Encyclopedia of Shinto

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1 Yamabiraki "Opening of the mountain." An event by which a mountain is opened the first time in a given year to climbers. The event held to bring the climbing season to a close is called yamajimai ("closing of the mountain"). Mountains have been regarded since ancient times ...
2 Yamaboko One type of float ( dashi ) used in festival processions. A "mountain" or other shape is constructed on top of a wheeled platform and topped by a spear or halberd. This kind of float is said to have developed from the Heian-period shirushi no yama ("sign-mountain"...
3 Yamada Akiyoshi (1844-1892) A patriot ( shishi ) of the Restoration period and a Meiji military man and politician. Born in 1844 in present-day Yamaguchi Prefecture's Hagi City as the son of a retainer of the Chōshū Domain. His childhood name was Ichinojō and his epistolary name was Kūsai. He studied ...
4 Yamada Yoshio (1873–1958) A scholar of Japanese philology and literature who was active from the later Meiji through the Shōwa eras. Born in Toyama Prefecture on May 10, 1873, Yamada dropped out of Toyama's ordinary middle school, then passed the teacher's license examination for elementary an...
5 Yamaga Sokō (1622-1685) An early Edo-period scholar of Confucianism and Military Science. His formal name was Takasuke, his style was Shikei, and he had the epistolary names Sokō and Inzan. Born in 1622 in Aizu Wakamatsu, he began his study of the Neo-Confucian Zhuxi under Hayashi Razan at the a...
6 Yamaguchi Okinari (1831-1886) A Meiji-era scholar of the Grand Shrines of Ise ( Ise Jingū ). His childhood name was Tanekichi, his common name was Denbee, later changed to Okinari, and his epistolary names were Tōen and Shunpo. He was born in the Watarai District of Ise Province (present-day Mie Prefec...
7 Yamakage Shintō A new religion that emerged from the so-called "ancient Shinto ( Ko Shintō )" tradition. The Yamakage family does not feature in historical accounts, but it claims to be an old Shinto family that was deeply trusted by and served successive generations of the imperial hous...
8 Yamamiya, Satomiya "Mountain shrine" and "village shrine." In cases where a shrine complex is composed of multiple sanctuaries, the one located at the top or midway up the side of a mountain is called the yamamiya (mountain shrine), while the one located at the foot of the mountai...
9 Yamamoto Nobuki (1873-1944) A scholar of modern Shintō history and D.Lit ( bungaku hakushi ). Born in 1873 to a family of hereditary Shintō priests ( shinshoku ) at Tachima village, Kita-Uwa District, Ehime Prefecture, he became a follower of the Shinto sect Konkōkyō. In 1895 he graduated from Kokug...
10 Yamanokami [Yama no kami] " Kami of the mountain." While the term yama no kami is a general expression referring to any kami dwelling in a mountain, a number of differences exist between low-land agriculturalists and mountain folk (people who make their living from various forestry ...
11 Yamatanoorochi [Yamata no orochi] (Kojiki)(Nihongi) A great serpent (the name means "eight-forked-snake") defeated by Susanoo. Banished from the Plain of High Heaven, the kami Susanoo descended to the peak of Torikami at the headwaters of the Hi River in Izumo Province (believed to b...
12 Yamato An alternate name for the country of Japan. Yamato is also written 日本, 山跡, 倭, and 夜麻登. Originally, this was the place name for the area around the present day city of Tenri in Nara Prefecture, but it later became the name for one of the five kingdoms of the Kinai region. (Yamato Province, a...
13 Yamato bashiri "Dash of the mountain men." A rite performed on November 27 at Usobuki Hachiman Shrine in Buzen City, Fukuoka Prefecture. Before dawn, one of the deputy leaders ( jikanza ) from the village group in charge of festivals ( miyaza ) performs ablutions ( misogi ) and draws water ...
14 Yamato damashii Literally, "Japanese spirit."Alternately written 日本魂 or 大和魂. This term is often contrasted with "Chinese Learning" ( karasae ), that is, knowledge and scholarship imported to Japan from China. Yamato damashii refers to an inherent faculty of common-sens...
15 Yamatokatsuragihōzanki A one-volume Ryōbu Shintō text of the Kamakura period which details the characteristics of the kami of heaven and earth based on Ryōbu Shintō theory. In the opening of the text, it is declared that the work was "written by Gyōki Bosatsu [the Bodhisattva Gyōki]," but such em...
16 Yamatokyō A Shinto-derived new religious movement founded by Hozumi Kenkō (1913-76), who had experienced religious practice at the Shugendō center Dewa Sanzan. It began in 1931 when Kenkō established the Yudonosan Kitōjo (Mount Yudono Invocatory Prayer Center). Even today, the group...
17 Yamatonoōkunitama [Yamato no ōkunitama] (Nihongi) Other names: Yamato no ōkunitama no kami The central deity ( saijin ) of the Ōyamato Shrine, but possessing ambiguous attributes. According to Nihongi's record of the sixth year of Emperor Sujin's reign, Yamato no Ōkunitama was originally enshrine...
18 Yamatotakeru [Yamato takeru no mikoto] (Kojiki)(Ninongi) Other names: Ousu no mikoto ( Kojiki, Nihongi ), Yamatooguna no miko ( Kojiki ), Yamatooguna ( Nihongi ). A son of Emperor Keikō, and father to Emperor Chūai. Yamatotakeru's mother was Ōiratsume of Inabi in Harima, the daughter of Wakatak...
19 Yamatsumi "mountain kami ". Generic name for any kami identified with a mountain, or that dwells in a mountain. Also called yama no kami ( kami of the mountain). The original meaning of yamatsumi is yama-tsu-mi ("holder of the mountain"), signifying that the kami posses...
20 Yamazaki Ansai (1619-1682) An early Edo-period scholar of Confucianism and Shinto. His style was Moriyoshi, his common name was Kaemon, and his epistolary name was Ansai. His posthumous "spirit-shrine" name ( reisha-gō ) was Suika. Born in Kyoto on the ninth day of the twelfth month in ...