2013年12月23日月曜日

8.A kyudo place


A kyudo place means the exercise hall for performing kyudo and archery. Seki handling those of a Kinteki place and an Enteki place with two kind, and bow and arrows -- since things are accompanied by danger, the design considered safely is made. It is annexed to the prefecture, the city, and the municipal public athletic plant in many cases.

 

 A Kinteki place is explained. The distance from those who shoot an arrow to a target is 28 m. Usually, a target 36 cm in diameter is placed. The ground is aslant piled so that an arrow may not be cracked in Matoba, and this is called Aduchi. Most kyudo places perform the usual exercise now in a Kinteki exercise hall from a junior high school ? university and a public establishment exercise hall to a private exercise hall. Since it is comparatively easy to take plottage, a home does not have few kyudo houses which build the simple exercise hall one person or for two persons, either.

 
 
 

 An Enteki place is explained. Generally, there is 60 m of distance from a shooting line to a target. Usually, a target 1 m in diameter is placed. Since a large site is required, there is few installation of an exclusive Entekki place. Aduchi of filling to Matoba is nothing. Combined use with the exercise hall and archery in which juxtaposition with a Kinteki place was designed by the up-and-down two-story building in Kinteki-Enteki places, such as the Tokyo Budokan Hall kyudo place, on restrictions of plottage by most now is also seen.

 

 "Kamidana" is put on the kyudo place. It is explained. Kamidana is the shelf which deified God of Shintoism. It is said that there are three kinds of household Shinto altars, and there is a full-scale spin-out thing of a shrine which deified Onreisya for deifying the soul of Sakkyu which put the card of God in the form of Miya which imitated the small shrine, and an ancestor who is equivalent to a Buddhistic Buddhist altar, and the object of worship. It can be said that Kamidana is what is an altar of Shintoism (religion) and shows the domain of God as a sacred place. Although the household Shinto altar remains in some public schools and a private school now, it is not installed simultaneously with establishment of a public judo area or kendo place, and a kyudo place. It may be able to be said that the household Shinto altar in an exercise hall was the symbol of thought and a wealth-and-military-strength-of-a-country policy which the national government performed aiming at building the new organization centering on the Emperor and which respects the Emperor.
 

0 件のコメント:

コメントを投稿