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Kominka Zakka

Sanada Shrine Wooden Ema

Sanada Shrine Wooden Ema

Regular price ¥1,500 JPY
Regular price Sale price ¥1,500 JPY
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

*SHIPPING OPTIONS VARY DEPENDING ON THE DESTINATION, PLEASE SCROLL TO THE END OF THIS LISTING FOR MORE DETAILS.

This listing is for a wooden ema from Sanada Shrine in Nagano Prefecture.  Sanada Jingu was built in 1879 among the ruins of Ueda Castle.  It is primarily used to honour successive lords of Ueda Castle, such as the Sanada clan, Sengoku clan and the Matsudaira clan.  The front of the ema is decorated with the helmet of the warlord Sanada Nobushige. Sanada Nobushige (1516-1615) was a samurai warrior often referred to as the ‘Last Sengoku Hero’, or the ‘Crimson Demon of War’.  It also features the six coin ‘rokumonsen’ emblem of the Sanada clan. These coins are to be given to the boatman who grants passage across the River of Three Hells, and is in reference to the passage to the afterlife. 

An ema is a traditional wooden votive prayer on which Shinto and Buddhist worshippers inscribe their wishes or prayers. Ema typically depict figures and zodiac animals, and they are hung at shrines and temples in the hope that the gods receive them and answer their prayers. The very first ema were said to be painted pictures of horses which were offered to shrines in place of real horses. The tradition of donating horses goes back to one of the first emperors of Japan, down in Kyoto. This was done to appease the gods when the weather wasn’t cooperating – a white horse was given to ease unseasonably heavy rainfall, and a black horse was offered to curb a drought. Traditionally ema were very large in size and often painted by well-known artists and craftsmen. During the Edo period they began to change in size due to the number of ordinary people travelling around the country visiting shrines and temples. These everyday folks were not so wealthy so shrines began to offer small wood framed ema as an alternative. This particular type were either hand painted by artists, or by those commissioned by the shrine. Sadly not many remain as most of them were burned in ritual fires at the end of each year.                                                                                                                               

Size

12.5cm (4.9”) from top to bottom x 15.5cm (6.1”) across                                                      

Condition

It was purchased late last year and is in perfect condition.                                                   

THESE ARE SHIPPING ESTIMATES BASED ON THE CURRENT GLOBAL SITUATION                                                                 

**Germany, France, Greece, Spain, Poland, Austria, Slovakia, Lithuania, Slovenia:  NO SHIPPING.  Very strict and expensive packaging laws in place and we are not licensed to send products to these countries.  We have no plan to register at this time because the process is in some cases very expensive and complicated, plus each country has its own set of regulations and application process. 

**USA, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland, Norway: Airmail Small Packet (approx. 15-28 days).  Combined shipping available up to 2kgs for Airmail Small Packet (please send us a message).

**Asia:  Airmail Small Packet (approx. 15-21 days).  Combined shipping available up to 2kgs for Airmail Small Packet (please send us a message).

**Central Asia, Middle East, South Africa, Brazil, Mexico:  EMS Express 10-15 days.

**Russia:  No shipping methods available.

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