- In ****an, a
chinjusha (鎮守社•鎮社, or
tutelary shrine) is a
Shinto shrine which enshrines a
tutelary kami (鎮守神, chinjugami); that is, a
patron spirit that...
-
ujigami and ubusunagami. A
shrine enshrining a
chinjugami is
called a
chinjusha.
Chinjugami differ from
ujigami in that the
latter is tied to bloodines...
-
Buddhist temples typically include a Main Hall. A
distinctive feature is the
chinjusha, a
Shinto shrine devoted to the temple's kami.
Buddhism co-existed with...
-
mountains and good health. Due to
their prominence in at
Hiyoshi Taisha the
Chinjusha of Enryaku-ji, the head
temple of
Tendai and the
shrine itself leading...
-
include one or more
Shinto shrines dedicated to
their tutelary kami ("
Chinjusha"), and in that case a
torii marks the shrine's entrance.
Benzaiten is...
-
shrines with
temples (jingū-ji) were destro****
while temples with
shrines (
chinjusha) were tolerated. As a result,
shrines with
temples within them are now...
- 1946. Many
shrines carrying that shōgō
adopted it only
after the war.
Chinjusha (鎮守社•鎮社, or
tutelary shrine)
comes from
Chinju written as 鎮守 or sometimes...
- In East
Asian Mahayana Buddhism, the
Sangharama are a
class of
deities who are
guardians of
Buddhist temples and monasteries.
Equivalent to the Taoist...
- [user-generated source] "Jinja to
Matsuri no Chishiki". Ujigami, ubusunagami,
chinjusha (in ****anese). Hachiman-gū.
Retrieved 20 July 2011. 小項目事典,デジタル大辞泉,世界大百科事典内言及...
-
enshrining the
statue of
Buddha or of a
bodhisattva and
dedicated to prayer.
chinjusha (鎮守社/鎮主社) – a
small shrine built at a
Buddhist temple and
dedicated to...