
The
Hongwanji developed from a modest temple built at the site of Shinran
Shonin's mausoleum. After his death, his cremated remains were
interred at Otani in the eastern hills of Kyoto and marked by a
simple stone obelisk.
Many followers came to pay their
respects, particularly from the distant Kanto region (now the Tokyo
area), and in 1272, with their support, Shinran's daughter,
Kakushinni, had his ashes moved to the grounds of her residence at
Yoshimizu, slightly to the north. There, a hexagonal chapel was built
and an image of Shinran enshrined.
Several years later, with
the death of her husband, title to the residence passed to
Kakushinni, allowing her to determine the future of the chapel, and
in 1277, she dedicated her property to the Shin movement as a
permanent mausoleum, to be tended by a person of Shinran's lineage.
The chapel and land became known as the Otani Mausoleum (byodo) and
was supported by followers in the Kanto area.
The first
intendant of the mausoleum was Kakushinni's son, Kakue, and in 1310
he was succeeded by his son, Kakunyo. Kakunyo elevated the status of
the mausoleum by gaining recognition for it as a temple, and further
sought to make it the center of the Shin movement. It was he who
adopted the name Hongwanji (lit. "Temple of the Primal
Vow").
In 1336, the Otani Mausoleum was burned during
warfare between Ashikaga Takauji and Emperor Godaigo. Kakunyo rebuilt
it, not as a hexagonal chapel, but as a regular temple. In succeeding
generations, the Hongwanji developed the present format of two halls,
the Founder's Hall and the Hall of Amida Buddha. Factions formed
among Shin followers, however, and most of the ten Shin denominations
arose during this period, around central temples in various parts of
the country. It was not until the time of Rennyo that the Hongwanji
became the center of the Shin tradition, independent from the Tendai
organization.
Rennyo Shonin (1415-1499)
Under
Rennyo, the eighth generation leader, the Hongwanji grew remarkably.
After assuming the role as head of the Hongwanji (now termed monshu),
he spread the teaching in nearby provinces with astonishing success,
communicating the teaching in forceful, colloquial language,
particularly through the use of letters (Gobunsho).
The growth
of Hongwanji influence in Omi (Shiga prefecture), however, aroused
the ire of the Tendai temple on Mt. Hiei, which had traditionally
regarded the area as within its jurisdiction. In 1465, warrior-monks
from Mt. Hiei raided the Hongwanji and destroyed a number of
buildings, and Rennyo was forced to flee.
In 1471, after Omi
had been occupied by an unfriendly daimyo, Rennyo settled at
Yoshizaki in Echizen (Fukui prefecture). There, his reputation as a
great religious leader spread, and he began to attract thousands of
followers. The Hongwanji-affiliated temples in Echizen and the
neighboring areas grew into a political power, and in an era of
constant struggle among daimyos, forces emerged that sought to
utilize Hongwanji's strength militarily, or to extend its influence
through political alliances.
Rennyo, finding his movement
becoming entangled in violent struggle and unable to restrain his
followers, chose to withdraw. In 1474, he returned to the Osaka area,
and in 1478, he selected Yamashina near Kyoto as the site for the
construction of a magnificent temple complex, completed five years
later.
At the age of seventy-four, Rennyo retired as monshu,
but continued his work in spreading the teaching. At eighty-two, he
established a temple at Ishiyama on Osaka Bay, which he recognized as
an ideal site for propagation because of its heavy river traffic. The
village that was to grow into the city of Osaka quickly sprang up
around the temple.
By the time of his death in 1499, at the
age of eighty-five, the small Kyoto temple of his youth had grown
into a powerful religious institution.
|Ishiyama
Hongwanji
The
century following Rennyo's death was one of turbulence and momentous
change for both the country and the Hongwanji. The period from 1482
to 1558 is known as the age of "the country at war" and was
characterized by incessant warfare and shifting alliances among the
feudal lords throughout Japan. At the beginning of this period, Shin
followers in Echizen and neighboring Kaga arose to virtually dominate
those provinces, and for a century the Hongwanji remained an obstacle
to the ambitions of warlords bent on dominating the entire
country.
In 1532, the Yamashina Hongwanji was attacked and
burned to the ground by the Omi daimyo, Rokkaku, and followers of the
Nichiren school. It was relocated at Ishiyama which, located on a
slight prominence and surrounded by waterways, occupied a strategic
position of great strength. It is the site of present Osaka Castle.
Hongwanji influence in the area grew.
From the mid-sixteenth
century, the warlord Oda Nobunaga emerged as one of the most powerful
military leaders, and his drive to control the country brought him
into conflict with the Hongwanji. In 1580, after eleven years of
military action against the Ishiyama Hongwanji and failure to achieve
its downfall, Nobunaga requested the intercession of Emperor
Ogimachi, who mediated the evacuation of Ishiyama. The eleventh
monshu, Kennyo, moved the Hongwanji to Saginomori in Wakayama
prefecture, and then to Kaizuka and Temma in present-day Osaka.
Return to Kyoto
Nobunaga
was assassinated in 1582, and it fell to one of his generals,
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, to effect final unification of the country.
Hideyoshi was supportive of the Hongwanji, and in 1591 donated the
tract of land where it stands today. With the relocation of the
temple halls from Temma the following year, the Hongwanji returned to
Kyoto.
In 1592 Kennyo died and was succeeded by his eldest
son, Kyonyo. In his will, however, Kennyo named his third son,
Junnyo, to be his successor, and with Hideyoshi's recognition of this
will, responsibility passed to Junnyo in 1593. Kyonyo retired, but a
decade later, in 1602, he received a parcel of land slightly to the
east of the Hongwanji from the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu. The Hongwanji
following was split, and an additional new temple was erected.
Popularly known as Higashi (lit. "East") Hongwanji, it
became headquarters of the new Otani denomination.
A number of
structures, including the Flying Cloud Pavilion, ceremonial gate and
Chamber of Waves, appear to have been moved to the original Hongwanji
about this time. The main halls, however, were destroyed in a great
earthquake in 1596, and though reconstruction was quickly undertaken,
in 1617 a fire swept the compound and the nearly completed buildings
burned. Under the direction of Junnyo and his successor, Ryonyo, many
of the structures of the present compound were built; some have been
recognized as National Treasures and Important Cultural Properties,
attesting to the Hongwanji's continuing creativity and vitality. In
1994, the entire Hongwanji precinct received designation as a UNESCO
World Cultural Heritage Site.
Junnyo built the Hall of Amida,
and the main audience chamber and Shiro shoin complex. The
reconstruction of a permanent Founder's Hall was left to Ryonyo who,
in addition, built the Kuro shoin chambers and the Meichodo at the
Otani mausoleum.
During this period, the Hongwanji temple
organization was firmly established in conformity with Tokugawa
government policies requiring hierarchical internal structures and
fixed temple membership. Further, official encouragement to formulate
doctrinal teachings led, in 1639, to the creation of a facility for
scholarly study, which was to develop into Ryukoku University, one of
the oldest institutions of higher education in Japan.
Beyond
National Boundaries
With
the Meiji Restoration in 1868, Japan entered a period of rapid
modernization, but it was also a time of crisis. The new government
adopted a strong anti-Buddhist attitude, and a movement to eradicate
Buddhism and bring Shinto to ascendancy arose throughout the country.
It was precisely at this time that the twenty-first monshu, Myonyo,
took office.
Myonyo was energetic in protecting religious
freedom and successfully struggled against state control of temple
activities. To advance the Shin tradition, as early as 1872 he began
sending advisors and students abroad to investigate religious thought
and practices throughout the world. In 1888, in response to interest
among Buddhists in Europe and America, the Hongwanji published a
journal in English, and also highly-regarded reports in Japanese on
religious conditions abroad.
At home, he broke down the rigid
hierarchy of branch temples and directly involved local temples
throughout the country in governing the Hongwanji. He also built
schools, orphanages and other social welfare facilities, and created
a program of prison and military chaplaincy. In 1897, the Hongwanji
began sending official ministers to establish temples for Japanese
immigrants in Hawaii and the mainland United States.
In 1903,
Myonyo was succeeded by Kyonyo (Ohtani Kozui), who continued to
broaden the vision and scope of Hongwanji activities. He is known in
particular for the Otani expeditions to Buddhist sites in central
Asia, which recovered many texts and artifacts from the deserts
across which Buddhism had been transmitted to Japan over the Silk
Road.
Shin missions in Europe started after the twenty-third
monshu, Ohtani Kosho, made a tour in 1954. Today, the Hongwanji is
the head temple for over ten thousand temples throughout Japan and
some two hundred temples around the world.