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. Persons of the Heian Period (794 to 1185) .
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Emon Saburoo, Emon Saburō 衛門三郎 Emon Saburo
and the beginning of o-settai, settai 摂待
- quote -
a legendary figure of early ninth-century Japan associated with Kūkai and the Shikoku Henro 88 temple pilgrimage.
Legend
A mendicant visited the house of Emon Saburō, richest man in Shikoku, seeking alms. Emon refused, broke the pilgrim's begging bowl, and chased him away with a broom.
After his eight sons fell ill and died, Emon realized that Kūkai was the affronted pilgrim and set out to seek his forgiveness. Having travelled round the island twenty times clockwise in vain, he undertook the route in reverse.
Finally he collapsed exhausted and on his deathbed Kūkai appeared to grant absolution. Emon requested that he be reborn into a wealthy family in Matsuyama so that he might restore a neglected temple. Dying, he clasped a stone. Shortly afterwards a baby was born with his hand grasped tightly around a stone inscribed "Emon Saburō is reborn."
source : David on facebook
- - - This is the rock (5.4cm). - At Temple 51.
When the baby grew up, he used his wealth to restore the Ishite-ji (石手寺) or "stone-hand temple", in which there is an inscription of 1567 recounting the tale.
Monuments
Emon Saburo's grave is beside the path between Temple 11 and Temple 12, at the spot where he fell. Near Temple 46 there is a burial mound said to contain his eight sons. At Ishite-ji there is a casket containing the eponymous stone.
Interpretation
The legend supports a number of practices of the Shikoku pilgrimage:
it encourages the custom of osettai or alms; suggests wealth should be spent endowing temples; gives an origin for the practice of reverse circuits of the island; and promises absolution for pilgrims.
- source : wikipedia -
衛門三郎と弘法大師(
at Tsuesugi-An 杖杉庵)
- source : Japanese wikipedia -
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Monju-in, the 9th Bangai Temple in Shikoku
It was from here that Emon Saburo began his pilgrimage in search of Kukai....
- source : ojisanjake.blogspot.jp -
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. Ishiteji 石手寺 Ishite-Ji .
. o-settai, settai 摂待 giving alms to Henro pilgrims .
kado-cha 門茶 "tea at the gate", giving tea as alms at the temple gate
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- Reference in Japanese -
- Reference in English - Emon Saburo -
source : facebook
the "Shikoku Pilgrimage Community Salon" (Ohenro Koryu Salon),
located between Temple 87 and 88 in Kagawa prefecture.
- source : www.topia.ne.jp -
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. Shikoku Henro Temple List .
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. Join the friends on Facebook ! .
- #heianemonsaburo #emonsaburo -
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