Nan'yō Shrine
Nanyo Shrine (南洋神社, Nan'yō-jinja) is a Shinto shrine located on the island of Koror, in Palau. The shrine was the ichinomiya of the government of the South Seas Mandate, a League of Nations mandated territory administered by the Empire of Japan. It was established in 1940 and designated for the veneration of Amaterasu Omikami.[1]
Nanyo Shrine (南洋神社) | |
---|---|
Nanyo Shrine at Koror – circa 1940 | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Shinto |
Deity | Amaterasu |
Type | Kanpei-taisha |
Location | |
Location | Koror, Palau |
Architecture | |
Date established | 1–3 November 1940 |
Destroyed | 1944 |
Glossary of Shinto |
History
The process which led to the establishment of the shrine began mid-1930s when the regional planning agency (Nan'yō Takushoku) was charged with the Japanization of Micronesia.[2] The chief advocate for the shrine was Domoto Teiichi, who had been the Private Secretary to the Governor of the South Seas Mandate since 1936.[1]
The enshrinement ceremonies took three days, November 1–3, 1940 (Showa 15, 1st–3rd day of the 11th month). The shrine was situated at Koror because it was the Japanese colonial capital. From the outset, the Nan'yō Shrine was officially designated one of the Kanpei-taisha (官幣大社), meaning that it stood in the first rank of government-supported shrines.[3] The shrine was construed by the Japanese government as marking "a step forward in the sacred task of constructing a New East Asian Order."[4]
When the Allied forces threatened Palau in late 1944, the kami and sacred symbols of the shrine were evacuated to Japan by submarine. The shrine remained untouched by American bombing; but Japan's defeat in World War II ended this colonial administration and a sense of reverence for the shrine structures which were dismantled for use in rebuilding Koror. Only the stone steps to the upper platform and the great stone lanterns still remain as evidence of the former shrine precincts.[5]
In 1983, plans were developed for a reconstruction of the shrine at its former site,[5] and a miniature replica of the original shrine was completed with the funding of private sponsors from Japan in 1993.[6]
Notes
- Peattie, Mark R. (1988). Nanʻyō: the rise and fall of the Japanese in Micronesia, 1885–1945, p. 226.
- Guichard-Anguis, Sylvie et al. (2009). Japanese Tourism and Travel Culture, p. 181.
- Peattie, pp. 225–229.
- Peattie, p. 229.
- Peattie, p. 339 n61.
- 南洋神社, Asahi Shimbun, September 21, 2009