Mikami Shrine
Mikami Shrine (Japanese: 御上神社) is a Shintoist shrine in Yasu City, Shiga Prefecture, Japan. A Kanpei-taisha, it is located at the foot of Mount Mikami (432 meters above sea level), a prominent hill in this flat area near Lake Biwa.
Mikami Shrine | |
---|---|
The Main Building of Mikami Shrine, a National Treasure | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Shinto |
Location | |
Shown within Japan | |
Geographic coordinates | 35.0500°N 136.0274°E |
Glossary of Shinto |
Legend and History
The shrine's legends tell that it was established when Ame-no-mikage-no-mikoto, Amaterasu's grandson, came down on Mout Mikami, as its Shintai, during the reign of Emperor Kōrei of the third century B.C., and that a building of worship was built by Fujiwara no Fuhito in the current place ca. 700 A.D. The shrine appears in the "Shrines Volume" of the "Engishiki (Japanese: 延喜式", "Procedures of the Engi Era") of the tenth century A.D.
National Treasure
The shrine's main building, built in the Kamakura Period, is a National Treasure. There are other Important Cultural Properties in the shrine compound.[1]
Festivals
The "Zuiki Festival of Mikami", celebrated every October as a harvesting festival, is an Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property. [2] The rice for Emperor Showa's first Niiname Festival in 1925 was grown in a paddy field nearby, which is celebrated every year in June by a rice planting ceremony.
- The Worship Building, an Important Cultural Property (where weddings are often held)
- Mount Mikami, as the Shrine's Shintai
- The Outer Shrine on top of Mount Mikami
- The rice for Emperor Showa was grown here.