Umenomiya Taisha
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Umenomiya Taisha
Summary
Umenomiya Taisha is a taisha[1]. It draws 63 Wikipedia views per month (taisha category, ranking #11 of 14).[2]
Key Facts
- Umenomiya Taisha is located in Ukyō Ward[3].
- Umenomiya Taisha is located in Yamashiro Province[4].
- Umenomiya Taisha is located in Kadono district[5].
- Umenomiya Taisha is in the country of Japan[6].
- Umenomiya Taisha's instance of is recorded as taisha[7].
- Umenomiya Taisha's instance of is recorded as Myōjin Taisha[8].
- Umenomiya Taisha's instance of is recorded as Shikinaisha[9].
- Umenomiya Taisha's instance of is recorded as Shrines receiving Tsukinami-sai and Niiname-sai offerings[10].
- Umenomiya Taisha's instance of is recorded as Shinto shrine[11].
- Umenomiya Taisha's founder is recorded as Tachibana no Kachiko[12].
- Umenomiya Taisha is part of Twenty-Two Shrines[13].
- Umenomiya Taisha is part of List of Shikinaisha in Yamashiro Province[14].
- Umenomiya Taisha's Commons category is recorded as Umenomiya Taisha[15].
- Umenomiya Taisha comprises Engishiki subshrine[16].
- Umenomiya Taisha's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 35.004071, 'lon': 135.694893}[17].
- Umenomiya Taisha's location of formation is recorded as Idedera-ato[18].
- Umenomiya Taisha's dedicated to is recorded as Ōyamatsumi[19].
- Umenomiya Taisha's dedicated to is recorded as Konohanasakuyahime[20].
- Umenomiya Taisha's dedicated to is recorded as Ninigi[21].
- Umenomiya Taisha's dedicated to is recorded as Hoori[22].
- Umenomiya Taisha's official website is recorded as http://www.umenomiya.or.jp/[23].
- Umenomiya Taisha's time of earliest written record is recorded as 836[24].
- Umenomiya Taisha's described by source is recorded as Kokugakuin University Shrine database (old)[25].
- Umenomiya Taisha's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'ojp-hani', 'text': '梅宮坐神'}[26].
- Umenomiya Taisha's legal form is recorded as non-denominational[27].
Body
Geography
Umenomiya Taisha is in the country of Japan[6]. Located in include Ukyō Ward[3], a ward of Japan[28], in Japan[29], founded in 1931[30]; Yamashiro Province[4], a province of Japan[31], in Japan[32]; and Kadono district[5], a former district of Japan[33], in Japan[34], founded in 1879[35]. Part of include Twenty-Two Shrines[13], a shrine rank[36], in Japan[37], founded in 1039[38] and List of Shikinaisha in Yamashiro Province[14], a list[39].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include taisha[7], Myōjin Taisha[8], Shikinaisha[9], Shrines receiving Tsukinami-sai and Niiname-sai offerings[10], and Shinto shrine[11].
Why It Matters
Umenomiya Taisha draws 63 Wikipedia views per month (taisha category, ranking #11 of 14).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[40] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[41]