Engyoji Temple, filming location for The Last Samurai

engyoji(6)right
engyoji(1)ropeway
engyoji(1)ropeway

When you take the ropeway to the top of Mt. Shosha, you will notice that the Niomon gate, which marks the entrance to the temple, is not there.    After climbing quite an uphill slope, we finally reached the Niomon gate.   However, I still couldn’t see the temple grounds.   The entire mountain itself is within the precincts, and there are continuous climbs and descents.    It takes a lot of determination.

engyoji(2)top of mountain
engyoji(2)top of mountain

 

 

 

This place is called “the Mt. Hiei of the west” (in the Harima area, it is often called “〇〇 of the west”), but it is true that the entire mountain of Mt. Hiei is within the temple grounds, and it is difficult to move around within it.    By the way, the Tendai sect is naturally the same.

 

“Maniden,” located in the center of the temple, was built using the same construction method “Kake Zukuri” as Kiyomizu-dera Temple in Kyoto, with the stage protruding from the cliff

When you reach the end, your field of vision suddenly opens up and you can see “San-no-do,” the place where monks practice and live.    A scene from The Last Samurai, tranquil and tense, comes back to life.   In the domain of the surviving samurai in the early Meiji era, Tom Cruise, an American officer inspired by the military commander Katsumoto played by Ken Watanabe, is depicted here in a brief moment of peace before they head off together as samurai for their final battle.

After immersing yourself in the world of the movie and descending the mountain on the ropeway, you will find a famous Japanese confectionery shop waiting nearby.

sun flower field
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