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Yoshino Mikumari Shrine

Coordinates: 34°21′14″N 135°52′23″E / 34.35389°N 135.87306°E / 34.35389; 135.87306
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Yoshino Mikumari-jinja
吉野水分神社
The honden, or main hall, is an Important Cultural Property
Religion
AffiliationShinto
DeityAme-no-mikumari-no-kami [sv] (main deity)
Location
Location1612 Yoshino-yama, Yoshino-chō Yoshino-gun, Nara-ken
Yoshino Mikumari Shrine is located in Japan
Yoshino Mikumari Shrine
Shown within Japan
Geographic coordinates34°21′14″N 135°52′23″E / 34.35389°N 135.87306°E / 34.35389; 135.87306
Architecture
Date establishedUnknown, possibly 806
Glossary of Shinto
Tamayori-hime (princess Tamayori)
Votive offerings

Yoshino Mikumari Shrine (吉野水分神社, Yoshino Mikumari-jinja) is a Shinto shrine located on Mount Yoshino in Yoshino district, Nara, Japan.[1] It is closely associated with Emperor Go-Daigo.

The Shrine’s deity

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The Shrine is dedicated to mikumari [Wikidata], a female Shinto kami associated with water, fertility and safe birth. Yoshino Mikumari Shrine is one of four important mikumari shrines in the former province Yamato. The shrine also houses six kami that are more or less related to mikumari (Takami-musubi-no-kami, Sukuna-hiko-no-kami, Mikogami, Ama-tsu-hiko-hi-no-ninigi-no-mikoto, Tamayori-hime-no-mikoto, and Yorozu-hata-toyo-akitsushi-hime-no-mikoto). A wooden statue of the deity Tamayori hime is registered as a National Treasure of Japan.

Shrine buildings

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The present-day buildings go back to 1605, when Toyotomi Hideyori rebuilt the shrine, as his father Toyotomi Hideyoshi once had prayed here for a son and successor. The main hall (honden), an Important Cultural Property, is an unusual structure 9 ken long and 2 ken wide. Built in the nagare-zukuri style, it has however an independent 1x1 ken unit in the kasuga-zukuri style at the center. The three resulting edifices all lie under the same bark roof, which has three dormer gables.[2]

In 2004, the shrine was designated as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Richard, Ponsonby-Fane. (1964) Visiting Famous Shrines in Japan, pp. 300-307.
  2. ^ "Yoshino Mikumari Jinja". Cultural Properties Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 1 January 2010.

References

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