Draft:Hanamori Shibata
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- Comment: content taken from Sect ShintoImmanuelle ❤️💚💙 (talk to the cutest Wikipedian) 19:51, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
- Comment: There exists no Japanese article on him might be worth g17ingImmanuelle ❤️💚💙 (talk to the cutest Wikipedian) 02:24, 16 October 2023 (UTC)
Hanamori Shibata was a founder of a Sect Shinto group.[citation needed]
His son inherited running the group in 1890.[1]
Overview
Around 1868, at the beginning of the
Unity of ritual and government system in the same year. The Taikyo Institute was established in 1872 (Meiji 5) as a missionary organization, but was dissolved in 1875 (Meiji 8). Instead, the Shinto side established the Bureau of Shinto Affairs
in the same year, to which the originally disparate folk belief religions belonged, and those denominations that met certain conditions, such as the number of followers, were officially recognized as "independent denominations". This was the beginning of the denominational Shinto.
Beginning with
Shinto Shusei in 1876 (9th year of Meiji), and in 1886, Bureau of Shinto Affairs (later renamed Shinto Taikyo), and in 1899 (32nd year of Meiji), it was reorganized into a denomination called Jingu-kyo renamed Ise Shrine Offering Association.[2][a] In 1908, Tenrikyo was founded, and by the time of 1908, there were a total of 13 schools (14 schools in total if the breakaway "Jingu-kyo
" is included).
Denomination | Founder | Founding date | Date of Independence | believers[3] | Priests[3] | Shrines and churches[3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jikkō kyō
|
Hanamori Shibata | May 1882 | 10,910 | 250 | 87 |
After the war, Oomoto also joined the federation, but Tenrikyo and Shinto Taiseikyo withdrew from the federation, so the federation now has 12 affiliated groups.
There are five main groups of Sect Shinto[4]
- The
- Shinto Shusei.[4]
- The Ontake-kyo.[4]
- Purification sects are Shinshu-kyo.[4]
- Utopian groups are Kurozumikyō, Tenrikyo, and Konkokyo.[4]
Tenrikyo is now classified by the Agency for Cultural Affairs as one of the various religions, not as a Shinto denomination. [5]
Notelist
References
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