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The Saki-Mitama (幸魂, lit."Happy/Lucky Spirit") - The happy and loving side of a whole, complete spirit (mitama); this is the spirit of blessing and prosperity.In a scene of the Nihon Shoki, kami Ōnamuchi is described in conversation with his own saki-mitama and kushi-mitama.
Mitama (三珠町, Mitama-chō) was a town located in Nishiyatsushiro District, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan. As of 2003, the town had an estimated population of 4,047 and a population density of 137.33 persons per km 2 .
A mitamaya (御霊屋, literally mitama "soul [of the dead]" + ya "house"; also called, otamaya, tamaya, or soreisha 祖霊社, or "Reibyo" 霊廟) [1] is an altar used in Shinto-style ancestor worship, dedicated in the memory of deceased forebears. It generally has a mirror symbolizing the spirits of the deceased or a tablet bearing their ...
Born in Hita, Ōita, Mitoma eventually moved to Kawasaki, Kanagawa in his earlier days, where he grew up in Miyamae-ku.He then joined the Kawasaki Frontale academy at the U10 level.
Loki takes Atar, Yukito and Mitama to the Emperor but reveals he is an illusion and the castle a giant machine named Assembly that controls the Empire with the suicide system to ensure it always remains the same. Mitama reveals people did destroy the world in religious war; the survivors building Assembly to ensure religion was forgotten.
Mitama Security: Spirit Busters (Japanese: ミタマセキュ霊ティ, Hepburn: Mitama Sekyureti) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tsurun Hatomune. It was serialized in Shueisha 's Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine from September 2019 to August 2020, and collected into five tankōbon volumes.
' one spirit, four souls ') – A philosophy within Shinto in which one's soul consists of a whole spirit called naohi that is connected with the heaven and the shikon: the ara-mitama, kushi-mitama, nigi-mitama, and saki-mitama. Ihai – A placard used to designate the seat of a deity or past ancestor. The name of the deity or past ancestor is ...
The deity's name is understood as being derived from uka no mitama, "august spirit (mitama) of food (uka)". [2] [5] While the above texts are silent regarding the deity's gender, Ukanomitama has long been interpreted to be female, perhaps due to association with other agricultural deities such as Toyouke or Ukemochi.