Encyclopedia of Shinto

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  • 9. Texts and Sources
Title Text
1 Shintō kan'yō #N/A
2 Shintō myōmoku ruijūshō (Hikita Mochimasa) A work in six books and six volumes. It is a work that categorizes the terminology of all aspects of the deities of heaven and earth, and then expounds upon these terms; it could even be classified as a dictionary of Shinto. It contains a preface dated the sixth month o...
3 Shintō nonaka no shimizu (Tomobe Yasutaka) A work in four books and four volumes compiled in 1732 by Tomobe Yasutaka. It was printed the following year. This is an introductory text explaining Shinto in easy to understand language from the point of view of Suika Shintō. The author regrets that there are some p...
4 Shintō shūsei (Tokugawa Mitsukuni) This is a compilation of Shinto works that Tokugawa Mitsukuni, the feudal lord of the Mito Clan, ordered Imai Ariyori and others to compile. After Ariyori died in 1683, his students Maruyama Yoshizumi, Tsuda Nobusada and others continued the work, and it was co...
5 Shintō taii (Yoshida Kanetomo) This is one work of the Yoshida Shintō collection. It consists of one volume, an abbreviated version of Yoshida Shintō, written by Yoshida Kanetomo in 1486 at the request of Ashikaga Yoshimasa, who wanted a general outline of Shinto. This work is also called Yuiit...
6 Shintō taiikōdan (Yoshikawa Koretari) It is also known as Shintō taii bunsho . It is a compilation in one volume of the lectures given by Yoshikawa Koretari, recorded by a student of his, Fuwa Koremasu. This work was completed in 1669. The topic of the lectures was Urabe Kanenao's Shintō taii . This work ...
7 Shintōkōshaku This is the act of expounding on the Shinto classics and Shinto doctrine to people in plain and easy to understand language, and thus educating and enlightening the masses. Shintō kōshaku is also occasionally referred to as Shintō kōdan . Tachibana Mitsuyoshi, Masuho Zankō, Tamada ...
8 Shintōshū Also known as Shosha kongen-shō , it is a collection of about fifty Shintō stories ( setsuwa ) compiled into ten volumes. It seems to have been compiled between the years of 1352 and 1361, but it is unclear who the compiler was. There is a theory that someone steeped in the traditions of th...
9 Shirushi no sugi (Ban Nobutomo) This is the work of Ban Nobutomo, consists of one volume, and was finished in 1835. It contains research into the Inari Shrine of Yamashiro Province (Fushimi Inari). One section was published in 1842 in Ōōhitsugo , second volume. The background for the writing of this w...
10 Shokishūge (Kawamura Hidene) This work is a commentary on Nihon shoki [see Kojiki and Nihon shoki (Nihongi) ] in thirty volumes, compiled by Kawamura Hidene, an official of the Owari domain and also a student of kokugaku , and his son, Masune. It is written in classical Chinese with interlinear r...
11 Suikabunshū This is a compilation of Chinese and Japanese poetry as well as Japanese essays written by Yamazaki Ansai, the founder of Suika Shintō. The work was compiled by Atobe Yoshiakira and Tomobe Yasutaka, both of whom belonged to the same lineage as Yamazaki. The work consists of three volu...
12 Sumiyoshitaishajindaiki A record in one volume of the Sumiyoshi Shrine in Settsu compiled by Tsumori Sukune Shimamaro and Tsumori Sukune Marōdo, and sent to the Jingikan (Bureau of Divinities) in the capital in 731. It bears the seal of the Sumiyoshi District Recorder and of the Settsu Provincial Recorder ( s...
13 Sōgakkōkei (Kada no Azumamaro) This was compiled by Kada no Azumamaro in one volume, and is also known by the title Sōkokugakkōkei . It is unclear when this was written. It is believed that Azumamaro wrote this to relate his own ideas about kokugaku (National Learning) and appeal to the shogunal g...
14 Tamakatsuma (Motoori Norinaga) A collection of essays by Motoori Norinaga in fourteen volumes with a table of contents, fifteen sections total. This essays were started in 1792 and were published in five stages, with three volumes each starting from 1795 until several years after Norinaga's d...
15 Tamanomihashira (Hirata Atsutane) A work in two volumes written by Hirata Atsutane, first drafted in 1812. It was published the following year. This work defined the direction that Atsutane's thinking on Shinto would take, and at the time it also made quite a stir among the circles of kokugaku schola...
16 Tenchijingi shin'chin'yōki #N/A
17 Toyoashiharajinpūwaki (Jihen) An outline of Shinto by a Buddhist priest in three volumes. In 1340 (the year of the establishment of the Southern Court), at the request of Fujiwara Renshi (Shintaikenmon'in), the Tendai priest Jihen compiled this book for the young Emperor Gomurakami. It is said that Jihen ...
18 Toyukekōtaijingūnenjūgyōjikonshiki (Matsuki Tomohiko) This is a collection of liturgical scripts for the ceremonies of the outer shrine (Gekū) of the Grand Shrines of Ise during the early Edo period in seven volumes. This work was initiated between 1661-1673 by Watarai Nobusada under orders from Watarai Matahiko, th...
19 Tsukisakaki (Suzuki Masayuki) Five volumes. It is also called Shidaionsho (The Book of the Four Great Obligations). Written by Suzuki Masayuki (1837-71), a kokugaku scholar active during the period spanning the end of Bakufu and continuing after the Meiji Restoration, it was finished in 186...
20 Ubusunashakodenshō (Mutobe Yoshika) Notes on Old Legends of the Ubusuna Shrines . Primary work by the late early modern ( bakumatsu ) Hirata School kokugaku (National Learning) scholar, Mutobe Yoshika. Includes a colophon dated the eighth lunar month of 1857. Ubusuna shrines in each region are believ...