抄録 | This paper is about Naito Jushin-in’s visit to Daiju-ji Temple in Mikawa Province(present-day Okazaki-shi, Aichi-ken). This visit was on May 2, 1865 when Jushin-in was at age 66, in the course of her moving from Nobeoka to Edo. Daiju-ji Temple is where the successive Tokugawa shoguns’ memorial tablets are enshrined. And in its sub-temple named Shinkyo-in, those of Yoshikiyo Naito and his wife are enshrined. Okazaki is the place where the Naito family was based before becoming a daimyo. Furthermore, the Nakane family, who managed the Nishi honjin, were formerly samurai and relatives of the Naito family when they were in Okazaki. Although Jushin-in originally planned to stay at the Nakane family’s place; learning court nobles were on their way to Okazaki, she hesitated to stay at the Nishi honjin and stayed at Saiko-ji Temple instead. Saiko-ji Temple is the place related to the Naito family where Yoshikiyo Naito, the founder of the family, and his wife’s were buried. During Jushin-in’s stay at Saiko-ji Temple for a while, she visited Daiju-ji Temple. At Daiju-ji Temple, she paid reverence at the mausoleums of the first shogun, Ieyasu and the second, Hidetada Tokunaga, saw wall and sliding screen paintings by Tamechika Reizei in the ohojo(large abbot’s chamber), and paid reverence at Kannuki-shin which had some connection with Ieyasu Tokunaga. At Shinkyo-in, she prayed to the memorial tablets of Kiyoshige Naito and his wife. She made her visit to Daiju-ji Temple first and then to the grave of Kiyoshige Naito and his wife. Until Naito Jushin-in visited this place, nobody from the Naito clan, neither kenin nor family, had visited there for a long time. Jushin-in’s visit to Daiju-ji Temple and stay at Saiko-ji Temple renewed the intimate relationship between the Naito family and these temples. |