various parts of Shikoku have been reassembled here, including a Farmers' Kabuki Theater, peasants' houses, a fisherman's house , a sugar mill, a shed for steaming mulberry bark to make paper , and workshops for making soy sauce and so on. There is a reprica of Kazura- bashi from Nishi Iyayama -son, too.
Open daily:8:30-16:30. Admission:\500
On May 5, people including children from Shodoshima Island, from which the Kabuki Theater came here, stage amn annual performance of their traditional farmers' kabuki.
3 minutes'walk from Nihon Tabako- mae
But Stop after 10 minutes'ride from JR Takamatsu.
(Kotoden Bus: Asahimachi Line)
30 minutes' walk from JR Takamatsu Station.
Japan's largest wax doll museum. The first fllor is dedicated to the 41 dolls of historical figures or modern men and women of celebrical figures or modern men and women of celebrity who have been closely associated with Shikoku.
The one of Kobo Daishi in his nyujo has its own corner as a special exhibition.
The other dolls include:
The second floor exhibits about 300 dolls portraying the 17 scenes from the Heike Monogatari or The Tale of the Tairas.TheSaga,composed of a large number of revealing episodes, literature and art. Some of the most famous scenes took place at the foot of Yashima Plateau at the northeastern tip of Takamatsu.
One hi-tech doll seen at the end of the exhibition is what was called biwa hoshi or a blind biwa-playing bard who traveled around chanting The Tale of the Taira Famiry even before it was written down in the first half of the 13th century. Its opening passage is especially famous for its Buddhist idea of impermanence that goes as follows:
The doll begins to talk and sing the first line of the opening passage when it senses visitors approaching.
Open daily Amission:\1200
Yoshida Shigeru (1875-1967), Prime Minister from1946 to 1954, is credited with giving Japan direct- ion through her most difficult times after the war.
the Kojima-Sakaide Route, popularly known as the Seto Ohashi Bridge , was completed in 1988. It is the world's longest two -tiered bridge system, stretching 13.1 km from Kojima to Sakaide, connecting the 5 islands in between.
The 11 bridges in the system include 3 suspension bridges , 2 twin cable-stsyed, 1 truss and 5 viaducts. THe upper level accommodates a motor expressway of four lanes, and the lower contains Japan Railway's system for a dual track superexpress line in the future.
The first person to air the idea of the Seto Ohashi Bridge was Okubo Jinnoji (1849-1891),a Kagawa native, who at that time was constructing the first Shikoku Roads to link all the prefectures on the island. In 1889Jinnojo disclosed his dream in a congratulatory speech he made as a member of the Prefectural Parliament at the opening ceremony of the first railroad in Shikoku between Marugame and Kotohira.
Exactry a century later, the Bridge came into being after decades of planning and ten years of construction,13 million workers involved (with the loss of 17 lives),and costing 1,190,000 million yen.
Surprisingly, Jinnojo had also foretold man's traveling to the moon in his favorite drinking ,which went as follows:
I 'll tell you, dear, don't laugh at me, a hundred years from now, I 'll be seeing you flying to and from the moon in a space ship.
Its port, let me tell you, dear, will be that mountaintop over there!
One of the best points to view the Bridge is Yoshima Island 1, a central pier of the Bridge. It also serves as a sightseeing outpost for the Shikoku and those who like to enjoy bridge-viewing , seafood and shopping.
To Yoshima: 20 minutes from JR Sakaide by Seto Ohashi Express Bus.
Another is a rotating tower 132 m tall at the Seto Ohashi Memorial Park 2 at the foot of the Bridge in Sakaide. the Memorial Hall provides all kinds of jnformation on the Bridge and its construction , while the park itself applies modern art to stone and water.
Admission to the tower :\800.
Admission to the Hall:\510.
To the Seto Ohashi Memorial Park : 10 minutes from JR Sakaide by shuttle bus (free of charge).
The Gold Tower 3 near JR Utazu Station offers a marvelous view , too. The 144 m tower made of half - mirror glass is the tallest of its kind in Japan and a World Toilet Museum.
Open daily. Admission to the tower :\800/
\1000(Toilet Museum included).
To Gold Tower : 8 minutes' walk from JR Utazu.
Bridge -viewing cruises are available from Keihan Fisherman7s Wharf on Yoshima 1, Memorial Park 2 and Sakaide Pork 4.
(\1,000-1,500)
25 minutes'train ride from JR Takamatsu.
To the Castle : 15 minutes' walk from JR Marugame.
The three- storied domjon on top of a green hill crowns the city of Marugame. When a Marugame Province of 53,000 koku and the castle seen today dates back to 1660, one of the few genuineEdo Perion castles remaining in Japan.
The present-day Marugame is famous for uchiwa or round paper fan manufacturing , producing about 90% of these fans in Japan.
The Castle Park , 15 minutes'walk from JR Marugame, is surrounded by moats, featuring the donjon, a couple of main gates (all Important Cultural Properties) and walls from the 17 th century . The 4- levwl 60 m ramparts, the tallest and among the of most beautiful in Japan, also contribute to the beauty of the castle.
One-shiro Matsuri Castle Festival is held on the 3rd weekend in May.
The Inokuma Genichiro Modern Art Museum adjacent to JR Marugame Station is dedicated to Inokuma Genichiro(1902-93)
Banshoen Garden built 1688 as a villa for the Lord of the Province is 10 minutes' drive from downtown Marugame. One of the galleries there houses Chinese ceramic ware and a collection of Iranian earthenware and glassware dating back to 2500 B.C. through the 1200's A.D. Open daily.
Admission to the Garden &Galleries:\1000
10 minutes'walk from Nakazu- bashi Bus Stop after
10 minutes'ride from Marugame Toricho near the castle. (Kotosan Bus for Zentsuji via Tadotsu)
[From JR Kotohira] 5 minutes to JR Zentsuji by ordinary train.
[From JR Takamatsu] 40 minutes to JR Zentsuji by express train (Dosan Line).
25 minutes'walk from JR Zentsuji along the street in front of the station.
Zentsu-ji Temple (No.75),is known as the birthplace of Kobo Daishi Kukai. (See p.190 :THE SHIKOKU PILGRIMAGE).Kukai is one of the greatest geniuses Japan has ever produced. He made a great contribution in remolding Japanese religion, while making unparalleled achievements as a scholar ,social worker , inventor discoverer and civil engineer.
The giant camphor trees nearthe five-storied pagoda in the East Precinct are said to have already been several hundred years old when Kukai was born in 774.
The Mieido Hall in the West Precinct at the foot of the green hilli is the Birthplace.
Visitors may traverse the basement of the hall along a pitch-dark path. This introspective journey is called kaidan-meguri. The entrance fee includes the admission to the Museum.(\300)
The utter blackness along the path symbolizes the darkness of the human mind or human ignorance of the Truth. The notice says: "Go along with the oalm of your left hand pressed against the left-hand wall.
The wall, painted with mandalas , angels and lotus flowers , is the Buddha's Way. You will be safely guided as long as you are on His Way."
After the Kaidan-meguri, arrows guide you to the Museum. The temple treasures exhibited there include a small clay pagoda Kukai molded at 7 , a bowl used by Kukai as a mendicant priest , a robe and a ritual stick (a National Treasure) of Intdian make, both presented to kukai by his Chunese master Abbot Hui-kuo, and a sutra scroll (a National Treasure) with each of the Chinese characters accompanied by a little Bodhisattva on a lotus pedestal; Kukai did the calligraphy , his mother the painting .
Shorinji Kempo is not merely a sport or martial art , but a religious exercise to approach the Buddha's spirit in the principles of "self - realization " and "help each other."
It was started by So Doshin I (1911-1980) in 1947. Two years before he had been repatriated from Manchuria , the northeastern part of china that 2Imperialist Japan"held for 13 years till the end of World War 2. Doshin had seen how people could be dehumanized in the dire extremities of war and its aftermath . "Developing good humanity is the only way to save Japan and the world at large, "he kept saying to himself. Doshin , who had learned various martial arts in Bodhidharma, trying to restore the martial art that Bodhidharma himself was said to have practised aboud 1, 500 years ago when he brought Zen from India to China.
Finally, Doshin succeeded in restoring and reorganizing the whole body of that art, which he named Shorinji Kenpo. Now its Headquarters has more than 100 branches in 23 countries in the world.
The Shorinji Kempo Headquarters (0877) 33- 1010 is on the southern slope of Toryo Koen Park Hill 15 minutes' walk from JR Tadotsu Station .
The Bodhidharma Festival is held on the 1st Sunday in October.
[from JR Takamatsu to JR kotohira]
60 minutes by shuttle train(Dosan Line)
[From Takamatsu Chikko]
70 minutes ' tram ride to Kotohira (KOtoden).
[From JR Okayama]
67 minutes' train ride by special express.
2 hours to Kotoden Kotohira Station by Seto
Ohashi Kosoku Bus.
Especially Noted Product: Ittobori woodcarving.
Kotohira-gu , a great shrine complex, often affectionately called Kompira - san, has been a celebrated destination for pilgrims and tourists for hundreds of years .
according to legend , Kompira-san came into being when kumbhira- a guardian god of Buddhism, originally a hindu crocodile god of the Gangen , was beckoned by a Buddhile god of matsuo- ji, a thousand-year-old temple this neighborhood.
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