Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto
Love Omamori (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto

Love (1) * Yasui-konpiragu, Kyoto

yasu-lov-1
OUT OF STOCK
$24.94
Blessed by Japanese monks



Omamori LOVE of the Yasui-konpiragu shrine of Kyoto

 

Omamori LOVE (for single, boyfriends, couples, weddings, etc.) of the Yasui-konpiragu shrine of Kyoto

*****

Yasui-konpiragu Shrine (安井金比羅宮) origins supposedly go back to the 7th century and a temple called Fujidera.

This temple was favored by the Emperor Sutoku (1119-1164), who was exiled to what is now Kagawa Prefecture in Shikoku after a war, known as the Hogen Rebellion, over the imperial succession with his younger brother Go-Shirakawa. Sutoku lost, died in exile and was buried on Mt. Shiramine.

Later Sutoku supposedly appeared in a dream to the Buddhist monk Daien, who reported the event to Go-Shirakawa, who ordered the building of another temple Kanshoji to appease the spirit of his older brother.

This temple, in its turn, was destroyed in the Onin War (1467-1477) and was replaced by Rengekoin, a temple originally located in Uzumasa.

The Emperor Sutoku, Omononushi no Kami and the warrior monk and poet Yorimasa Minamoto were all enshrined here. The shrine became known as Yasui-konpiragu during the early Meiji Period of Japanese history under the nationalistically inspired separation of "imported" Buddhism from "native" Shinto, when the name Rengekoin was dropped.

16 OTHER OMAMORI IN THE SAME CATEGORY

CUSTOMERS WHO BOUGHT THIS OMAMORI ALSO BOUGHT


Omamori Store



We're the largest omamori store in the world.
The quality of each individual product is absolutely guaranteed!
Thank you for visiting our online store.

Adam Lussana
CEO of Omamori.com

Omamori added to wishlist