Meishin-taisha

Hirota Shrine

Hirota Shrine

Nijunisha
ค่าเข้าชม
Free
โกชูอิน
300 yen
การเดินทาง
15 min walk
เวลาทำการ
Dawn to dusk

ภาพรวม

Hirota Shrine in Nishinomiya City, Hyogo Prefecture — from which the city's very name derives — is unique in Japan as the only shrine dedicated to the ara-mitama (fierce, active spirit) of Amaterasu Ōmikami. According to the Nihon Shoki, Empress Jingū established the shrine in the 3rd century following divine instructions received before her military campaign to the Korean peninsula, making this the most important sacred site she founded upon her return. During the Heian period Hirota Shrine became an object of direct imperial patronage, and Emperor Shirakawa designated it one of the Nijūnisha — the twenty-two most revered shrines in Japan. It held Kanpei-taisha (first-rank imperial shrine) status from 1871 to 1946 and is Hyogo Prefecture's only grand shrine (taisha). Its prominence in the Genji Monogatari (Tale of Genji) as the "Nishi no Miya" (Western Shrine) speaks to its central place in classical Heian culture. The shrine is particularly known for protection against illness and misfortune (yakunoke). It is also celebrated for its grove of kobanomitsuba tsutsuji (three-leaf azaleas), which bloom spectacularly each spring and are closely associated with the shrine's identity.

ประวัติ

การก่อตั้ง

📜ตามตำนาน
201 [Jingu Kogo era]

เทพเจ้าที่บูชา

primary Deity

พรที่ได้รับ

เครือข่ายศาลเจ้า

ข้อมูลการเยี่ยมชม

Location Coordinates

34.7556, 135.3392

Physical Address

7-7 Taisha-cho, Nishinomiya-shi, Hyogo

Province historique

Settsu Province

การเดินทาง

Nishinomiya Station (Hankyu)

15 min walk

เวลาทำการ

Dawn to dusk

Informations visiteurs verifiees le 2026-04-11. Consultez le site officiel pour les details actuels.

ศาลเจ้าที่เกี่ยวข้อง

คำถามที่พบบ่อย

ข้อมูลจัดทำโดยทีม Jinja DB

What is Hirota Shrine?

Hirota Shrine in Nishinomiya City, Hyogo Prefecture — from which the city's very name derives — is unique in Japan as the only shrine dedicated to the ara-mitama (fierce, active spirit) of Amaterasu Ōmikami. According to the Nihon Shoki, Empress Jingū established the shrine in the 3rd century following divine instructions received before her military campaign to the Korean peninsula, making this the most important sacred site she founded upon her return. During the Heian period Hirota Shrine became an object of direct imperial patronage, and Emperor Shirakawa designated it one of the Nijūnisha — the twenty-two most revered shrines in Japan. It held Kanpei-taisha (first-rank imperial shrine) status from 1871 to 1946 and is Hyogo Prefecture's only grand shrine (taisha). Its prominence in the Genji Monogatari (Tale of Genji) as the "Nishi no Miya" (Western Shrine) speaks to its central place in classical Heian culture. The shrine is particularly known for protection against illness and misfortune (yakunoke). It is also celebrated for its grove of kobanomitsuba tsutsuji (three-leaf azaleas), which bloom spectacularly each spring and are closely associated with the shrine's identity.

Where is Hirota Shrine located?

Hirota Shrine is located in Nishinomiya-shi, Hyogo. The full address is: 7-7 Taisha-cho, Nishinomiya-shi, Hyogo.

What deities are enshrined at Hirota Shrine?

The enshrined deities are: Amaterasu Omikami.