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Emperor Tenji
Emperor Tenji
The 38th emperor (626–672); architect of the Taika Reforms; instituted Japan's first legal codes
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Emperor Tenji (天智天皇, 626–672), known as Prince Naka no Ooe before his accession, was the thirty-eighth emperor and one of Japan's great reforming rulers. Together with Nakatomi no Kamatari, he carried out the Taika Reform (645), dismantling the Soga clan's monopoly on power and reorganizing Japan along Tang Chinese administrative lines. This reform laid the groundwork for Japan's centralized imperial state.
He is enshrined at Omi Jingu (Otsu, Shiga), built near his capital at Otsu on Lake Biwa. As the emperor who introduced Japan's first official water clock (rōkoku), he is also venerated as a patron of time-keeping and poetry—his famous poem about the autumn harvest opens the Hyakunin Isshu anthology.
ศาลเจ้าที่บูชาเทพเจ้าองค์นี้
| Shrine | Prefecture | Network Role |
|---|---|---|
| Omi Jingu Omi Jingu | Shiga |
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Who is Emperor Tenji in Japanese mythology?
Emperor Tenji (天智天皇) is The 38th emperor (626–672); architect of the Taika Reforms; instituted Japan's first legal codes. This deity appears in Historical and is enshrined at 1 shrines across Japan.
What shrines are dedicated to Emperor Tenji?
There are 1 shrines in our database dedicated to Emperor Tenji, including Omi Jingu.
What myths involve Emperor Tenji?
Emperor Tenji appears in myths from Historical. The deity is known as The 38th emperor (626–672); architect of the Taika Reforms; instituted Japan's first legal codes.