Hokkaido Shrine
北海道神宮
Izushi Shrine
Izushi Shrine is the ichinomiya of former Tajima Province, located in the historic castle town of Izushi, Toyooka City, Hyogo Prefecture. It enshrines two principal deities: Izushiyamae-no-Okami (representing eight sacred treasures brought from Silla) and Amenohiboko-no-Mikoto, a legendary prince from the Korean kingdom of Silla. According to the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, Amenohiboko crossed to Japan during the reign of Emperor Suinin, settled in Tajima Province, and is credited with draining marshlands to create farmland — earning veneration as the founding ancestor of Tajima. Tax records from Tajima Province dating to 737 CE establish it as one of the oldest documented shrines in the region, and the Engishiki lists it as a Myōjin Taisha. The shrine flourished under the patronage of the Yamana clan in the Muromachi period. The current buildings, rebuilt in 1914 following a fire in 1910, are designated Tangible Cultural Properties of Toyooka City. A wakizashi sword from the Nanboku-chō period housed at the shrine is designated a National Important Cultural Property. Izushi Shrine is revered for blessings related to land development and civil engineering — reflecting Amenohiboko's legendary flood-control feats — as well as safe childbirth, fertility, and general good fortune. The charming castle town of Izushi, famous for its soba noodles and white-walled townscape, surrounds the shrine.
Location Coordinates
35.4650, 134.8756
99 Izushi-cho Miyauchi, Toyooka-shi, Hyogo
Tajima Province
Toyooka Station (JR San'in Line)
Dawn to dusk
Bus to Izushi area
北海道神宮
上川神社
帯廣神社
樽前山神社
美瑛神社
旭川神社
Contenu redige par l'equipe editoriale de Jinja DB
Izushi Shrine is the ichinomiya of former Tajima Province, located in the historic castle town of Izushi, Toyooka City, Hyogo Prefecture. It enshrines two principal deities: Izushiyamae-no-Okami (representing eight sacred treasures brought from Silla) and Amenohiboko-no-Mikoto, a legendary prince from the Korean kingdom of Silla. According to the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, Amenohiboko crossed to Japan during the reign of Emperor Suinin, settled in Tajima Province, and is credited with draining marshlands to create farmland — earning veneration as the founding ancestor of Tajima. Tax records from Tajima Province dating to 737 CE establish it as one of the oldest documented shrines in the region, and the Engishiki lists it as a Myōjin Taisha. The shrine flourished under the patronage of the Yamana clan in the Muromachi period. The current buildings, rebuilt in 1914 following a fire in 1910, are designated Tangible Cultural Properties of Toyooka City. A wakizashi sword from the Nanboku-chō period housed at the shrine is designated a National Important Cultural Property. Izushi Shrine is revered for blessings related to land development and civil engineering — reflecting Amenohiboko's legendary flood-control feats — as well as safe childbirth, fertility, and general good fortune. The charming castle town of Izushi, famous for its soba noodles and white-walled townscape, surrounds the shrine.
Izushi Shrine is located in Toyooka-shi, Hyogo. The full address is: 99 Izushi-cho Miyauchi, Toyooka-shi, Hyogo.
The enshrined deities are: Ame no Hiboko no Mikoto, Izushi Yamae no Okami.