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Photo prise le 30 mars 2017
Camera Franka Rolfix II (1952)
Rodenstock Trinar 105mm
f/16 - 1/250s
Kodak Portra 160 ISO
Bauen mein Hobby, entspannung Pur (270 p.)
Komponents by: Fanatic, LOVE, Monarchs Groupgift´s, Konoha, DDD, Fourth Wall, Faded, booN,
:::who what::: , Sky, Botanicle, Cerridwen´s Couldron, Tsunami Creations, KO-H, taikou
Zusammengestellt by: Raffael-Ludewig von Fimicoloud
Bauen mein Hobby, entspannung Pur (270 p.)
Komponents by: Fanatic, LOVE, Monarchs Groupgift´s, Konoha, DDD, Fourth Wall, Faded, booN,
:::who what::: , Sky, Botanicle, Cerridwen´s Couldron, Tsunami Creations, KO-H, taikou
Zusammengestellt by: Raffael-Ludewig von Fimicoloud
Kasuga Grand Shrine is a Shinto shrine in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It was established in 768 CE and rebuilt several times over the centuries, it is the shrine of the Fujiwara family. The interior is famous for its many bronze lanterns, as well as the many stone lanterns that lead up the shrine.
The path to Kasuga Shrine passes through a deer park. In the deer park, deer are able to roam freely and are believed to be sacred messengers of the Shinto gods that inhabit the shrine and surrounding mountainous terrain.
Foundation in old dark gray bricks/plates including the interior completed and already started working on the roof which will be removable to show the interior.
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Temple Shinto "Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū" (Kamakura - Japon)
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Ema (絵馬 ?) are small wooden plaques on which Shinto worshipers write their prayers or wishes. The ema are then left hanging up at the shrine, where the kami (spirits or gods) supposedly read them. They tend to be fairly uniform in size and shape, but many have different pictures painted on them, of animals or other Shinto imagery, and they often have the word gan'i (願意), meaning "wish", written along the side.
Wikipedia
For the Japanese tradition of Shichi Go San, girls aged 3 and 7 and boys aged 3 and 5 dress in kimonos and visit a Shinto shrine. This photo was taken by me, When my family went to Shichi Go San.
A scene from a traditional Shinto wedding, taken at the Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū Shrine in Kamakura, Japan.
Looking down the main tree-lined stone walkway, that leads directly to the Tōshō-gū shrine, a UNESCO world heritage site.
Nikko Toshogu is a Shinto shrine established in 1617 to enshrine Tokugawa Ieyasu, the first shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate. Ieyasu was born on December 26, 1542 in Okazaki Castle in Mikawa (present day Okazaki, Aichi Prefecture). After a great deal of hardship from an early age he succeeded in pacifying the country after a turbulent period of conflict and established the Tokugawa shogunate system in 1603. His actions brought order and organization to Japanese society while promoting scholarship and industry. Ieyasu laid the foundation for over 260 years of peace and culture during the Edo Period, greatly contributing to the development of modern Japan.
#nikko #japan #autumn #tochigiprefecture #fall #visitjapan #japanesemaple #toshogushrine #unescoworldheritagesite