Sanno Shrine
Encyclopedia
The , located about 900 metres south-east of the atomic bomb hypocentre in Nagasaki, is noted for its one-legged stone torii
at the shrine entrance.
The epicenter of the bomb's destructive force was located appromimately 800 meters from the shrine (in the right background of the image the deformed torii on this page).
One support column was knocked down; but the other somehow remained standing, even though it was rotated about 30 degrees on its pedestal base. The central part of the shrine is located just behind where the photographer would have stood in order to capture the recent photograph which shows the current state of the still-standing column.
The dead parts of the living trees have been enveloped by new growth.
Torii
A is a traditional Japanese gate most commonly found at the entrance of or within a Shinto shrine, where it symbolically marks the transition from the profane to the sacred...
at the shrine entrance.
Torii
The well-known was one of the unanticipated consequences of the atomic bomb blast on August 9, 1945.The epicenter of the bomb's destructive force was located appromimately 800 meters from the shrine (in the right background of the image the deformed torii on this page).
One support column was knocked down; but the other somehow remained standing, even though it was rotated about 30 degrees on its pedestal base. The central part of the shrine is located just behind where the photographer would have stood in order to capture the recent photograph which shows the current state of the still-standing column.
Trees
The surviving trees of Sannō Shrine have became another living demonstration of destruction and re-growth. Two large camphor trees was scorched, burned and stripped of all leaves by the bomb's shock wave; and yet, despite everything, the trees survived. One tree in Nagasaki was designated a natural monument on February 15, 1969.The dead parts of the living trees have been enveloped by new growth.