Encyclopedia of Shinto

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1 Ijun A Shinto-derived new religion from Okinawa founded by Takayasu Ryūsen (1934-). Takayasu was born in the Okinawan city of Naha in 1934 and, from an early age, played children's roles in the Okinawan theatre. It is reported that, while being evacuated to Taiwan near the end of World War ...
2 Ikeda Mitsumasa (169-82) Early Edo-period lord of Okayama Domain in Bizen Province (present-day Okayama Prefecture). Common name Shintarō, and posthumous title Hōrekkō. Born in 1609 to Ikeda Toshitaka (1584-1616), the previous lord of Okayama Domain. Mitsumasa inherited the title of daimyō (...
3 Ikenie A kind of offering ( shinsen ) in which a living animal is presented to the kami . A few such living offerings are still conducted today, including white chickens offered at the Grand Shrines of Ise. According to Engishiki , however, a variety of animals were offered in ancient times, in...
4 Ikibina matsuri Living doll festival. On April third at Ichinomiyaminashi Jinja in Hida, Miya Village, Ōno-gun, Gifu prefecture, a rite is performed in which seven women are chosen to play the role of living dolls, and are lined up in front of the kami . Afterwards the living dolls throw mochi (pounde...
5 Ikigami A person either worshipped while alive as a kami , or revered for his or her exemplary " kami -like" existence. Venerated for their remarkable power and charisma, individuals worshiped as living kami are usually persons of high station, such as the emperor, or individual...
6 Ikugui, Tsunukui (Kojiki)(Nihongi) Other names: Tsu no kui( Kojiki, Nihongi ) The deities Ikugui and Tsunukui (or Tsunugui) were paired kami which came into being as the fourth of the first "seven generations of the age of the kami " ( kamiyo ). The name Ikugui comes from iku, which means to b...
7 Ikuta Yorozu (181-37) Kokugaku (National Learning) scholar of the late Edo period. Born in 1801 to Ikuta Nobukatsu, samurai retainer of Tatebayashi Domain in Kōzuke Province (present-day Gunma Prefecture). His formal name was Kuniho (or Kunihide), and he used the epistolary name Daichū Dōji...
8 Ikutamayoribime (Kojiki)(Nihongi) The daughter of Suetsumimi no mikoto and lover of Ōmononushi. According to Kojiki , the attractive Ikutamayoribime had a fine-looking male visitor who came to her each night, yet whose name she did not know. At last Ikutamayoribime became pregnant, and in order t...
9 Imaizumi Sadasuke (1863-1944) Educator and Shintoist of the Meiji, Taisho and Showa periods. Born on the ninth day of the second month of 1863 in Sendai Domain (present-day Miyagi Prefecture), third son of Imaizumi Tsutayoshi, vassal of the chief retainer Katakura clan. In 1874, at the bequest of his ...
10 Imi Imi means abstinence or taboo, or the avoidance of that which is abnormal ( magakoto ), imperfect ( tsumi ) and polluted ( kegare ), and the removal of those states. Originally 忌み and 斎み (both pronounced imi ) were synonyms, in the sense that both meant removing abnormality, imperfecti...
11 Imikotoba Taboo words. Special words used by people performing kami rituals, and by those attending them, in the Imperial Palace or in shrines. People used imikotoba for the duration of the ritual in the place where it was being performed in order to preserve the purity of the rite by avoiding ce...
12 Imperial Restoration (Ōsei fukko) The overthrow of the Tokugawa shogunate and the installation of a system of direct rule by the emperor. The inspiration for an imperial restoration and the movement toward direct imperial rule spread among activists following the signing of the trade treaties with som...
13 Inaba Masakuni (1834-98) First superintendent ( kanchō ) of Shintō Honkyoku, one of the thirteen sects of prewar Shinto ( Shintō jūsanpa ) and a Viscount ( shishaku ) in the modern system of Japanese court ranks. Born on the twenty-sixth day of the fifth month of 1834 as the second son of Niwa Nagatomi, ...
14 Inadama Inadama is the spirit that dwells within the rice plant and governs its cultivation and successful harvest. From ancient times people prayed for a bountiful harvest by welcoming the descent of the Ta no kami (the deity of the rice fields) from the mountains. In autumn, when the harves...
15 Inadanomiyanushisuganoyatsumimi [Inada no miyanushi suga no yatsumimi] (Kojiki) Other names: Inada no miyanushi susa no yatsumimi no kami( Nihongi ) "Master(s) of the Inada palace at Suga." After killing the serpent Yamata no orochi at Suga, Susanoo took as wife Kushinadahime, and gave the name Inada no ...
16 Inari Shinkō The cult connected to the kami Inari and Inari's retinue. In addition to its relationship to food or agriculture, Inari faith takes a variety of other forms including "estate kami" ( yashikigami ) and others. Inari faith is widespread and shrines devoted to Inari number m...
17 Inbe Shintō One lineage of Shinto. Transmitted by the Inbe clan and commonly held to have been advocated by Inbe Masamichi (n.d.). Claiming Futodama as its ancestral patriarch, the ancient Inbe clan is said to have been in charge of court rituals together with the Nakatomi clan. However, it is be...
18 Inbe no Hironari (n.d.) Court functionary of the early Heian period. Apart from being listed in the Nihon kōki as having been conferred the Lower Junior Fifth court rank on the seventeenth day of the eleventh month of 808, he is absent from the written record. He changed his family name to a variant on th...
19 Inbe no Masamichi (n.d.) Shintoist of the Muromachi period. Masamichi was likely from a branch of the Inbe clan in the Department of Divinities (Jingikan), though no detailed records of his life exist. Inbe is thought to be the author of the Jindai no maki kuketsu , dated to 1367 based on its foreword. On...
20 Inoue Kowashi (1843-95) Bureaucrat and politician of the Meiji era, who used the epistolary name Goin. Born on the eighteenth day of the twelfth month of 1843 in the castle town of Kumamoto as the third son of Iida Gongobei, a vassal of the "Nagaoka Inspector" ( nagaoka kenmotsu , a high of...