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Enoshima Shrine

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Enoshima ( 江の島 ) is a small offshore island, about 4 km (2.5 mi) in circumference, at the mouth of the Katase River which flows into the Sagami Bay of Kanagawa Prefecture , Japan. Administratively, Enoshima is part of the mainland city of Fujisawa , and is linked to the Katase section of that city by a 389-metre-long (1,276 ft) bridge. Home to some of the closest sandy beaches to Tokyo and Yokohama , the island and adjacent coastline are the hub of a local resort area.

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4-543: Enoshima Shrine (江島神社) is a Shinto shrine in Enoshima , Fujisawa, Kanagawa , Japan. The shrine is dedicated to the worship of the kami Benten . Enoshima-jinja comprises three shrines, He-tsu-miya, Naka-tsu-miya and Oku-tsu-miya. According to legend, 12th-century Japanese ruler Hōjō Tokimasa visited the shrine to pray for prosperity, and there heard a prophecy from a mysterious woman, who left behind three scales, which became his family crest. Enoshima Benzaiten ,

8-664: A million visitors a year. Enoshima is now the center of Shōnan , a resort area along the coast of Sagami Bay. Enoshima is served by three nearby railway stations: Katase-Enoshima Terminus on the Odakyū Enoshima Line , Enoshima Station on the Enoshima Electric Railway ("Enoden"), and Shōnan-Enoshima Station on the Shonan Monorail . Enoshima was the Olympic harbor for the 1964 Summer Olympics . Enoshima

12-580: The goddess of music and entertainment, is enshrined on the island. The island in its entirety is dedicated to the goddess, who is said to have caused it to rise from the bottom of the sea in the sixth century. The island is the scene of the Enoshima Engi , a history of shrines on Enoshima written by the Japanese Buddhist monk Kōkei in 1047 AD. In 1880, after the Shinto and Buddhism separation order of

16-493: The new Meiji government had made the land available, much of the uplands was purchased by Samuel Cocking , a British merchant, in his Japanese wife's name. He developed a power plant and extensive botanical gardens including a very large greenhouse. Although the original greenhouse was destroyed in the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake , the botanical garden (now the Samuel Cocking Garden ) remains an attraction with over half

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