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2.3: Ise Shrine

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    Ise Shrine

    4.png

    Artist: Unknown
    Medium: Architecture
    Art Historical Time Period: Ongoing, rebuilt every 20 years (Shinto)

    Ise Shrine, also known as Ise Jingu, is a Shinto shrine complex in Mie Prefecture, Japan. It is dedicated to Amaterasu, the sun goddess and the ancestral deity of the Japanese imperial family. The shrine is rebuilt every 20 years as part of the Shikinen Sengu ceremony.

    Ise Shrine is important to its culture as it is considered the most sacred Shinto shrine in Japan, symbolizing the continuity and renewal of tradition. It plays a central role in Japanese religious and cultural identity. Ise Shrine is also important to world culture as it exemplifies the Shinto principles of purity, renewal, and reverence for nature.

    Understanding Ise Shrine helps students appreciate the significance of religious rituals and the ways in which they reinforce cultural values and continuity.

    Vocabulary

    • Amaterasu The sun goddess in Shinto, considered the ancestral deity of the Japanese imperial family.
    • Shinto The indigenous spirituality of Japan, characterized by the worship of kami.

    Student Authors

    • Camila Bravo ’23 and Carlos Jimenez ’25

    References and Image Attribution

    • Breen, John, and Mark Teeuwen. A New History of Shinto. Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.

    • Nelson, John K. Enduring Identities: The Guise of Shinto in Contemporary Japan. University of Hawaii Press, 2000.

    • Image: “Naiku 04” via Wikimedia Commons by Nyoutarou, licensed under CC0 1.0 Universal. Modified from original.

       

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