:Saiō
{{Distinguish|Saiin (priestess)}}
{{Italic title}}
File:Saio.jpg}}, 2007 {{transliteration|ja|Saiō Matsuri}}]]
{{Nihongo||斎王|Saiō}} or {{transliteration|ja|itsuki no miko}}{{cite book|title=スーパー大辞林|trans-title=Super Daijirin}} was the title of the unmarried female members of the Japanese Imperial Family, sent to serve at Ise Grand Shrine from the late 7th century to the 14th century. The {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}'s residence, {{Nihongo|Saikū|斎宮}}, was about {{cvt|10|km}} north-west of the shrine. The remains of Saikū are situated in the town of Meiwa, Mie Prefecture, Japan.{{Cite web|url=http://www.bunka.pref.mie.lg.jp/saiku/p0048200012.htm|title = 斎宮歴史博物館 Reduced-scale reconstruction of the Saikuryo}}
Origins
File:Saio genji.jpg showing what life at Saikū might have been like]]
According to Japanese legend, around 2,000 years ago the divine Yamatohime-no-mikoto, daughter of the Emperor Suinin, set out from Mount Miwa in Nara Prefecture in search of a permanent location to worship the goddess Amaterasu-ōmikami.Brown Delmer et al. (1979). Gukanshō, p. 253; Varley, H. Paul. (1980). Jinnō Shōtōki, pp. 95-96; [https://books.google.com/books?id=18oNAAAAIAAJ&pg=PP9&dq=nipon+o+dai+itsi+ran#PRA1-PA10,M1 Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du japon, p. 10]. Her search lasted for 20 years and eventually brought her to Ise, Mie Prefecture, where the Ise Shrine now stands.The Deep Purple Story of Meiwa (紫紺の語り部) (Meiwa Town Office, 2003), p. 3. Prior to Yamatohime-no-mikoto's journey, Amaterasu-ōmikami had been worshiped at the Imperial Palaces in Yamato.
According to the {{transliteration|ja|Man'yōshū}} (The Anthology of Ten Thousand Leaves), the first {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} to serve at Ise was Princess Ōku, daughter of Emperor Tenmu, during the Asuka period of Japanese history. Mention of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} is also made in the {{transliteration|ja|Aoi}}, {{transliteration|ja|Sakaki}} and {{transliteration|ja|Yugao}} chapters of The Tale of Genji, as well as in the 69th chapter of The Tales of Ise ({{transliteration|ja|Ise Monogatari}}).
In the 13th century, Jien recorded in the {{transliteration|ja|Gukanshō}} that during the reign of Emperor Suinin, the first High Priestess ({{transliteration|ja|saiō}}) was appointed for Ise Shrine.Brown, p. 253. Hayashi Gahō's 17th-century {{transliteration|ja|Nihon Ōdai Ichiran}} is somewhat more expansive, explaining that since Suinin's time, a daughter of the emperor was almost always appointed as high priestess, but across the centuries, there had been times when the emperor himself had no daughter; and in such circumstances, the daughter of a close relative of the emperor would have been appointed to fill the untimely vacancy.[https://books.google.com/books?id=18oNAAAAIAAJ&pg=PP9&dq=nipon+o+dai+itsi+ran#PRA1-PA9,M1 Titsingh, p. 10].
Role
File:Saikū Historical Museum - Display item05 - The room of Saiô.jpg
The role of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} was to serve as High Priestess at Ise Shrine on behalf of the Emperor, to represent the role first set out by Yamatohime-no-mikoto. Three rituals a year were conducted at the Shrine in which the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} prayed for peace and protection. In June and November each year, she journeyed to the Shrine to perform the Tsukinamisai Festival. In September in the lunisolar calendar, she performed the Kannamesai Festival to make offerings to the {{transliteration|ja|kami}} of the year's new grain harvest.The Deep Purple Story of Meiwa, p. 9.
For the rest of the year, the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} lived in Saikū, a small town of up to 500 people approximately {{cvt|10|km}} north-west of Ise, in modern Meiwa, Mie Prefecture. Life at Saikū was, for the most part, peaceful. The {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} would spend her time composing {{transliteration|ja|waka}} verses, collect shells on the shore of Ōyodo beach, or set out in boats and recite poetry upon the water and wait to be recalled to Kyoto.
Selection process
When an Emperor died or abdicated the throne, when the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}'s relative died, or when certain political power required, she would be recalled to the capital and a new {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} selected from one of the new Emperor's unmarried female relatives using divination by either burnt tortoise shell or deer bones. The new {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} would then undergo a period of purification before setting out with her retinue of up to 500 people for Saikū, never to return to the capital until recalled by the next Emperor.
Upon the selection of the new {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}, the current {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} and her retinue would return to the capital to resume their lives as part of the Imperial Court. Often, a {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} was quite young when she left the capital for Saikū, and would only be in her mid-teens or early twenties when she returned to the capital. It was considered a great honor to marry a former {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} and her time at Saikū improved her own position at court and those of the people who served with her.
Procession to Saikū
The procession routes of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} changed after the capital was moved to Heian-kyō in 794.
The procession began in what is today the Arashiyama district on the west side of Kyoto. In the Heian period, successive imperial princesses stayed in the Nonomiya Shrine for a year or more to purify themselves before becoming representatives of the imperial family at the Ise Shrine.Kyoto City Tourism and Culture Information Site: [http://kaiwai.city.kyoto.jp/raku/backnum/dec07_e/buttone3.html Nonomiya Shrine.] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20070626055413/http://kaiwai.city.kyoto.jp/raku/backnum/dec07_e/buttone3.html |date=2007-06-26 }} Contemporary annual processions recreate a scene from a picture scroll of the imperial court during the Heian period, starting from the shrine and continuing as far as the Togetsu-kyo Bridge, Arashiyama.Kyoto City: [http://kaiwai.city.kyoto.jp/raku/backnum/nov08_e/gyoji_dtle.html Saigū Procession];{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} [http://raku.city.kyoto.jp/backnum/oct06_e/oct06_topics_e.html Events, October 2006.]{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
The procession of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} from Kyoto to Saikū, the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}'s official residence in Ise, was the largest procession of its kind in Japan for its time. Up to 500 people would set out from Kyoto as a part of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}'s retinue for the journey, which lasted six days and five nights. From Kyoto, they travelled in an eastward direction, passing through the Suzuka Pass, which was without doubt the most difficult part of the journey. Once clearing the pass, the retinue would descend into the Ise region and turn south, eventually reaching the {{nihongo|Kushida River|櫛田川}}. Here, the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} would stop to perform a final cleansing ritual before crossing the river and travelling the short distance to Saikū.Saiō Procession (Documentary movie, Saikū Historical Museum).
The {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} was expected to remain at Saikū until the emperor whom she represented either died or abdicated the throne. The {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} was permitted to return to Kyoto only on the provision of a close relative's death. When returning to Kyoto, a different route was taken through the mountains to Nara, then to Osaka Bay where a ceremony was to be performed before she could finally return to the capital.
From Japanese literature
=Princess Ōku=
The {{transliteration|ja|Man'yōshū}} (The Anthology of Ten Thousand Leaves), tells the story of Princess Ōku, the first {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} to serve at Ise Shrine. The daughter of Emperor Tenmu, Japan's 40th emperor (according to the traditional order of succession), Princess Ōku and her younger brother, Prince Ōtsu, survived the Jinshin incident. After taking up her role as {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}, her brother was put to death for treason in 686 and Princess Ōku was relieved of her duties and returned to Yamato. Here, she enshrined her brother's remains on Mt. Futakami before she died the age of 41.The Deep Purple Story of Meiwa, p. 6.
=Princess Yoshiko=
The Tale of Genji tells the story of Rokujo-no-miyasudokoro, which is believed to be based on Princess Yoshiko, who served as {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} from 936 to 945. In The Tale of Genji, Rokujo-no-miyasudokoro became the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} of Ise Shrine at the young age of 8, serving at the shrine for 9 years. After returning to the capital, she became a consort to Emperor Murakami and gave birth to Princess Noriko. She became famous throughout Kyoto for her colorful life, devoting herself to waka poetry and music. According to the story, she falls in love with Prince Genji, but her jealous nature brings about the death of two of her rivals. When her daughter is chosen as {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} at the age of 13, Rokujo-no-miyasudokoro decides to join her in Saikū to help her overcome her feelings for Genji.
=Princess Yasuko=
The love story of Ariwara-no-Narihira and the 31st {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}, Princess Yasuko (served as {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} from 859 to 876), is told in the 69th chapter of The Tales of Ise. Ariwara-no-Narihira, well known in his time for his good looks, is married to Princess Yasuko's cousin, but on meeting at the Saikū, they fall into forbidden love. Giving in to temptation, they secretly meet under a pine tree on the shore of Ōyodo Port to reveal their feelings for one another and to promise to meet again the following night. But this first secret meeting would also be the last, as Narihira was due to depart that next day for Owari Province. Princess Yasuko came to see Narihira off, and they were never to see each other again, though it is said that Princess Yasuko bore a child as a result of the brief love affair.The Deep Purple Story of Meiwa, p. 5.
End of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} system
It is not precisely clear when the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} system ended, but what is known is that it occurred during the turmoil of the Nanboku-chō period when two rival Imperial courts were in existence, in Kyoto and Yoshino. The {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} system had been in steady decline up to this period, with Saikū reverting to just another rural rice farming village after the system's collapse.
Though the area of Saikū remained, it was unclear exactly where the old Imperial town stood until pottery remains were unearthed in 1970 during the construction of housing in the Saikū area, Meiwa Town. A modern museum was built on the site of the first finds and archaeological excavations are continuing, held each summer with the aid of volunteer school children from all over Japan. Though a site for the main {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} residence has been discovered, a large percentage of it lies beneath the main Kintetsu Ise railway line and is inaccessible. Itsukinomiya Historical Experience Hall, a reconstruction of the building using traditional techniques, was built in the 1990s and stands beside Saikū station on the local Kintetsu rail line, no more than {{convert|200|m}} from the original site.
Festivals
The {{transliteration|ja|Aoi Matsuri}}, the first of the three main festivals held in Kyoto each year, re-enacts the Heian period march of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} to the Shimigamo Shrine (lower Kamo Shrine) in Sakyo Ward. This festival is held every year on May 15 and in 2006 consisted of 511 people dressed in traditional Heian court clothing and 40 cows and horses, stretching around {{cvt|800|m}} from start to finish. This festival is said to have started in the 6th century when the Emperor sent his representatives to Shimogamo and Kamigamo Shines to pray from good harvests.
The {{transliteration|ja|Saiō Matsuri}} is held in the town of Meiwa, Mie Prefecture, on the first weekend of June each year. First held in 1983, it re-enacts the march of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} from her residence at Saikū, to the nearby Ise Shrine. More than 100 people dressed in traditional Heian-period dress along a section of the old Ise {{transliteration|ja|kaido}} (pilgrimage road), before ending in the grounds of the Saikū Museum.
List of {{transliteration|ja|saiō}}
After the establishment of the {{transliteration|ja|saiō}} system by Emperor Tenmu, these were priestesses of Ise Shrine.
class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%" |
colspan="7" |{{transliteration|ja|Saiō}}Saikū Historical Museum, Meiwa, Mie: wall-display information table |
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rowspan|Date
!rowspan|{{transliteration|ja|Saiō}} !rowspan|Japanese name !rowspan|Birth / Death year !rowspan|Appointed by !rowspan"|Relationship to the Emperor |
673–686
|{{lang|ja|大来皇女}} |661–701 |Daughter |
698–701
|{{lang|ja|多紀皇女}} |?–751 |Aunt |
701–706?
|{{lang|ja|泉内親王}} |?–734 |Distant relative |
706–707?
|{{lang|ja|田形内親王}} |?–728 |Aunt |
715?–721
|Princess Kuse |{{lang|ja|久勢女王}} | |Unknown |
721–730?
|Princess Inoe |{{lang|ja|井上内親王}} |717–775 |Daughter |
744?–749
|Princess Agata |{{lang|ja|県女王}} | |Unknown |
749–756?
|Princess Oyake |{{lang|ja|小宅女王}} | |Distant relative |
758–764?
|Princess Yamao |{{lang|ja|山於女王}} | |Unknown |
772–775?
|{{lang|ja|酒人内親王}} |754–829 |Daughter |
775?–781?
|Princess Kiyoniwa |{{lang|ja|浄庭女王}} | |Distant relative |
782–796
|Princess Asahara |{{lang|ja|朝原内親王}} |779–817 |Daughter |
796–806
|Princess Fuse |{{lang|ja|布勢内親王}} |?–812 |Daughter |
806–809
|Princess Ōhara |{{lang|ja|大原内親王}} |?–863 |Daughter |
809–823
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|仁子内親王}} |?–889 |Daughter |
823–827
|Princess Ujiko |{{lang|ja|氏子内親王}} |?–885 |Daughter |
828–833
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|宜子女王}} | |Niece |
833–850
|Princess Hisako |{{lang|ja|久子内親王}} |?–876 |Daughter |
850–858
|Princess Yasuko |{{lang|ja|晏子内親王}} |?–900 |Daughter |
859–876
|Princess Yasuko |{{lang|ja|恬子内親王}} |?–913 |Sister (different mother) |
877–880
|Princess Satoko |{{lang|ja|識子内親王}} |874–906 |Sister (different mother) |
882–884
|Princess Nagako |{{lang|ja|掲子内親王}} |?–914 |Aunt |
884–887
|Princess Shigeko |{{lang|ja|繁子内親王}} |?–916 |Daughter |
889–897
|Princess Motoko |{{lang|ja|元子女王}} | |Distant relative |
897–930
|Princess Yasuko |{{lang|ja|柔子内親王}} |?–959 |Sister (same mother) |
931–936
|Princess Masako |{{lang|ja|雅子内親王}} |909–954 |Sister (different mother) |
936
|Princess Sayoko |{{lang|ja|斉子内親王}} |921–936 |Sister (different mother) |
936–945
|{{lang|ja|徽子女王}} |929–985 |Niece |
946
|Princess Hanako |{{lang|ja|英子内親王}} |921–946 |Sister (different mother) |
947–954
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|悦子女王}} | |Niece |
955–967
|Princess Rakushi |{{lang|ja|楽子内親王}} |952–998 |Daughter |
968–969
|Princess Sukeko |{{lang|ja|輔子内親王}} |953–992 |Daughter |
969–974
|Princess Takako |{{lang|ja|隆子女王}} |?–974 |Prince Akiakira |Daughter |
975–984
|Princess Noriko |{{lang|ja|規子内親王}} |949–986 |Daughter |
984–986
|Princess Saishi |{{lang|ja|済子女王}} | |Prince Akiakira |Daughter |
986–1010
|Princess Kyōshi |{{lang|ja|恭子女王}} |984–? |Prince Tamehira |Daughter |
1012–1016
|Princess Masako |{{lang|ja|当子内親王}} |1001–1023 |Daughter |
1016–1036
|Princess Senshi |{{lang|ja|嫥子女王}} |1005–1074 |Prince Tomohira |Daughter |
1036–1045
|Princess Nagako |{{lang|ja|良子内親王}} |1029–1077 |Daughter |
1046–1051
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|嘉子内親王}} |{{c.|1030}}–? | |
1051–1068
|Princess Tagako |{{lang|ja|敬子女王}} | | |
1069–1072
|Princess Toshiko |{{lang|ja|俊子内親王}} |1056–1132 | |
1073–1077
|Princess Atsuko |{{lang|ja|淳子女王}} | | |
1078–1084
|{{lang|ja|媞子内親王}} |1076–1096 | |
1087–1107
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|善子内親王}} |1077–1132 | |
1108–1123
|Princess Aiko |{{lang|ja|恂子内親王}} |1093–1132 | |
1123–1141
|Princess Moriko |{{lang|ja|守子女王}} |1111–1156 | |
1142–1150
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|妍子内親王}} |?–1161 | |
1151–1155
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|喜子内親王}} | | |
1156–1158
|Princess Asako |{{lang|ja|亮子内親王}} |1147–1216 | |
1158–1165
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|好子内親王}} |1148–1192 | |
1165–1168
|Princess Nobuko |{{lang|ja|休子内親王}} |1157–1171 | |
1168–1172
|Princess Atsuko |{{lang|ja|惇子内親王}} |1158–1172 | |
1177–1179
|Princess Isako |{{lang|ja|功子内親王}} |1176–? | |
1185–1198
|Princess Sayoko |{{lang|ja|潔子内親王}} |1179–after 1227 | |
1199–1210
|Princess Sumiko |{{lang|ja|粛子内親王}} |1196–? | |
1215–1221
|Princess Hiroko |{{lang|ja|熙子内親王}} |1205–? | |
1226–1232
|Princess Toshiko |{{lang|ja|利子内親王}} |1197–1251 | |
1237–1242
|Princess Teruko |{{lang|ja|昱子内親王}} |1231–1246 | |
1244–1246
|Princess Akiko |{{lang|ja|曦子内親王}} |1224–1262 | |
1262–1272
|Princess Yasuko |{{lang|ja|愷子内親王}} |1249–1284 | |
1306–1308
|{{lang|ja|弉子内親王}} |1286–1348 | |
1330–1331
|Princess Yoshiko |{{lang|ja|懽子内親王}} |1315–1362 | |
1333–1334
|Princess Sachiko |{{lang|ja|祥子内親王}} | | |
Notes
{{reflist|2}}
References
- Brown, Delmer and Ichiro Ishida, eds. (1979). [ Jien, c.1220], Gukanshō; "The Future and the Past: a translation and study of the 'Gukanshō,' an interpretive history of Japan written in 1219" translated from the Japanese and edited by Delmer M. Brown & Ichirō Ishida. Berkeley: University of California Press. {{ISBN|0-520-03460-0}}
- Farris, William Wayne. (1999). "Sacred Texts and Buried Treasures: Issues in the Historical Archaeology of Ancient Japan," Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp. 123–126.
- Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). [Siyun-sai Rin-siyo/Hayashi Gahō, 1652]. Nipon o daï itsi ran; ou, [https://books.google.com/books?id=18oNAAAAIAAJ&dq=nipon+o+dai+itsi+ran Annales des empereurs du Japon.] Paris: Oriental Translation Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
- Varley, H. Paul, ed. (1980). [ Kitabatake Chikafusa, 1359], Jinnō Shōtōki ("A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns: Jinnō Shōtōki of Kitabatake Chikafusa" translated by H. Paul Varley). New York: Columbia University Press. {{ISBN|0-231-04940-4}}
=See also=
- Saiin, the high priestess of the Kamo Shrine
- Kikoe-ōgimi, the high priestess of Ryukyu Kingdom
External links
{{commons category-inline}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060106075305/http://www.pref.mie.jp/saiku/hp/ Saikū Historical Museum (Japanese)]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080110232127/http://www2.mint.or.jp/~itukino/ Itsukinomiya Historical Experience Hall (Japanese)]
- [http://saioh.sub.jp/ Saio Matsuri (Japanese)]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Saio}}
Category:History of Mie Prefecture