- 41–49:
Other departments volume 50:
Miscellaneous laws The
Engishiki Jinmyōchō is the part of the
Engishiki where the main
shrines and kami of ****an...
-
Imperial patronage during the
early Heian period.
According to the
Engishiki Jinmyocho, the much
lesser known Nunakuma Shrine in ****uyama is the
source by which...
- It was
originally two shrines, and both are
mentioned in the
Engishiki Jinmyocho written in 927.: 124 Its area was very
strategically important on the...
- "Kakuyama-no-uneo-no-kono****a-ni-zasu-kami" (香山(かぐやま)の畝尾の木の下に坐す神). The
engishiki jinmyōchō (延喜式神名帳)
mentions the Uneotsu-Tamoto
shrine (畝尾都多本神社, uneotsu-tamoto jinja)...
- was
during Emperor Suijin or
Emperor Nintoku's reign. In the
Engishiki Jinmyocho, it was
listed as a
Myojin Taisha in 927. The
shrine is
important in Oki...
- and agriculture.: 6 It is
listed as a
Myojin Taisha in the
Engishiki Jinmyocho.
Harvest Festival (豊年祭, Hōnensai) is a
fertility festival celebrated every...
-
Emperor Tenmu started the
festival in 675 AD. All
shrines of the
Engishiki Jinmyocho had to
perform the ceremony. In
ancient times,
people held
domestic rites...
-
service to pray for a good harvest, were
mostly decided by the
Engishiki Jinmyōchō (延喜式神名帳,
Engishiki Shrine Name Book), but once the Ritsuryō
system began...
- 203
Myojin Taisha or the 492
Shikinai Taisha listed in the
Engishiki Jinmyocho The term
became more
strict in the
Empire of ****an. In that time it almost...
-
Ibaraki Prefecture This
shrine to
Kushinadahime is
classified in the
Jinmyōchō (神名帳, lit. 'Register of
Shrine Names')
section of the
Engishiki as a 'notable...