The oldest of Kyoto’s Big Three Festivals is the Aoi Matsuri on May 15 (the others are the Gion Matsuri and the Jidai Matsuri). Aoi means hollyhock, once thought to have protective power, and the festival originated in the sixth century as a means to appease angry deities at a time of bad weather, bad harvests and pestilence.
The festival is a joint event of the two Kamo shrines, Kamigamo and Shimogamo, which predate the establishment of Kyoto in 794. So ancient and so important was the festival that in the past when mention was made of ‘matsuri’, it was presumed that the reference was to Aoi. It’s mentioned too in a famous incident involving Lady Rokujo in The Tale of Genji (c.1004).
There are several colourful pre-events in the days leading up to the big parade on May 15, one of which was the famous Yabusame (horse archery) which took place yesterday at Shimogamo. Today was misogi shinji, the purification rite of the Saiodai (an unmarried woman representing the medieval Sai-in, an emperor’s daughter appointed virginal head of the shrine). Together with 40 attendants all dressed in Heian-era costume, she offered a hitogata to the purifying Mitarashi waters – and what follows is a photographic account.
(The Saio-dai, incidentally, is chosen from Kyoto’s leading tea schools and is aged around twenty. She wears the twelve-layered kimono (junito hitoe) of Heian nobility. Her headpiece is said by John Nelson in Enduring Identities to resemble the crowns of early shamanic rulers, made of branches with plum blossom and held in place by half-discs representing sun and moon. The tree branches may reflect himorogi shamanism, while the sun and moon symbols speak of Taoism and yin-yang.)
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