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Ishizuchi Shrine

This dramatic shrine has compounds distributed all over Mt. Ishizuchi, the highest mountain in western Japan.

Ishizuchi Shrine

This dramatic shrine has compounds distributed all over Mt. Ishizuchi, the highest mountain in western Japan.

Mt. Ishizuchi, or Ishizuchi-san as it’s known in Japanese, is the highest mountain in western Japan. It dominates the scenery of Saijo, and the mountain itself is venerated as a deity. Centuries ago, it was also known as the abode of hijiri, holy men or shamans who had control over demons and other spirits on the mountain. Ishizuchi is the patron god of fishermen on the Seto Inland Sea who fly its flag as a talisman and use the mountain as a landmark.

This Shinto shrine actually has four parts, one at the summit of Ishizuchi, two on the side, and the head shrine at the bottom. Here we’re interested in the one at the bottom which is the most easily accessible. It stands on one of the foothills of Ishizuchi in Saijo, and the temple compound winds its way up the slope through a series of different levels.

At the bottom, you pass through two torii gates, one painted red, the other of stone. There’s a car park on the left, and if you want to enjoy the shrine in its entirety, this is the place to park. Next to the car park is a new gate house in traditional style, with magnificent shishi lion guardians, and in the gate itself, wooden tengu, the long-nosed, winged beings who are said to inhabit Japan’s mountains. Beautiful pink cherry blossoms flower in April.

Beyond the gate is a path through a forest of bamboo and trees, including a big cypress bedecked with a Shinto straw rope and tassels. Insects buzz and birds sing. The atmosphere here is of an isolated, hallowed mountain. At the top of a flights of stone steps is a compound of concrete buildings. The next section is wonderful, with mossy trees, a beautiful pond with carp, eccentric stone lions, and a dramatic dragon fountain spewing water straight from the mountain. The final stretch calls to mind the route to the peak of Ishizuchi itself, which passes up steep rock faces hung with chains. Here, sweeping staircases with chains for handrails pass up through precipitous stone walls.

The main hall of the shrine itself is a painted concrete building. It stands in an expansive plaza with a broad view of Saijo and the Inland Sea. On a clear day, the view is spectacular. If you’re lucky, you may hear the priest playing constantly changing rhythms on the enormous shrine drum.

When you visit Ishizuchi Shrine, be sure to visit its neighbour, Maegami-ji, Temple No. 64 on the Shikoku 88 temple pilgrimage, which used to be the headquarters of the cult of Mt. Ishizuchi before Ishizuchi Shrine was formed in the Meiji period.

Information

Name in Japanese: 石鎚神社

Pronunciation: ishizuchi jinja

Address: 797 Nishidako, Saijo, Ehime 793-8555

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