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Title |
Text |
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1 |
Ryūkyū shintōki |
This work is the oldest text on Shintō from the Ryūkyū Islands (present-day Okinawa), and includes in its scope the indigenous traditional religions of the area. This five volume work was written by the Jōdo Buddhist priest Taichū (1552-1639). While in his fifties, Taichū intended ... |
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2 |
Saitenryaku tsuketari saimonrei |
(Kusakado Nobutaka) Saitenryaku, with an attachment of examples from Saibunrei. Written by Kusakado Nobutaka in one volume and one attachment. It was published in 1869 as the Ibukinoya Juku edition. It was revised by Kamo Tsuneharu. Nobutaka was a student of the Hirata school in Mi... |
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3 |
Sangeyōryakuki |
This is a work from the late Kamakura period that deals with Sannō Shintō . In some instances this work is in nine and, in other cases, it consists of seven volumes and, in addition to the number of volumes, composition of this work varies dramatically depending on the manuscript. In the ... |
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4 |
Sanshatakusenkō |
(Ise Sadatake) This is a work investigating Sanshatakusen ( The Oracles of the Three Shrines , see Sansha takusen (var. Sanja takusen) ). It was written by Ise Sadatake and consists of one volume. The colophon is dated 1784. Sadatake argued that Sansha takusen , which was popular in hi... |
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5 |
Sendaikujihongitaiseikyō |
This is a Shinto work attributed to Shōtoku Taishi that expounds on the commonality of the three doctrines of Shinto, Confucianism, and Buddhism. It is compiled in seventy-two volumes, with a preface and a table of contents (divided into thirty-eight volumes called the main portio... |
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6 |
Sendaikujihonki |
A history in ten books arranged in chronological format, mainly centering around events from the beginning of the "age of the kami " down to the reign of Emperor Suiko, with other sections such as Kokuzō hongi appended. The title of this work is also occasionally abbreviat... |
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7 |
Sengūinhimon |
A work from the Kamakura period on Ryōbu Shintō; one volume. The official title is Ise daijingū mizukashiwa chinju sengūin himon . It was believed to have been compiled by Ennin, but in reality the work originated at the Jingūji of the Sengū Shrine, Sengūin, in the Watarai District of M... |
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8 |
Senkyōibun |
(Hirata Atsutane) This is a story of the experience of the young boy, Torakichi (Takayama Katsuma), who was lured into the mountains by a long-nosed goblin (a type of being known in Japanese as Tengu) and lived eight years in a village of the sages, and then returned to his own village to ... |
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9 |
Senmyō |
This refers to edicts written down in a Japanese phonetic script. Originally this referred to the verbal proclamations of the emperor, but later this term came to specifically refer to the written records of these proclamations. Compared with promulgations written in classical C... |
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10 |
Shakunihongi |
(Urabe Kanekata) This is a commentary on Nihon shoki [see Kojiki and Nihon shoki (Nihongi) ], compiled in twenty-eight volumes around the middle of the Kamakura period by Urabe Kanekata. Based on lectures his father, Kanebumi, conducted for the former Regent, Ichijō Sanetsune bet... |
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11 |
Shingakushokaiki |
This one-volume work, written by Fujitsuka Tomoaki in 1743, is also known as Kyōken senshō shokaiki . Kyōken refers to Yoshimi Yoshikazu. It is a record of numerous questions addressed by Tomoaki, priest ( shinkan ) at the Shiogama Shrine (modern day Shiwahiko and Shiogama Shrines)... |
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12 |
Shinnomihashiraki |
(Watarai Yukitada) This is a work, in one volume, dealing with the secret ceremonies surrounding the "august pillar of the heart" placed on the floor of the Main Chamber of both the Inner Shrine (Naikū) and Outer Shrine (Gekū) at Ise. Because the title of this work appears in ... |
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13 |
Shinsen kisōki |
This is a four volume work dealing with the origins and development of plastromancy ( kiboku ) in Japan. It is said to be the work of the Urabe family, and Urabe Tōtsugu seems to have presented it to Emperor Junna in the eighth month of 830. It is a noteworthy work as it contains quotes from K... |
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14 |
Shinsen shōjiroku |
This is a record of the genealogy of the ancient families living in the capital (Heian-kyō) and the five inner provinces. It was compiled near the beginning of the Heian period. It is also known variously as Shōjiroku and Shinsen shōjiroku-shō . It consists of thirty books. The comple... |
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15 |
Shinten'yoku, kōten'yoku |
#N/A |
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16 |
Shinto and Literature |
Shintō and literature. There are many ways that Shintō and literature intersect, but among this confluence, the influence of legends in the records of the shrines ( engi setsuwa ) is considerable. There are an abundant number of medieval legends influenced by kenmitsu bukkyō (exot... |
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17 |
Shinto taii |
(Yoshida Kanemi) This is another one-volume work of the Yoshida Shintō collection. With each new generation in the Yoshida family, the family head would compile a work with this title, and this text belongs to this group. The author is Yoshida Kanemi (1535-1610), who is a great grand... |
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18 |
Shintō ameno nuboko no ki |
(Izawa Banryū) A work in two volumes by Izawa Banryū, published in 1720. Banryū (1688-1730) was a samurai from the Higo Kumamoto Clan, and was a popular Shintoist during the middle years of the Edo period. His name was Nagahide, but he went by the alias Banryū. He studied Suika Shintō in ... |
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19 |
Shintō denju |
(Hayashi Razan) This is also known as Shintō denju shō . This is a work by the Confucian scholar of the early Edo period, Hayashi Razan, which expounds the secret doctrines of Shinto. It contains a wide variety of doctrine from the various groups of Shinto, based mostly on Yoshida Shint... |
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20 |
Shintō gobusho |
This is the basic texts of medieval Ise Shintō (Watarai Shintō). This is the general title given the five works: Amaterashimasu Ise nisho kōtai jingū gochinza shidaiki (or Gochinza shidaiki ), Ise nisho kōtaijin gochinza denki (or Gochinza denki ), Toyouke kōtaijin gochinza hongi ... |
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