
The Tateyama Faith
nature
立山信仰
Mt. Tate has been considered sacred for centuries, drawing pilgrims who believed the climb offered spiritual purification and passage into the Pure Land after death. From the eighth century, ascetics left bronze artifacts at the summits as evidence of their training on the mountain. The volcanic landscape, with its bubbling mud pools at Jigokudani, came to represent the Buddhist hell, and ascending through it symbolized rebirth. By the nineteenth century, an estimated 6,000 pilgrims made the climb annually, and lodging villages grew up around the mountain to accommodate people traveling from across Japan.
Tateyama is one of Japan's three sacred mountains alongside Fuji and Hakusan. The Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route crosses 37km through the Northern Alps between Toyama and Omachi (Nagano) via buses, ropeways, and a trolleybus. In April and May, the Murodo plateau snow corridor walls reach 15 to 20 meters. The Mikurigaike volcanic crater lake at 2,405 meters is one of Japan's highest alpine lakes. Accommodation at Murodo (2,450 meters) books out months in advance for the May snow-wall period.
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