Taku Seibyō

In 1699, Taku Shigefumi, the local village headman, built the Gakumonsho (later Higashihara Shosha) for the purpose of promoting education and enshrined the statue of Confucius imported from China in its lecture hall.

In 1708, the current worship hall was completed at the foot of Mount Shiihara, with a bronze statue cast in Kyoto.

After completion, the complex was called Kyōanden (恭安殿), and unusual for Edo period, was an academy open to all students regardless of their social class.

The Taku Seibyō itself is a three-bay Zen Buddhist temple-style structure decorated with a variety of Chinese-style patterns not seen in other Confucius shrines, and carvings on its exterior include the phoenix, kirin, elephant, and dragon, animals which are said to bring about a peaceful and prosperous society with good governance and education.

[3] It is located approximately 4.3 kilometers, or ten minutes by car, south of Taku Station on the JR Kyushu Karatsu Line.