-
Bunrei or
wakemitama (分霊) is a
Shinto technical term that
indicates both the
process of
dividing a
Shinto kami to be re-enshrined
somewhere else (such...
-
process through which a kami,
previously divided through a
process called bunrei, is
invited to
another location and
there re-enshrined. Kanjō was originally...
- or one
particular to the
house owner's profession. A part of the kami (
bunrei) was
obtained specifically for that
purpose from a
shrine through a process...
-
Portrait of Ueda
Akinari by Koga
Bunrei...
- act of
establishing a new
shrine to a kami who
already has one is
called bunrei ("dividing the spirit"). As part of this, the kami is
invited to
enter a...
- entertainment.
Artists active in the
genre include Chishima Shunri (千島春里),
Hayasaka Bunrei (早坂文嶺),
Hirasawa Byōzan (平沢屏山),
Kakizaki Hakyō,
Kodama Teiryō (小玉貞良), Matsuura...
- kami from
another Kumano shrine through a
process of
propagation called bunrei (分霊) or kanjō (勧請). The
point of
origin of the
Kumano cult is the Kumano...
-
process is
called kanjō, and the
divided spirits bunrei (分霊, literally: "divided spirit"), go-
bunrei (御分霊), or
wakemitama (分霊). This
process of propagation...
-
selective de-enshrinement in the
Tokugawa era. The
Shinto processes of
bunrei and kanjō
exist specifically to
remove a kami from its
shrine and re-enshrine...
- 1062
during the late
Heian period when
Minamoto no
Yoriyoshi brought a
bunrei of the
Minamoto clan’s
tutelary shrine, the
Iwashimizu Hachimangū in Kyoto...