A Shinto shrine in Chuo-ku ⑩
~ Hoju Inari Shrine~
Remotely navigate the beloved Chuo-ku, rosemary sea.
This time, the 10th time of the shrine series in Chuo-ku, which is a little worrisome, I would like to introduce Hoju Inari Shrine.
This is also one of the "Ginza Hatcho Shrine Tour".
Then...
A long history
Hoju Inari Shrine was enshrined deity in 1615 in the Edo mansion of Shigemasa, the lord of Fukamizo, the country of Mikawa, Itakura Uchizen no Kami, as the god of fire extinguishing at home.
Shigemasa Uchizen was renowned as Kyoto Shojidai and Edo-cho magistrates, and was born in 1588 as the second son of Katsushige Itakura in 1588, Emperor Yozei (107th generation). It is.
Shigemasa is rich in valor and has a deep respect for the gods, and has been killed in the Shimabara rebellion as a military command to pursue the rebellion of Shimabara in the winter of Osaka.
The general of the time was Iemitsu and was the 110th Emperor Gokomyo Tenno.
Uchizen Takumi's older brother Suo Morishigemune is the castle owner of Seki-juku, Shimousa.
It was transferred to the Kamei family of castle owner in Tsuwano, a country of Iwami in 1760.
The achievements of Shigegen Kamei during the Meiji Restoration became famous along with Daiko Inari.
Also sold to the Okazaki family in Okayama in 1918, the shrine was donated to the local Kobikicho 3-chome shrine parishioner along with the site, and in 1950, the local shrine parishioner volunteered to acquire the adjacent land and built shrine hall and shrine office.
※ His brother Shigemune has succeeded his father, Katsushige's "Kyoto Shojidai".
Itakura Shrine, located in Sugizuma-cho, Fukushima City, Fukushima Prefecture, is a shrine dedicated to Shigemasa Itakura.
What is Itakura Shrine?
In order to worship the spirits of Shigemasa Itakura, the ancestor of Fukushima feudal lord Itakura, and Shigenori, the eldest son of Shigemasa, the 11th generation (feudal lord, the 8th generation of the Fukushima Itakura clan), Katsunaga opened in the Edo clan residence in 1792.
Later, in the second year of culture (1805), he was enshrined in the Fukushima Shiromoto Maru.
In 1869, he was temporarily transferred to Mikawa due to the transfer to Mikawa, but in 1882, he was relocated to the former territory at the invitation of former territories, and the former clansman and others raised funds and rebuilt it at its current location (formerly Fukushima Castle Momijiyama).
(From Itakura Shrine website)
Shigemasa Itakura ...
He served Ieyasu from an early age, pointed out the bell name of the problem in Hokoji Temple's "Kanemei Case", became Ieyasu's messenger, and also played an active role as a military teacher during the peace of "Osaka Winter Camp".
Later, he received 15,000 stones of Mikawa Fukamizo and became the first Itakura family.
He started to suppress the Shimabara rebellion in Kanei 14 (1637).
As a superior envoy, he led Kyushu Daimyo such as Matsukura, Hosokawa, Nabeshima and Tachibana, but could not drop Hara Castle, and the Shogunate dispatched Nobutsuna Matsudaira to rebuild the army. .
Ashamed of the shogunate's treatment, he attacked a total attack on January 1, 2015 to drop the castle before arriving at Shinzuna, but died in a shattering war. He was 51 years old.
(Dictionary)
A new ball
A flower that is left to the old age
Leave only the name
A pioneer and known
(From Itakura Shrine website)
(Not separate): Only the name of the flower that blooms in the year of the new ball remains, known as Sakigake)
Shigemasa Itakura, anecdote between his father, Katsushige, and his brother Shigemune ...
Shigemasa replied on the spot when his father Katsushige said, "Let's answer about the pros and cons of a lawsuit."
However, his brother Shigemune asked for a day's grace and the next day he answered the same conclusion as his brother.
People around me evaluated that "the younger brother Shigemasa is better."
However, his father, Katsushige, said, "Shigemune had come to a conclusion as quickly as Shigemasa, just did that kind of behavior to be cautious, and Shigemune was more volatile." You.
(From the Records of the Great Shogun [Meishogen Koroku])
・・・ In addition to Katsushige and Shigemune, anecdotes, including his successor, Chikashige Makino, are separately described in the "Meisho Act Records", and "Miki Tokugawa" and "Semiwagusa: Semen Amakusa" ) ".
This time, I will show you the Edo classical rakugo.
It was the 47th time.
It is difficult to select the material each time.
The "bead" of "Hoju Inari" is linked to "giboshi", but on September 26, 2020, it was shown in the 17th part of "No.25 Shrine, which can be reached from Ningyocho Station".
Also, on September 7, 2020, the 12th "Three-way one-way loss" in "From Ningyocho Station ... NO.20" describes the outline of Katsushige Itakura and father and son of Shigemune during his tenure at Kyoto Shojidai It is said that the content written in "Itakura Masayo" is a rakugo story.
・・・ It seems that the preamble has become longer.
After all, this time, we decided to introduce "hanging".
It was decided that the subject was Mikawa, the territory of Katsushige Itakura, was based on Mikawa, and that it was based on Banzai Mikawa.
<Preliminary confirmation corner>
Hanging over...
It's the collection.
Sugawara Hands-on Training Book (Sugawara Denju Ikagami) ...
February 9, 2020 Please see the article on "Meijiza March Hanagata Kabuki".
"Take-up,"
It's New Year's Eve.
Hachigoro, who has accumulated the debt of the bargain, of course there is no credit to pay.
So I will make an excuse with what I like to hang, wrap it around, and then turn it back.
First of all, landlord, rent is accumulated.
The landlord is crazy about kyoka, for improvised kyoka.
"Is it the end of the year that the poor" Bo (stick) "is gradually getting longer and won't be shaken?"
"Despite poverty, a mountain of debt in my home is tasteful and quality."
Arrange mad songs like this.
Then the landlord felt and wrote, "Lending and borrowing is what a landlord is in a world where the landlord can be taken" and promised a repayment delay.
(The plums are flying cherry blossoms in a world where the dying cherry blossoms die," which appears in Kabuki's "Sugawara Densetsu Handbooks.")
Next time, Mr. Kin, a fish shop, is famous for his quick fight. "I can't work until I get my debt back," he said.
It provoked, saying, "Sit there for decades until gold enters," and after a question and answer, lets you pull out debts.
At the head of a liquor store, he likes the play.
He shouts, "Okatori, I'm sorry," and invites him as "the boss" of Kabuki's "Kanamoto Chushingura."
Again, he wrote tanka poetry, which incorporates eight views of Omi, saying, "I guess it's just past the peak of the flowers at Takamine in Yukiharu Hira."
I will continue to make excuses and finally postpone the payment until September next year, saying, "That autumn moon of Ishiyama ... the bell of Mii-dera Temple is signaled."
The last is the owner of Mikawaya.
The opponent is regarded as Mikawa Manzai's Saizo, and in the condition of Mikawa Manzai Tayu, `` Let's wait, let's wait, let's say, the first month for a month, the second month for two months, the second month for two months, Kokeraja, Dodanbee ".
I brought it to a chat, and at the end, the open master, "I can pay when."
"Oh, that's a thousand years, if it's past,"
Introduction of nearby historic sites
The site of Meiji Hall
3-14, Ginza
Meiji Kaido is a speech venue built in 1881 by Yukichi Fukuzawa.
It is a two-story wooden building in tile roofing with a floor area of approximately 620 m2, and was designed by Hisakichi Fujimoto, a relative of Fukuzawa.
At that time, there were some facilities such as the Mita Speech Hall built by Fukuzawa, but in terms of scale, many speeches were held in rental seats, theaters, restaurants, etc., which were not originally speech venues. Was.
The Meiji Hall was built as a well-equipped speech venue for these alternative facilities.
In the explanatory text of the Nishiki-e "Meiji Kaido no Zu" (in the explanatory version), "The hall of the venue was filled with 3,000 people, and the dining room was set up with 200 people. There is an office room, and it will be the first hall of Tokyo's first hall without any difficulty. "
At the end of 1882, from the ownership of Fukuzawa to the hands of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, it was renamed the Koseikan in 1884, but after being paid to the private sector in 1890, Taisho 12 (1923) ) Was burned down in the Great Kanto Earthquake.
※ In addition, "the birthplace of Senshu University" is also next to it.
Hoju Inari Shrine
3-14-15, Ginza
Close to Higashi Ginza Station on the Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line
Behind Kabukiza, in the center of "Kibikicho-dori", on the right side toward the front entrance of Kabukiza.