Sōja (Shinto)
Sōja (総社) is a type of Shinto shrine where the kami of a region are grouped together into a single sanctuary. This "region" may refer to a shōen, village or geographic area, but is more generally referred to a whole province. The term is also occasionally called "sōsha". The sōja are usually located near the provincial capital established in the Nara period under then ritsuryō system, and can either be a newly created shrine, or a designation for an existing shrine. The "sōja" can also be the "ichinomiya" of the province, which themselves are of great ritual importance.[1]
Whenever a new kokushi was appointed by the central government to govern a province, it was necessary for him to visit all of the sanctuaries of his province in order to complete the rites necessary for ceremonial inauguration. Grouping the kami into one location near the capital of the province greatly facilitated this duty,[2]
The first mention of "sōja" appeared in the Heian period, in the diary of Taira no Tokinori, dated March 9, 1099 in reference to the province of Inaba. [3]
The name "Sōja" is also found in place names such as the city of Sōja in Okayama Prefecture.
Region | Province | Sōja | Location | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Transliteration | kanji | |||
Kinai | Yamashiro | unknown | ||
Yamato | unknown | |||
Kawachi | 志貴県主神社 | Fujiidera, Osaka | ||
Izumi | 泉井上神社 | Izumi, Osaka | ||
Settsu | unknown | |||
Tōkaidō | Iga Province | unknown | ||
Ise | 三宅神社 | Suzuka, Mie | ||
Shima | 国府神社 | Shima, Mie | ||
Owari | Owari Ōkunitama Jinja | 尾張大国霊神社 | Inazawa, Aichi | |
Mikawa | 国府町 (愛知県)#三河総社 | Toyokawa, Aichi | ||
Tōtōmi | 淡海国玉神社 | Iwata, Shizuoka | ||
Suruga | Shizuoka Sengen Shrine (Kambe Junja) | 神部・浅間神社 | Shizuoka, Shizuoka | |
Izu | Mishima Taisha | 三嶋大社 | Mishima, Shizuoka | |
Kai | 甲斐奈神社 | Fuefuki, Yamanashi | ||
Sagami | 六所神社 | Ōiso, Kanagawa | ||
Musashi | Ōkunitama Shrine | 大國魂神社 | Fuchū, Tokyo | |
Awa | 六所神社 | Tateyama, Chiba | ||
Kazusa | Togakushi Jinja | 戸隠神社 | Ichihara, Chiba | |
Shimōsa | 六所神社 | Ichikawa, Chiba | ||
Hitachi | 常陸國總社宮 | Ishioka, Ibaraki | ||
Tōsandō | Ōmi | unknown | ||
Mino | 南宮御旅神社 | Tarui, Gifu | ||
Hida | 飛騨総社 | Takayama, Gifu | ||
Shinano | 科野大宮社 | Ueda, Nagano | ||
Kōzuke | 総社神社 | Maebashi, Gunma | ||
Shimotsuke | 大神神社 | Tochigi, Tochigi | ||
Mutsu | 陸奥総社宮 | Tagajō, Miyagi | ||
Dewa | 六所神社 | Tsuruoka, Yamagata | ||
Hokurikudō | Wakasa | 総神社 | Obama, Fukui | |
Echizen | 総社大神宮 | Echizen, Fukui | ||
Kaga | 石部神社 | Komatsu, Ishikawa | ||
Noto | 総社 | Nanao, Ishikawa | ||
Etchū | unknown | |||
Echigo | Sōja () | 総社 | Jōetsu, Niigata | |
Sado | 総社神社 | Sado, Niigata]] | ||
San'indō | Tamba | 宗神社 | Nantan, Kyoto | |
Tango | unknown | |||
Tajima | 気多神社 | Toyooka, Hyōgo | ||
Inaba | unknown | |||
Hōki | (Sōja-daimyōjin) | 国庁裏神社 | Kurayoshi, Tottori | |
Izumo | 六所神社 | Matsue, Shimane | ||
Iwami | 伊甘神社 | Hamada, Shimane | ||
Oki | (Sōja-daimyōjin) | 玉若酢命神社 (総社大明神) | Okinoshima, Shimane | |
San'yōdō | Harima | 射楯兵主神社 | Himeji, Hyōgo | |
Mimasaka | 美作総社宮 | Tsuyama, Okayama | ||
Bizen | 備前国総社宮 | Okayama, Okayama | ||
Bitchū | 備中国総社宮 | Sōja, Okayama | ||
Bingo | 総社神社 | Fuchū, Hiroshima | ||
Aki | Sōja () | 総社 (多家神社) | Fuchū, Hiroshima | |
Suō | (佐波神社) | Hōfu, Yamaguchi | ||
Nagato | 総社宮 | Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi | ||
Nankaidō | Kii | 府守神社 | Wakayama, Wakayama | |
Awaji | 十一明神神社 | Minamiawaji, Hyōgo | ||
Awa | 八幡総社両神社 | Tokushima, Tokushima | ||
Sanuki | 総社神社 | Sakaide, Kagawa | ||
Iyo | 伊加奈志神社 | Imabari, Ehime | ||
Tosa | Tosa Kokubun-ji | 土佐国分寺 | Nankoku, Kōchi | |
Saikaidō | Chikuzen | unknown | ||
Chikugo | Kōra taisha | 味水御井神社 | Kurume, Fukuoka | |
Buzen | 惣社八幡宮 | Miyako, Fukuoka | ||
Bungo | unknown | |||
Hizen | unknown | |||
Higo | 北岡神社 | Kumamoto, Kumamoto | ||
Hyūga | 都萬神社 | Saito, Miyazaki | ||
Ōsumi | 祓戸神社 | Kirishima, Kagoshima | ||
Satsuma | 守公神社 | Satsumasendai, Kagoshima | ||
Iki | 興神社 | Iki, Nagasaki | ||
Tsushima | unknown |
See also[]
- List of Shinto shrines
- Ichinomiya
- Kokubun-ji
References[]
- Shinto shrines
- Heian period
- Soja
- Shinto stubs