Daijō-sai
0 sources
Daijō-sai
Summary
Daijō-sai is a ritual ceremony of the Imperial Palace[1]. Daijō-sai draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (ritual_ceremony_of_the_imperial_palace category, ranking #2 of 4).[2]
Key Facts
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Dengai-omi-akusha (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[3].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as East Fuzokuuta-kuzu-no-inishieburi-no-aku (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[4].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as East Kashiwa-ya (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[5].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as East Omi-akusha (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[6].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Gaishu-gaki (Reiwa Daijokyu) 01.JPG[7].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Kairyuden (Reiwa Daijokyu) 01.JPG[8].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Kairyuden (Reiwa Daijokyu) 03.JPG[9].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Kairyuden (Reiwa Daijokyu) 02.JPG[10].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Minami-shinmon (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[11].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Kuroki-toro (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[12].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Nishi-shinmon (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[13].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Reiwa Daijokyu 01.JPG[14].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Reiwa Daijokyu 04.JPG[15].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Reiwa Daijokyu 05.JPG[16].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Reiwa Daijokyu 06.JPG[17].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Reiwa Daijokyu 07.JPG[18].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Emperor Akihito Daijōsai(1990).jpg[19].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Sukiden Chigi (Reiwa Daijokyu).JPG[20].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Shii-no-wae (Reiwa Daijokyu) 01.JPG[21].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Shii-no-wae (Reiwa Daijokyu) 02.JPG[22].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Usu and Kine.png[23].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as 大嘗宮内図.png[24].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as 令和の主基田.jpg[25].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as 御幘の冠.jpg[26].
- Daijō-sai's image is recorded as Okangai1.png[27].
Why It Matters
Daijō-sai draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (ritual_ceremony_of_the_imperial_palace category, ranking #2 of 4).[2] Daijō-sai has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]