Hyakudo-ishi

Shrine & Temple Buildings

Hyakudo-ishihyakudo-ishi / 百度石

A stone pillar marking the starting point for the devoted practice of making 100 round trips to the shrine in prayer.

The hyakudo-ishi is a stone marker that serves as the starting point for "ohyakudo-mairi" — the practice of walking 100 round trips between this stone and the worship hall while repeating one's prayer each time. This practice is reserved for the most earnest supplications: healing illness, conceiving a child, or ensuring a loved one's safety.

The physical toll of 100 round trips is considerable — typically one to two hours — and the willingness to endure this effort is believed to convey the depth of one's sincerity to the divine. Worshippers traditionally count their trips using 100 small stones or paper twists. Even today, figures can be seen performing ohyakudo-mairi in the early morning or late evening hours, a powerful display of faith in its most primal form.