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  2. Ta-no-Kami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ta-no-Kami

    Ta-no-Kami is also called Noushin (kami of agriculture) or kami of peasants. Ta-no-Kami shares the kami of corn, the kami of water and the kami of defense, especially the kami of agriculture associated with mountain faith and veneration of the dead (faith in the sorei). Ta-no-Kami in Kagoshima Prefecture and parts of Miyazaki Prefecture is ...

  3. Category:Agricultural deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Agricultural_deities

    Ta-no-Kami; U. Ugajin; Ukanomitama; Y. Yaksha This page was last edited on 17 June 2022, at 19:12 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...

  4. List of Japanese deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_deities

    Tamanoya-no-Mikoto, a kami believed to be the creator of Yasakani no Magatama. [26] Takitsuhiko a kami believed to bring forth rain. [27] Tamayori-hime, mother of Emperor Jimmu. [28] Ta-no-Kami (田の神), is a kami who is believed to observe the harvest of rice plants or to bring a good harvest, by Japanese farmers.

  5. Gero Ta-no-Kami Festival (下呂の田の神祭, gero no ta no kami matsuri) [191] February 14: A lion dance followed by four dancers wearing hats decorated with red, yellow and white paper performing a flower umbrella (hana kasa) dance. At the end there series of performances imitating the stages of rice farming. Gero, Gifu —

  6. Kunitama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunitama

    Kunitama (国魂) is a type of kami or god who acts as a tutelary deity or guardian of a province of Japan or sometimes other areas in Shinto. [1] [2]: 102 The term is sometimes treated as a specific deity itself especially with Hokkaidō Shrine, [2]: 394 and other colonial shrines, [3]: 53–54 [3]: 217 a or as an epithet in the case of Okunitama Shrine [4] or a part of a deity's name in the ...

  7. Ōkuninushi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ōkuninushi

    The child was thus named 'Ki(no)mata-no-Kami' (木俣神, from ki (no) mata "tree fork"). [ 70 ] [ 69 ] Ōkuninushi – in this section of the narrative given the name Yachihoko-no-Kami (八千矛神, "Deity of Eight Thousand Spears") – then wooed a third woman, Nunakawahime (沼河比売) of the land of Koshi , singing the following poem :

  8. J-Novel Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J-Novel_Club

    After coming to the conclusion that "there was a whole universe of content out there in Japan that's hardly available in the west at all," [2] Sam Pinansky began working on the business model for J-Novel Club in 2015 and "took inspiration from what the fans had started to do on their own, as well as the more traditional models for book publishing."

  9. Talk:Ta-no-Kami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Ta-no-Kami

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