Japanese_Shinto_Shrine 21

Downloadable Content

Download image

File Details

Depositor
Tiffany Chan
Date Uploaded
Date Modified
2020-12-03
Fixity Check
passed on September 03, 2024 at 22:18
Characterization
Height: 5648
Width: 3796
File Format: tiff (Tagged Image File Format)
File Size: 64364824
Filename: Japanese_Shinto_Shrine021.tif
Last Modified: 2024-09-04T07:10:06.921Z
Original Checksum: e73613f662afa4b6ba2829df534eb9ac
Mime Type: image/tiff
Creator Transcript
  • gable roof. On the gable-end or the front side of the honden is the entrance and stairway, called tsuma-iri, or gable entrance. Because of a central pillar, the entrance must be narrow and placed off centre. The gable roof of the entrance has a separate roof which is not connected to the main gable roof of the honden. The Shinto shrine in Victoria differs from the Taisha style in that its gable-roof entrance is proportionally quite wide and located directly in front of the main building on a central axis. This particular feature reflects the style of the Kasuga shrine-type, which is similarly shaped with a wide-roofed entrance and stairway in the centre of the gable-end. However, what differentiates the Victoria Shinto shrine from the Kasuga shrine type is that it has a gabled roof over the entrance and stairway, whereas the latter has a single sloping or slanting roof resembling the peak of a cap. The Victoria shrine also shows the same structural roof features as the Otori shrine in that it has two gable roofs on a central axis, but it has a very narrow body with no partition in the main building, less expansive gable-roofs and a small balcony around the main building. In short, the Shinto shrine in Victoria combines architectural aspects from the Taisha-, Kasuga- and Otori-type shrines. Both the Kasuga and Otori styles are advanced developments of the Taisha style. As mentioned above, the entrenchment of Buddhism in Japan nurtured the spread of Ryobu Shinto with its doctrine that the various kami of Shinto were incarnations of Buddhist deities. As a result, many techniques of construction, decoration and even iconography became common to Shinto and Buddhist imagery and buildings. For example, many Shinto shrines display elements of The last Shinto ceremony before shrine is moved down the mountain in 1983. 19
Permalink
User Activity Date