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is held semiannually, on
February and October 2, following a sacred dance to the gods. If the rope does not give way during the pulling, it remains until it breaks - a rope that withstands is considered a sign of good luck and a new rope is placed alongside it. This festival has been designated as an
230:, made by local citizens from seven intertwined ropes, is extended from a concrete pole (previously a sacred pine tree) and the 45-meter high rock face that blocks the entrance to the underworld. A rope-changing festival called
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285:"Nakagami Kenji's 'Writing Back to the Centre' through the Subaltern Narrative: Reading the Hidden Outcast Voice in 'Misaki' and Karekinada – New Voices in Japanese Studies"
132:, after Izanagi saw Izanami's rotting corpse, he sealed the entrance from the world of the living with a large boulder. In 2004, the shrine was registered as part of the
152:. The shrine is one of the oldest in Japan, although the exact date of its construction is unknown; the first written record of it dates back to 720 AD in the
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Sekai isan baka : Jitsuroku kumano kodo o sekai isan toroku shi chikyu ekoroji o jitsugen suru otoko
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Hananoiwaya Shrine figures in both Shinto and
Buddhist histories. The 10th century priest and poet
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attempted to find
Izanami after she died giving birth to Kagu-tsuchi. According to the
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Localizing
Paradise: Kumano Pilgrimage and the Religious Landscape of Premodern Japan
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460:"Hananoiwaya-jinja Shrine | Travel Japan (Japan National Tourism Organization)"
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Sacred Sites and
Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range
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The shrine complex at
Hananoiwaya Shrine dates back to the
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Izanami no okoku kumano : Arima kara kumano sanzan e.
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Hananoiwaya is not mentioned as a shrine in either the
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Eiichiro
Kirimura, 英一郎 桐村. Hojodoshuppan. July 2013.
367:. Kimiyoshi Tamaki, 公良 玉置. Bungeisha. January 2014.
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532:"「お綱かけ神事」に向け準備進む 熊野・花の窟神社 県無形民俗文化財:中日新聞Web"
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93:in the Arima neighborhood of the city of
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458:Organization, Japan National Tourism.
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56:https://hananoiwaya.com/index.html
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619:Shinto shrines in Mie Prefecture
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273:(in Japanese). 新潮社. p. 60.
205:as the descendants of Izanami.
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335:Moerman, D. Max (2020-03-23).
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561:www.japan-experience.com
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203:Imperial House of Japan
488:tanakaiku.sakura.ne.jp
443:: CS1 maint: others (
395:: CS1 maint: others (
341:. BRILL. p. 110.
316:Cite journal requires
508:"花窟神社(花の窟神社):熊野の観光名所"
595:33.880°N 136.0936°E
591: /
250:of Mie Prefecture.
76:Hananoiwaya Shrine
68:Glossary of Shinto
19:Hananoiwaya Shrine
422:978-4-89231-114-7
374:978-4-286-14177-0
348:978-1-68417-399-0
294:10.21159/nv.05.01
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154:Nara period
150:Nihon Shoki
136:by UNESCO.
129:Nihon Shoki
106:Kagu-tsuchi
95:Kumano, Mie
39:Affiliation
583:33°52′48″N
566:2022-10-07
542:2022-10-07
517:2022-10-07
493:2022-10-07
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300:2022-10-07
254:References
120:underworld
439:cite book
431:855429218
391:cite book
383:872153791
270:熊野高野・冥府の旅
217:shimenawa
209:Festivals
165:Engishiki
613:Category
199:Maitreya
81:Japanese
33:Religion
536:中日新聞Web
484:"花の窟神社"
181:Ionushi
163:or the
140:History
124:Izanagi
102:Izanami
50:Website
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240:御綱掛け神事
195:sutras
161:Kojiki
122:where
44:Shinto
89:is a
445:link
427:OCLC
417:ISBN
397:link
379:OCLC
369:ISBN
343:ISBN
322:help
176:Zōki
104:and
99:kami
85:花窟神社
289:doi
113:花の窟
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