The list below is taken from the Japan National Tourism Organization. Click on the individual event for information. It’s estimated that 25% of the population partake in a local festival, and with each shrine holding an annual event Japan must count amongst the most festival-loving people on earth. The typical pattern is for a religious ritual to be performed prior to the festivities, then a parade of the kami around the community with pauses for entertainment of some kind, and then return to the shrine where the closing ritual is held.
- Ancestor worship (51)
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- Animism (132)
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- Death (44)
- Emperor (imperial family) (51)
- Fertility (19)
- Festivals (181)
- Folklore (38)
- Fuji (12)
- General (174)
- Green issues (106)
- Hinduism (10)
- Hokkaido (16)
- Inari (35)
- Insularity (3)
- International (181)
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- Ise (31)
- Izumo (42)
- Japanese culture (131)
- Kami (57)
- Kansai (22)
- Kanto (41)
- Kojiki (1)
- Koshinto (1)
- Kumano (16)
- Kyoto shrines (196)
- Kyushu (33)
- Lafcadio Hearn (26)
- Martial arts and sumo (13)
- Misogi (9)
- Mountains (41)
- Mythology (73)
- Nagano (7)
- Nationalism (50)
- New Year (51)
- Nihon Shoki (2)
- Oddities (38)
- Okinawa (13)
- Origins (45)
- Paganism (58)
- Pilgrimage (25)
- Poetry (31)
- Politics (35)
- Power spots (22)
- Practical (38)
- Priests (16)
- Purity and pollution (28)
- Rites and celebrations (73)
- Rocks (40)
- Setsubun (14)
- Seven Lucky Deities (13)
- Shamanic connections (55)
- Shinto sects (6)
- Shrine items (86)
- Shrine types (25)
- Shrine visits (141)
- Shugendo (22)
- Social values (31)
- Spirituality (26)
- Syncretism (116)
- Taoism (1)
- Tenson Korin (4)
- Tohoku (19)
- Uncategorized (2)
- World Heritage (65)
- Yasukuni (23)
- Zen (27)
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