MiyajimaPersonal travel impressions in stories and pictures from Miyajima, Japan. Click on the pictures to enlarge, send as a free e-card, or download for personal use. You can locate Miyajima and navigate the world using Google Earth Show on map
N 34° 17.838
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Japan is full of Shinto shrines, each one of which has a torii or entrance gate. Of these toriis, the one on Miyajima island is one of the most famous. The shrine itself is dedicated to three goddesses of the sea. It has been erected in 592, and placed in such a way that the high tide affects it most. Therefore, it is possible to walk under and around the "torii" when it is low tide, but it gives the impression of a floating gate with high tide. A visit therefore takes hours, if you want to see the gate in both conditions.
It has been said that to keep the island pure, it was for a long time forbidden to die or give birth on the island. Therefore, pregnant women and seriously ill people were transported to the mainland before they could break the rule. Now, the island is a major attraction in Japan, which in practice means that there are mainly Japanese tourists. The island certainly has a lot of charm if you manage to discount the many souvenir stalls which try to sell all kinds of kitchy things.
Near the end of World War II, kamikaze pilots came close to this island to pray before setting out on their final mission. Now, the site is a well-preserved example of Japanese shinto religion, complete with five-story pagoda, museum, shrine, and Hall of Thousand Mats. The orange paint on most buildings seems new and it is hard to imagine these buildings are so many centuries old.