Yamashiro Province - Temples

Temples

The provincial temples included those where the resident chief priest was a man, and those where it was a woman in Sōraku District. Kuni no Miya’s Daigokuden was made a temple in 746. It was destroyed by fire in 882, and the rebuilding afterwards would decline. In the Kamakura Period, it came to be a branch temple of Byōdō-in. The location is in modern Kizugawa city, coinciding with Kamo. In 1925, a large number of old tiles were excavated near the provincial temple, and it is thought that these once belonged to the convent.

The Kamo Shrines -- the Kamigamo Shrine in the Kita ward of Kyoto and the Shimogamo Shrine in Sakyō ward -- were designated as the to chief Shinto shrines (ichinomiya) of Yamashiro province.

Yamashiro’s ichinomiya designation differed from other provinces’, likely due to the Jingi-kan; from nearly the end of the 11th century, when the primary shrines were being established in each of the various provinces, it is thought that in Kinai, it was decided on after the turn on the 12th century. There were no ninomiya (secondary shrines). It is unknown whether there were any sōja.

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