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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 ...
The folkloricist Kunio Yanagita theorizes with words such as "river-child migration" that these seasonal changes between kappa and yamawaro comes from the seasonal changes between faith and the field gods and the mountain gods (Yama-no-Kami) and that since birds could often be heard in many places during those times, it may be related to the ...
Furthermore, kami, who are normally venerated (not worshiped) in shrines, may inhabit natural sites, rocks, mountains, rivers, etc., and protect mountains (yama no kami), fields (ta no kami), or paths (sae no kami). These "earthly kami" thus reside in the world.
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Tano (Ta Kora), the Akan God of war and strife; Ta-no-Kami, a Japanese spirit believed to observe the harvest of rice plants; Tano languages, a group of Kwa languages spoken in the Tano River region; Ahsoka Tano, a character in the Star Wars franchise; Hopi-Tewa, a Pueblo group from Arizona; Bofoakwa Tano, a football team from Sunyani, Ghana
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In Japanese Ko-ShintÅ, due to the blessings obtained from water sources, hunting grounds, mines, forests, and awe and reverence for the majestic appearance of volcanos and mountains, these geographic feature are believed to be where the God resides or descends, and are sometimes called Iwakura or Iwasaka, the edge of the everlasting world (the land of the gods or divine realm).