Рет қаралды 10,065
2023,4,16 雨により翌日に延期された葵祭(賀茂祭)の路頭の儀が斎行されました。
斎王代をアップでご覧になりたい方は↓
• 葵祭 賀茂別雷神社 斎王代以下女人列御禊の儀...
斎王代の表情が最も近くで見ることができるのが
斎王代以下女人列御禊の儀ですのでこちらでお願いします。
『賀茂旧記』によると葵祭の祭祀の起源は太古御祭神・賀茂別雷大神が神山に御光臨されるに神託により葵を飾り、馬を走らせ、神迎えの祭りを行ったことに始まるとされています。
約1500年前、欽明天皇(在539~571)の頃に遡ります。
風雨が続き、五穀が実らなかったため、勅命により当時賀茂の大神の崇敬者だった卜部伊吉若日子に占わせたところ賀茂大神の祟りであるとわかり、
旧暦4月に祭礼を行い、馬には鈴をかけ、人は猪頭(ししがしら)をかぶって駆競(かけくらべ)を行いました。
すると風雨がおさまり、五穀も豊かに実って国民も安泰に。
この行事が葵祭のルーツとされています。
819年には、律令制度で最も重要な恒例祭祀に準じて行う国家的な行事となりました。
平安中期の貴族の間では、「祭り」と言えば葵祭をさすほど有名で、「枕草子」や「源氏物語」といった文学作品にも登場しています。
もともとは「賀茂祭」と呼ばれていましたが、江戸時代に、当日の内裏宸殿の御簾や牛車などに二葉葵を飾ることから葵祭と呼ばれるようになったと言われています。
平安時代以降、応仁の乱後の約200年、明治4(1871)年~明治16(1883)年、昭和18(1943)年~昭和27(1952)年と、3度の中断や行列の中止を経験しましたが、復活を遂げ、現代まで王朝風俗の伝統を受け継いでいます。
April 16, 2023 The Aoi Festival (Kamo Festival) postponed to the next day due to rain was held.
For those who want to see the Saiodai cloose up ↓
• 葵祭 賀茂別雷神社 斎王代以下女人列御禊の儀...
The closest you can see the face of Saiodai is
Since it is a ceremony of purification ceremony for women under the Saiodai, please do it here.
The origin of the Aoi Festival is said to be that when Kamowakeikazuchi no Okami,
the ancient enshrined deity, descended upon the mountain,
an oracle decorated Aoi and ran horses to welcome the gods.
It dates back to the time of Emperor Kinmei (539-571), about 1500 years ago.
Because of the continuous rain and wind, the rice did not grow, so Ikiwakahiko Urabe, who was a worshiper of Kamo no Okami at the time,
was ordered by imperial order to tell fortunes, and it was found that it was the curse of Kamo no Okami.
Festivals were held in May, and bells were put on the horses, and people wore boar heads and raced. Then the wind and rain subside, the rice grows abundantly, and the people are safe.
This event is said to be the root of the Aoi Festival. In 819, it became a national event in accordance with the most important annual rituals in the legal system.
Among aristocrats in the middle of the Heian period, the word “Festival ” was so famous that the Aoi Festival was mentioned,
and it appeared in literary works such as “Makura no Soshi” and “The Tale of Genji”. It was originally called the Kamo Festival, but it is said that during the Edo period, the blinds and oxcarts of the Imperial Palace were decorated with two-leaf hollyhocks, so it came to be called the hollyhock festival.
Kamo Festival = Aoi Festival.
After the Heian period, about 200 years after the Onin War, from 1871 to 1883, from 1943 to 1952, the procession was interrupted and canceled three times.
However, it has been revived and has inherited the tradition of dynasty customs to the present day.