Kasuga-zukuri


Kasuga-zukuri is a traditional Shinto shrine architectural style which takes its name from Kasuga Taisha's honden. It is characterized by the use of a building just 1x1 ken in size with the entrance on the gabled end covered by a veranda. In Kasuga Taisha's case, the honden is just 1.9 m x 2.6 m.
Supporting structures are painted vermilion, while the plank walls are white. It has a tsumairi structure, that is, the building has its main entrance on the gabled side.
The roof is gabled, decorated with purely ornamental poles called chigi or katsuogi, and covered with cypress bark.
After the nagare-zukuri style, this is the most common Shinto shrine style. While the first is common all over Japan, however, shrines with a kasuga-zukuri honden are found mostly in the Kansai region around Nara.
If a diagonal rafter is added to support the portico, the style is called sumigi-iri kasugazukuri.

''Kasuga-zukuri'' and ''nagare-zukuri''

While superficially completely different, the kasuga-zukuri actually shares an ancestry with the most popular style in Japan, the nagare-zukuri.
The two for example share pillars set over a double-cross-shaped foundation and a roof which extends over the main entrance, covering a veranda. The foundation's configuration is typical not of permanent, but of temporary shrines, built to be periodically moved. This shows that, for example, both the nagare-zukuri Kamo Shrine and Kasuga Taisha used to be dedicated to a mountain cult, and that they had to be moved to follow the movements of the kami.
The styles also both have a veranda in front of the main entrance, a detail which makes it likely they both evolved from a simple gabled roof.

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