1) Minami-senju-->Tokyo Station: put stuff in locker
2) Tokyo Station-->Asakusa
3) Asakusa-->Akihabara
4) Akihabara-->Kudanshita (near Kitanomaru-kouen)
5) Kudanshita-->Shibuya
6) Shibuya-->Harajuku on foot (and back again)
7) Shibuya-->Kamiyacho (to Tokyo Tower)
8) And back to Tokyo Station
Phase 1 and 2 passed without incident. Once I reached Kaminarimon Gate, I found a sign on the store I'd wanted to go back to which said "Closed on Mondays." (Which was strange, since it was a Wednesday, but it was still closed when I left, so...No second look for me.) In any case, I continued down Nakamise to visit Senjoji temple.
Hozomon Gate
Senso-ji is the oldest temple in Tokyo, built in 628 after two fisherman caught a statue of the bodhisattva Kannon in their nets. The founder of Sensoji, Shokai decided to hide the statue from public view in 645 after a mystical dream, but in the early 8th c., Ennin of Enryakuji temple came to Sensoji, created a replica statue, and called forth Kannon's spirit into the statue.
The top-most story of this pagoda contains a bone relic of the Buddha, a gift from Sri Lanka in 1973 from when the temple was rebuilt after WWII
The garden by Yogodo and Yakushido Halls
The Shintennou, I believe
An intriguing ad of some sort I caught leaving Nakamise
A rickshaw driver on the hunt
I feel silly now, because looking at the map on the pamphlet from Sensoji, I probably could have made a quick stop at Asakusa Jinja, no problem. It just looked a lot farther on the city maps...
No comments:
Post a Comment