Utsushihikanasaku | |
---|---|
Major cult centre | Hotaka Shrine |
Personal information | |
Parents |
|
UtsushihikanasakuWatatsumi and the Oyagami or tutelary deity of the Azumi people.[1][2][3][4]
(宇都志日金拆命) is a Japanese deity, son ofHe is also known by the name Hotakami no Mikoto.[2][3][4] He is said to have descended to earth on the nearby Mount Hotakadake.[5]
He is considered the ancestor of the Azumi people.[6] Azumi-no-isora is also considered an ancestral deity of them, but has a different name and myth.[7]
He is worshipped at Hotaka Shrine.[2][3] In the central Honden.[2] It is a prominent Myojin Taisha[8].[2] An agricultural shrine in Azumino used by Azumi people who moved inland to become farmers..[2][3] which also worships his father Watatsumi.[2][3][4]
Genealogy
- Red background is female.
- Green background means groups
- Bold letters are three generations of Hyuga.
See Also
References
Bibliography
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hotaka jinja.
- Grumbach, Lisa (2005). Sacrifice and Salvation in Medieval Japan: Hunting and Meat in Religious Practice at Suwa Jinja (PhD). Stanford University.
- Inoue, Takami (2003). "The Interaction between Buddhist and Shinto Traditions at Suwa Shrine." In Rambellli, Fabio; Teuuwen, Mark, eds. (29 August 2003). Buddhas and Kami in Japan: Honji Suijaku as a Combinatory Paradigm. Routledge. ISBN 978-1134431236.
- Jinchōkan Moriya Historical Museum, ed. (2015). 神長官守矢資料館のしおり (Jinchōkan Moriya Shiryōkan no shiori) (in Japanese) (3rd ed.).
- Kanai, Tenbi (1982). 諏訪信仰史 (Suwa-shinkō-shi) (in Japanese). Meicho Shuppan. ISBN 978-4626001245.
- Kodai Buzoku Kenkyūkai, ed. (2017). 古代諏訪とミシャグジ祭政体の研究 (Kodai Suwa to Mishaguji Saiseitai no Kenkyū) (in Japanese) (Reprint ed.). Ningensha. ISBN 978-4908627156.
- Miyaji, Naokazu (1937). 諏訪史 第二卷 後編 (Suwa-shi, vol. 2, part 2). 信濃教育会諏訪部会 (Shinano kyōikukai Suwa-bukai).
- Miyasaka, Mitsuaki (1992). 諏訪大社の御柱と年中行事 (Suwa-taisha no Onbashira to nenchu-gyōji) (in Japanese). Kyōdo shuppansha. ISBN 978-4-87663-178-0.
- Muraoka, Geppo (1969). 諏訪の祭神 (Suwa no saijin) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Yūzankaku-shuppan.
- Oh, Amana ChungHae (2011). Cosmogonical Worldview of Jomon Pottery. Sankeisha. ISBN 978-4-88361-924-5.
- Suwa Shishi Hensan Iinkai, ed. (1995). 諏訪市史 上巻 原始・古代・中世 (Suwa Shishi, vol. 1: Genshi, Kodai, Chūsei) (in Japanese). Suwa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Tanigawa, Kenichi, ed. (1987). 日本の神々―神社と聖地〈9〉美濃・飛騨・信濃 (Nihon no kamigami: Jinja to seichi, vol. 9: Mino, Hida, Shinano) (in Japanese). Hakusuisha. ISBN 978-4-560-02509-3.
- Terada, Shizuko; Washio, Tetsuta, eds. (2010). 諏訪明神 -カミ信仰の原像 (Suwa Myojin: Kami shinkō no genzō) (in Japanese). Iwata Shoin. ISBN 978-4-872-94608-6.
- Ueda, Masaaki; Gorai, Shigeru; Miyasaka, Yūshō; Ōbayashi, Taryō; Miyasaka, Mitsuaki (1987). 御柱祭と諏訪大社 (Onbashira-sai to Suwa Taisha) (in Japanese). Nagano: Chikuma Shobō. ISBN 978-4-480-84181-0.
- Yazaki, Takenori, ed. (1986). 諏訪大社 (Suwa Taisha). Ginga gurafikku sensho (in Japanese). Vol. 4. Ginga shobō.
This page will be placed in the following categories if it is moved to the article namespace.
Categories: This page will be placed in the following categories if it is moved to the article namespace.
Categories: