top of page
logo2.png

Tōkyō-to, Suginami-ku, Kamiogi 1-21-7     東京都杉並区上荻1-21-7

homepage : (Japanese)

白山神社

  Hakusan Shrine

Nearest station:  Ogikubo  Lines: JR East (JC09), Marunouchi Subway (M01) 

a11.JPG
Sacred Tokyo 40 Shinto Shrines

Enshrined Kami:  

(Note: numbers in parentheses after kami names

refer to position in How Many Kami table)

Main

 

Izanami-no-mikoto (13B)            伊邪那美命

 

From Merged Shrines

In-ground Subordinate Shrines:

Tamori Inari Jinja  田守稲荷神社

Mitsumine Jinja     三峯神社

Inari Jinja                稲荷神社

 

Outside Subordinate Shrines:

​Annual Festival: 

Nearest Sunday to September 15

Divine Favours  (御利益 Goriyaku)

Safe child birth (安産)

Marriage (縁結び)

Child rearing (子育て)

Flourishing family (一族繁栄, Ichizoku Hanei)

ao2.JPG

The shrine legend dates its origins to around 1470 when Nakata Kaga, a retainer of the then Kanto Governor, dedicated a branch of  the Shirayama Hime Jinja in his hometown of Kaga Province in the grounds of his mansion.

 

It was given the name Gosha Gongensha. The Nakata family thereafter prospered, and in due course they built a new shrine. Sometime during the Edo Period the shrine’s betto-ji was destroyed and along with this all the records pertaining to the shrine were lost.     

The Ogikubo Hakusan Jinja was not only the tutelary deity of the Ogikubo area, but also came to be known as the Kami for curing toothache.  This came about when Nakata Kaga’s younger brother, Hyogo, was suffering a severe bout of toothache and was told in a dream by the Hakusan Kami to eat his meals using chopsticks made from the bush clover found in the grounds of the shrine: this he did and lo and behold he completely recovered from his toothache.

 

Many parishioners followed his example, so many in fact that according to a document written in 1909 there was a veritable mountain of bush clover chopsticks which had been offered to the Kami in the shrine. Again, in 1967 the expansion of Ring Road Route 8 necessitated the reconstruction of the shrine and people were astonished at the huge number of bush clover chopsticks found to have been stored in the long beam of the old shrine.

 

The main shrine itself is not so interesting, although the walk along the long, tree-lined sando running from near Ogikubo Station to the shrine is enjoyable. This manicured koma-inu is of some interest: what is very interesting about this shrine is the small complex of two Inari jinja and one Mitsumine Jinja in its grounds. The actual shrine buildings are very small, but the various carvings scattered around them are a delight to see and well worth a visit.

Click to expand image

a15.JPG
ao1.JPG
a10.JPG
ao7.JPG
ao5.JPG
ao9.JPG
ao8.JPG
ao4.JPG
a05.JPG
ao6.JPG
a12.JPG
mani
mitsumine

Mitsumine Jinja   三峯神社

a13.JPG
a14.JPG
a17.JPG
a18.JPG
a16.JPG
a19.JPG
a20.JPG
a21.JPG
a22.JPG
a23.JPG
a24.JPG
a25.JPG

Inari Jinja   稲荷神社

a30.JPG
a27.JPG
a32.JPG
a26.JPG
a28.JPG
a29.JPG
a33.JPG
a31.JPG
inari
bottom of page