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Ōkuninushi indirectly appears in a narrative set during the reign of Emperor Suinin. Prince Homuchiwake (本牟智和気命), Suinin's son with his first chief wife Sahohime (狭穂姫命, also Sawajihime), was born mute, unable to speak "[even when his] beard eight hands long extended down over his chest" until he heard the cry of a swan (or ...
Sukuna-Biko-Na (少名毘古那) A small deity of medicine and rain, who created and solidified the land with Ōkuninushi. Sumiyoshi sanjin, the gods of the sea and sailing. Tajimamori (田道間守), god who obtained the tokijiku no kagu no mi in Tokoyo-no-kuni, and hailed as "god of wagashi" (sweets, confections).
Originally, Begin Again Open Mic was aired on JTBC from December 29, 2020 to February 11, 2021. A New Year Special titled Begin Again - Intermission (비긴어게인 - 인터미션) aired from January 6, 2023 to February 10, 2023, with two lineups airing interwoven.
Reunion 3: Singles Cruise (also known as Class Reunion 3; Finnish: Luokkakokous 3 – Sinkkuristeily) is a 2021 Finnish comedy film directed by Renny Harlin. [1] [2] It is the third entry of the Reunion film series, and the only film in the film series that Taneli Mustonen, who directed the previous films, was not involved in making.
Izumo, known as the realm of gods or the land of myths, is Izumo-taisha's province. Its main structure was originally constructed to glorify the great achievement of Ōkuninushi, considered the creator of Japan. Ōkuninushi was devoted to the building of the nation, in which he shared many joys and sorrows with the ancestors of the land.
April 16, 2021 (second time) August 6, 2021 [405] Crayon Shin-chan: Shrouded in Mystery! The Flowers of Tenkazu Academy: Wataru Takahashi: Yumiko Kobayashi, Miki Narahashi, Toshiyuki Morikawa, Satomi Kōrogi: April 23, 2021: July 30, 2021 [245] Earwig and the Witch: Gorō Miyazaki
In the Izumo no Kuni no Miyatsuko no Kanʼyogoto, Ōnamochi (Ōkuninushi), after relinquishing his authority over the land, attaches his nigitama (和魂, 'gentle spirit') in an 'eight-hand mirror' (八咫鏡 yata no kagami), which he then enshrined in Miwa under the name 'Yamato-no-Ōmononushi-Kushimikatama-no-Mikoto' to serve as a patron of ...
[6] The original shrine property was returned to the shrine organization in October 1961 as a result of lengthy legal and legislative appeals. [7] The shrine building was moved in 1963 to its present location to make way for Federal Housing Administration redevelopment. The shrine was restored from 1968-1969 at a cost of $170,000.