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  2. Kamidana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamidana

    Kamidana shintai [a] are most commonly small circular mirrors, though they can also be magatama jewels, or some other object with largely symbolic value. The kami within the shintai is often the deity of the local shrine or one particular to the house owner's profession.

  3. Shinto shrine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinto_shrine

    Mount Fuji is Japan's most famous shintai. The defining features of a shrine are the kami it enshrines and the shintai (or go-shintai if the honorific prefix go-is used) that houses it. While the name literally means "body of a kami", shintai are physical objects worshiped at or near Shinto shrines because a kami is believed to reside in them. [33]

  4. Shintai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shintai

    The most common shintai are man-made objects like mirrors, swords, jewels (for example comma-shaped stones called magatama), gohei (wands used during religious rites), and sculptures of kami called shinzō (), [3] but they can be also natural objects such as rocks (shinishi ()), mountains (shintai-zan ()), trees (shinboku ()), and waterfalls (shintaki ()) [1] Before the forcible separation of ...

  5. Honden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honden

    The go-shintai is actually not divine, but just a temporary repository of the enshrined kami. [ 5 ] Important as it is, the honden may sometimes be completely absent, as for example when the shrine stands on a sacred mountain to which it is dedicated, or when there are nearby himorogi (enclosure) or other yorishiro (substitute object) that ...

  6. Shinto architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinto_architecture

    At the same time, temples in the entire country adopted tutelary kami (chinju (鎮守/鎮主) and built temple shrines called chinjusha to house them. [2] After the forcible separation of Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines ( shinbutsu bunri ) ordered by the new government in the Meiji period , the connection between the two religions was ...

  7. Mirrors in Shinto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirrors_in_Shinto

    It is said that the origin of the divine mirror dates back to China. [3] In China, more ancient divine mirrors have been unearthed than in Japan, and compared to the oldest mirror in Japan, the "Four divine mirrors with a rectangular shape inscribed in the third year of Seiryu," which is dated to 235 A.D., the oldest divine mirror in China is the "Leaf Vein Mirror (葉脈文鏡, Yōmyaku bun ...

  8. Shinboku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinboku

    A shinboku (神木) is a tree or forest worshipped as a shintai – a physical object of worship at or near a Shinto shrine, worshipped as a repository in which spirits or kami reside. [1] [2] They are often distinctly visible due to the shimenawa wrapped around them. [3]

  9. Kanjō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanjō

    The transfer does not necessarily take place from a shrine to another: the new location can be a privately owned object or a kamidana ("god-shelf", or altar) within an individual house. The case is recorded of Inari being re-enshrined in a fox hole [ 3 ] [ 4 ] In fact, the first recorded Inari kanjō , in 842, involved the kami' s transfer to ...