Takamagahara (High Plain of Heaven) 神々の住む天上 ── 高天原

天照大神·天岩戸·天孫降臨·三種の神器。天津神の世界

神々の住む天上 ── 高天原

Takamagahara (High Plain of Heaven) · たかまがはら

Also known as: 高天が原

日本の神話において、神々の住まう天上の世界 ── それが「高天原(たかまがはら)」である。太陽の女神·天照大神(あまてらすおおみかみ)を主宰の神とし、数えきれぬ神々がこの天の高みに集うとされた。

地上の人の世「葦原中国(あしはらのなかつくに)」、地の底の死の国「黄泉(よみ)」── 日本神話が描く三層の世界の、最も高きところに位置するのが、この高天原である。天照が岩戸に隠れた天岩戸の物語も、皇統の起源とされる天孫降臨も、すべてはこの天上の世界から始まった。本稿は、日本神話の源流ともいうべき神々の天界をたどる。

天つ神の世界

高天原は、天上にあるとされた神々の国である。『古事記』では、天地のはじめに、まずこの高天原に造化三神(ぞうかさんしん)をはじめとする神々が次々と成り出でたと語られる。世界の創成が、この天の高みから始まったのである。最初に現れた天之御中主神(あめのみなかぬしのかみ)をはじめとする造化三神は、姿を見せることなく身を隠したと伝わる。続いて男女の対をなす神々が次々と生まれ、やがてイザナギ·イザナミの二神が、国生み·神生みの大業を担うことになる。

ここに住まう神々を「天津神(あまつかみ)」と呼び、地上に現れた「国津神(くにつかみ)」と区別した。日本神話の世界は、天上の高天原、地上の葦原中国、そして地中の根の国·黄泉という三つの層から成る。高天原は、そのいただきに位置する、最も清らかで神聖な世界とされた。地の底の暗い死の国である黄泉とは、まさに対極をなす場所であった。

天照大神の統べる天界

高天原を統べるのは、太陽の女神·天照大神である。天照大神は、父神イザナギが黄泉の穢れを清める禊(みそぎ)によって生まれ、そのとき「高天原を治めよ」と命じられた。光をつかさどる女神が、最も高き天の世界を治める ── そのことに、古代の人々の世界観がよく表れている。このときイザナギの禊からは、天照大神とともに、夜をつかさどる月読命(つくよみのみこと)、海原をつかさどる須佐之男命も生まれた。三柱はあわせて「三貴子(みはしらのうずのみこ)」と呼ばれ、なかでも天照大神が、最も貴い神とされたのである。

神話に描かれる高天原は、神々の住む天上界でありながら、どこか地上の営みを映してもいる。そこには天之安河(あめのやすかわ)が流れ、水田が広がり、機織りをする忌服屋(いみはたや)もあったと記される。神々もまた稲を育て、布を織る ── 天界は、稲作に生きた古代日本人が、自らの世界を映して思い描いた、理想の天上であった。

天岩戸の物語

高天原を舞台とする神話のなかで、最もよく知られるのが「天岩戸(あまのいわと)」の物語である。

天照大神の弟·須佐之男命(すさのおのみこと)が、高天原で田の畔を壊し、機織り小屋に皮を剥いだ馬を投げ入れるなど、乱暴のかぎりを尽くした。これを嘆いた天照大神は、天岩戸と呼ばれる岩の洞窟に閉じこもってしまう。太陽の女神が姿を隠したことで、高天原も葦原中国も、ことごとく闇に包まれた

困り果てた八百万(やおよろず)の神々は、天安河原(あめのやすかわら)に集まって会議を開く。そして、常世(とこよ)の長鳴鳥(ながなきどり)を鳴かせ、八咫鏡(やたのかがみ)や勾玉を木の枝に捧げて、岩戸の前で盛大な祭りを執り行った。そして、岩戸の前で天宇受売命(あめのうずめ)が舞い、神々がどっと笑い、その声につられて天照がわずかに岩戸を開けたところを、力自慢の天手力男神(あめのたぢからお)が岩戸を一気に引き開けた ── こうして世界に光が戻った。なお、このとき投げ放たれた岩戸が、はるか信濃の地に落ちて山になったとする伝説が、戸隠山に伝わっている。

天孫降臨

高天原の神々の物語は、やがて、地上の統治へと向かっていく。

天照大神は、葦原中国を治めるべき地と定め、その平定を進めた。出雲を治める大国主神(おおくにぬしのかみ)が、天津神に国を譲り渡す「国譲り」がなされ、地上は天津神の治める世界となった。地上の平定が成ると、天照大神は孫の邇邇芸命(ににぎのみこと)を地上へ遣わした。これが「天孫降臨」である。ニニギは高天原から、筑紫の日向(ひむか)の高千穂峰(たかちほのみね)へと天降った

このとき天照大神がニニギに授けたのが、八咫鏡(やたのかがみ)·草薙剣(くさなぎのつるぎ)·八尺瓊勾玉(やさかにのまがたま)の「三種の神器」である。皇位継承の象徴とされるこの神宝は、高天原から地上へともたらされた。そして、ニニギの子孫が初代·神武天皇となり、皇統につながっていくとされる。天上の世界と地上の王権を結ぶ ── それが天孫降臨の神話であった。

三つの世界の、いただきに

天上の高天原、地上の葦原中国、地下の黄泉。この三層の世界観のなかで、高天原は、光と秩序と生命をつかさどる、最も高き神聖な世界として描かれた。

その主宰神·天照大神は、今も伊勢神宮の内宮に祀られ、日本の総氏神として崇敬を集めている。神話の天上世界は、目には見えずとも、伊勢の杜(もり)を通じて、今を生きる私たちの世界とたしかに結ばれている。天照を祀る聖地については伊勢神宮内宮に、地の底の死の国については黄泉に詳しい。天と地と地下 ── 三つの世界をあわせて見わたすとき、日本人が思い描いた壮大な神話の宇宙が、その全き姿をあらわすだろう。

All yokai of Takamagahara (High Plain of Heaven)4

Complete list of yokai linked to Takamagahara (High Plain of Heaven), including those not featured in the article above.

  • Kagutsuchi

    Kagutsuchi

    Divine

    kagutsuchi

    The Fire God Who Spawns Death and Rebirth

    Deity / Divine SpiritAge of the Gods (Kiki Mythology) / Mt. Atago / Akihasan Hongu Akiha Shrine

    This version of Kagutsuchi bears fire not as a "convenient attribute" but as an "event that changes the world." In the "Kojiki," the scene where Izanami dies giving birth to the fire god instantly pivots the bright story of national creation to the tale of Yomi (the underworld). Fire is the result of birth, yet it takes the mother goddess away. Here lies the fundamental duality between the fire that sustains life and the fire that burns houses and bodies. The scene of Kagutsuchi being slain is the epitome of creation arising from destruction. When Izanagi's sword severs the fire god, other deities are born from the blood and body parts. The myth does not end by extinguishing the fire. Even when cut, the power of fire branches off into blood, swords, mountains, and lightning. Kagutsuchi is not a self-contained deity, but a generating device for subsequent gods. Layering the variant traditions of the "Nihon Shoki" reveals that Kagutsuchi is the totality of fire passed down with fluctuating names and personalities in the Kiki. Names like Kagutsuchi and Homusubi are not mere spelling differences, but indicate multiple perspectives grasping fire as "that which burns," "that which creates," and "that which possesses spiritual power." In YOKAI.JP, explaining this fluctuation adds depth to the page as a divine spirit. Kagutsuchi, expanding into fire prevention beliefs, reverses from a god of terror to a god of protection. At Atago Shrine and Akihasan Hongu Akiha Shrine, prayers are continuously offered to him as a god of fire and fire prevention. Precisely because he is the god with the power to cause fires, he is expected to have the power to quell them. The mindset of not avoiding the cause of disaster but praying at its center is characteristic of Japanese fire protection beliefs. Visually, this version is better suited by layering childbirth, swords, and mountains rather than a simple ball of flame. Red fire, black soot, blood dripping from a sword, fire protection talismans on mountain peaks, the dark entrance to Yomi. When these elements align, Kagutsuchi stands up not as a fantasy fire attribute, but as a dangerous turning point in myth. In diagnoses or cards, Kagutsuchi symbolizes strong change. When one cannot proceed to the next stage without ending something, when one has no choice but to burn down the old order, he becomes a terrifying but necessary god. However, fire cannot be treated lightly. Kagutsuchi's protection is only directed at those who take responsibility even for the aftermath of the burning. Reading Kagutsuchi in relation to Izanami, fire appears as a wound left on the mother goddess's body. The birth of fire takes the mother, and her death spawns the story of the underworld. In other words, Kagutsuchi bears not only the blessing of parent-child relations but also the mythological pain that birth hurts someone. There is a weight there beyond a mere god of flames. Kagutsuchi as a god of fire prevention is also the name for humans to coexist with dangerous forces. Life cannot be sustained without using fire. But if fire is used, disaster can strike at any time. Prayer is not a technique to extinguish fire, but the ethics of living with fire. If this sense of daily life is included in Kagutsuchi's page, ancient mythology and folklore connect beautifully. In the association network, it expands not only to Izanami and Izanagi but also to fire and mountain anomalies like Atagoyama Tarobo and Kasha. Placing Kagutsuchi allows the stream from the upper reaches of mythology through folk fire protection beliefs to yokai-like images of fire to converge into a single flow.

  • Ame-no-uzume

    Ame-no-uzume

    Divine

    ame-no-uzume

    The Laughing Dancer Who Opens the Rock Cave

    Deity / Divine SpiritTakamagahara / Myth of Amano-Iwato / Sarutahiko Shrine & Sarume Shrine (Ise City, Mie Prefecture)

    This version of Ame-no-uzume demonstrates that the power to save the world resides not in "battle" but in the "art of changing the atmosphere." When Amaterasu-Omikami hid in the rock cave, simply breaking down the door by brute force would not bring the sun back. Uzume gathers the gods' attention, provokes laughter, and makes Amaterasu herself want to look outside. She does not move the other party directly, but alters the conditions of the space. The dance before the rock cave is less an orderly court dance and more a bodily expression of divine possession. The sound of stamping the tub, the disheveled garments, and the laughter of the gods merge, pouring an excess of vitality into the dark world. This excess is Uzume's weapon. Facing a crisis, she shakes the closed door not just with seriousness, but with laughter and deviation. Layering the image of Ame-no-uzume-no-mikoto from the "Nihon Shoki" reveals that Uzume is the specialized deity in charge of ritual performance in myth. While mirrors and jewels are prepared as ritual implements, she makes her own body the ritual implement. Her voice, her feet, her chest, her laughter, her gaze. Everything becomes a tool to move the gods. In this respect, Uzume is not only the ancestral god of performing arts but a god who harmonizes the world through the body. In the confrontation with Sarutahiko, Uzume's boldness manifests in another form. Facing an unusual god standing at the Heavenly Crossroads, she questions him without retreating. To open a path, one must face an unknown opponent. Uzume fulfills that role, drawing out Sarutahiko's guidance. The power linking the inside and outside of the rock cave transforms here into the power linking heaven and earth. In beliefs at places like Sarume Shrine, Uzume is endeared as a god of improvement in performing arts and matchmaking. However, at her root, she is not merely a god who dances well, but a god who crosses boundaries. Standing on stage, raising one's voice, asking the other's name, breaking a closed atmosphere. All of these are somewhat frightening, yet simultaneously actions that open the world. In modern terms, Uzume is highly versatile as a patron deity of creation, expression, and communication. Against inward-closed situations, organizational silence, or personal hesitation, she brings not only cheerfulness but a ritualistic resilience. In yokai diagnosis, she symbolizes someone who can read and break the atmosphere, someone who unravels heaviness with laughter, and someone who moves others by taking the stage. Uzume's strength lies in her fearlessness of the gaze of others. In the dance before the rock cave, she exhausts her body before the gods, drawing laughter. Before Sarutahiko, she asks the unusual opponent for his name. Both require the courage to be seen, to approach, and to ask. Expression is not merely showing something beautiful. If we read this version as the ancestor of kagura, kagura is not only an art to console the gods but a technology to move them. Drums, bells, foot-stamping, masks, costumes. The elements seen in later kagura all recall the scene before the rock cave. Uzume can be understood as the first being to step across the boundary between the stage and the sacred precinct. Within YOKAI.JP, Uzume serves as a bright turning point against the flow of heavy vengeful spirits and violent gods. Unraveling fear with laughter, opening closed stories. When users navigate the mythological network, the presence of her page makes the relationships between Amaterasu, Sarutahiko, and Ninigi far more multi-dimensional.

  • Susanoo

    Susanoo

    Legendary

    すさのお

    Susanoo (Default)

    kamiJapanese Mythology (Kojiki, Nihon Shoki), Izumo no Kuni Fudoki, Gion Beliefs / Gozu Tenno Beliefs, Izumo and Yasaka lineage shrines

    The Dramatic Transformation from 'Wild God' to 'Hero God'. While the basic description traced Susanoo's primary myths, this detailed explanation delves into his dramatic personality shift from 'wild god' to 'hero god'. The Susanoo of the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki possesses diverse characteristics, having three entirely different aspects: the childishness of weeping for his mother, the ferocity in Takamagahara, and the heroism, paternity, and wisdom in granting trials after descending to Izumo. Folklorist Teiji Yoshimura (1977) pointed out that 'the Susanoo of Takamagahara mythology and Izumo mythology have different personalities.' This can be interpreted as the result of multiple different mythological traditions being integrated into a single deity. Two lineages—the Takamagahara mythological sphere (Amatsu-kami lineage) and the Izumo mythological sphere (Kunitsu-kami lineage)—were converged into the single deity 'Susanoo' during the process of political and religious integration in ancient Japan, resulting in a unique deity with a multi-layered personality. Yearning for the 'Mother's Country' ── Ancient Motherhood Beliefs. Despite being entrusted with the rule of the sea plain by his father Izanagi, Susanoo continued to weep and howl in longing for the root country (Ne-no-Katasu-Kuni) of his deceased mother Izanami. This 'yearning for the Mother's Country (Hahanokuni)' is an important motif in ancient Japanese mythology, expressing the fundamental tension among patriarchy, matriarchy, and generational succession. Shinobu Orikuchi deciphered this motif comparatively as 'Tokoyo-no-Kuni belief' and 'Mother's Country belief'. The later tale of Okuninushi descending to Ne-no-Katasu-Kuni to undergo Susanoo's trials also reflects the structure of generational succession: 'deceased mother → father god (Susanoo himself) → son-in-law god (Okuninushi)'. It can be read as a multi-layered expression of ancient Japanese views on motherhood, fatherhood, and life and death, transcending a simple heroic myth. Soshimori in Silla and Ancient Japan-Korea Relations. The Kojiki's account that the banished Susanoo descended to Mount Torikami in Izumo via 'Soshimori in Silla (Shiragi Soshimori)' is extremely interesting as a rare 'tale via the continent' in ancient Japanese mythology. The specific location of Soshimori in the southeastern Korean Peninsula is debated, and it can be interpreted as a passage mythologizing ancient Japan's history of continental immigrant culture and exchanges with the Korean Peninsula. It has been pointed out that Shinto of the Izumo Kuni-no-Miyatsuko lineage likely developed within the maritime trade network with the Korean Peninsula and the continent since ancient times, and Susanoo's tale via Silla can be read as a memory layer mythologizing this history of maritime exchange. It serves as documentary evidence showing that ancient Japan was not an isolated cultural sphere but formed through close interaction with the continent and peninsula. Social Historical Interpretation of Slaying Yamata-no-Orochi. The tale of slaying Yamata-no-Orochi has been interpreted as a multi-layered story reflecting the socio-historical situation of ancient Japan, going beyond a simple heroic monster-slaying myth. The specific descriptions—'eight heads, eight tails, along the Hii River, blood flowing from the belly, an iron sword from the tail'—strongly support the 'iron-making origin theory' (proposed by Takeshi Matsumae, Shohei Mishina, etc.), which suggests that the ancient Izumo tatara iron-making, the iron content of the Hii River, river flooding, and the social organization of iron-making communities were mythologized. Susanoo's heroic tale was formed in intense dialogue with the iron culture of ancient Japan and the nature and society of the Hii River basin, re-evaluated not as a simple myth but containing valuable record layers of ancient social history. 'Eight Clouds Arise' ── Japan's Oldest Waka. The poem Susanoo composed when he built a palace in Suga, Izumo after slaying Yamata-no-Orochi—'Eight clouds arise, the eightfold fence of Izumo creates an eightfold fence to keep my wife in, oh that eightfold fence'—is positioned as the origin of the history of Japanese literature and waka. The basic format of the thirty-one syllables (5-7-5-7-7) was already established here, demonstrating the identification of the birth of songs with mythological heroism in ancient Japan. The fact that the starting point of the entire Japanese waka culture, leading to the Man'yoshu, Kokinshu, and Shin-Kokinshu, is attributed to the mythic hero-god Susanoo symbolizes the inseparability of poetry and mythology in Japanese culture. The opening phrase 'Eight clouds arise' remains a sacred cultural resource repeatedly cited in the world of waka and tanka today. Syncretism with Gozu Tenno and Medieval Gion Beliefs. From the Middle Ages onward, Susanoo syncretized with Gozu Tenno, derived from Buddhism, Taoism, and the Korean Peninsula, becoming the guardian deity of dispelling epidemics and warding off disasters as the principal deity of the Kyoto Gion Shrine (now Yasaka Shrine). Gozu Tenno is considered a plague god originating from Silla and the Korean Peninsula, and has a complex religious history where Chinese beliefs of the guardian deity of Jetavana Monastery and Japanese Susanoo beliefs syncretized in the Middle Ages. The history of the Gion Goryo-e, initiated in 869 (Jogan 11) to pray for the end of an epidemic spreading in the capital, exceeds a millennium, and was inherited as the largest religious festival for dispelling epidemics nationwide throughout the Edo period, early modern, and modern eras. It continues to be inherited in the 21st century as the Kyoto Gion Festival (a nationally designated Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property) and a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage, showing that the multi-layered overlap of ancient myth and medieval Buddhism continues to exert a sustained influence on the religious life of modern Japan. Resurgence in Modern Culture. Susanoo has been repeatedly re-sculpted in post-war Japanese subculture works. He frequently appears as one of the strongest demons in the 'Megami Tensei' series, in the portrayal of Susanoo and Kushinadahime in the game 'Okami', as a motif like 'Sun Breathing' in the manga 'Demon Slayer', and in anime such as 'Nura: Rise of the Yokai Clan' and works like 'Touhou Project'. His multi-layered attributes as a 'wild god', hero, ancestor of poetry, and guardian deity against epidemics have high affinity with modern character creation. He is a symbolic figure of ancient mythology who continues to drive the mythological imagination of the Japanese people for over two thousand years.

  • Amaterasu-Omikami

    Amaterasu-Omikami

    Legendary

    あまてらすおおみかみ

    Supreme Deity of Takamagahara

    Divine Spirit / DeityInner Shrine of Ise Jingu (Kotaijingu, present-day Ise City, Mie Prefecture) / Amano-Iwato Shrine (present-day Takachiho, Nishiusuki District, Miyazaki Prefecture) / Mythologically: Takamagahara (High Plain of Heaven), Eldest of the Three Precious Children

    The Peculiarity of Japanese Mythology: Sun God = Female. While the base description touched on the primary myths of Amaterasu-Omikami, this detailed explanation delves into the comparative religious peculiarity of Japanese mythology in making the sun god female. Sun deities in ancient world mythologies—such as Greece's Apollo, Egypt's Ra, India's Surya, Inca's Inti, and Babylonia's Shamash—are predominantly male. On the other hand, female sun deities like Japan's Amaterasu, Norse's Sól, Baltic's Saulė, and some in Eastern Europe are relatively rare. In post-war Japanese mythological studies, scholars like Takeshi Matsumae proposed the male deity theory, stating that "the archetype of Amaterasu was various male sun gods (Amateru deities) who were later feminized," which became a central controversy. If we adopt this theory, the feminization of the sun god can be read as a unique deification process that advanced within the kingship, religion, and agricultural rituals of ancient Japan. The "Hiding in the Rock Cave" Tale ── Comparative Religion of Sun Disappearance Myths. The "Hiding in the Rock Cave" tale, where Amaterasu-Omikami hides in a cave and plunges the world into darkness, is a prime example of "sun disappearance and rebirth" in world mythology. Myths recounting the disappearance and rebirth of the sun—such as the Aten faith of ancient Egypt, Surtr in Norse myth, the Hittite sun god disappearance myth, and the Baltic sun god rebirth myths—are widely distributed as religious responses to the winter solstice, solar eclipses, and agricultural cycles in ancient farming societies. Amaterasu's seclusion is interpreted as the origin myth of Shinto kagura and ritual ceremonies, where "ritual tools like Ame-no-Uzume's kagura dance, the Yata mirror, jewels, evergreen trees, and the eternal bird (announcing the eternal dawn)" summon the sun god from the cave. As the root myth of religious rituals like the ancient Japanese winter solstice festival, Niiname-no-Matsuri, and Kanname-no-Matsuri, it holds cosmological significance far beyond a simple heroic tale. The Three Sacred Treasures ── The Unity of Kingship and Religion. The Three Sacred Treasures (the Yata mirror, Yasakani jewel, and Kusanagi sword) that Amaterasu-Omikami bestowed upon Ninigi during the heavenly descent symbolize the unity of kingship, religion, and mythology in ancient Japan. The Yata mirror embodies sunlight and Amaterasu's spirit; the jewel is a symbol of spiritual power and prayer in ancient Japanese religion; and the Kusanagi sword is a symbol of martial power and rule obtained through Susanoo's slaying of the Eight-Headed Serpent. The Three Sacred Treasures became the core of ancient imperial enthronement rituals and continue to function as the central apparatus of imperial succession ceremonies to this day. They are devices embodying the unique continuity of myth and politics in ancient Japan, where mythological narratives exert a sustained influence on modern political systems and state rituals. Ise Jingu and the Shikinen Sengu ── Two Thousand Years of Succession. The Inner Shrine of Ise Jingu (Kotaijingu) is the sacred site enshrining Amaterasu-Omikami from ancient times to the present. Through the "Shikinen Sengu" (the ritual of completely rebuilding the shrine buildings every 20 years), which began in the 4th year of Empress Jito (690 CE), ancient architectural techniques, rituals, and Shinto culture have been passed down for over 1,300 years. This is a unique philosophy of succession that "embodies eternity through newness"—realizing an "eternity as constant rebirth" through periodic wooden reconstruction, in contrast to the "unchanging eternity" of ancient stone temples. The Shikinen Sengu continues in the 21st century, with the 62nd iteration conducted in 2013. It is a rare phenomenon in world religious history that embodies the essential views of time, eternity, and renewal in ancient Shinto. The Imperial Lineage and the Basis of Ancient State Legitimacy. As the ancestral deity of the ancient imperial lineage, Amaterasu-Omikami has been at the core of the basis of legitimacy for the Japanese state from ancient times to the present. The genealogy from Emperor Jimmu to successive emperors to the modern emperor was established through five generations from Amaterasu, functioning as an apparatus to guarantee the continuity between ancient myth and the ancient state. This is a prime example of establishing legitimacy through a founding myth of an ancient state, alongside China's Mandate of Heaven, Korea's Dangun myth, Rome's Aeneas myth, and Britain's Brutus myth. She has a complex religious and political history, having been emphasized and politically utilized as the core of State Shinto in pre-war Japan, and undergoing a history of re-evaluation and depoliticization under the post-war system of separation of church and state and popular sovereignty. Ise Shinto, Ryobu Shinto, and Yoshida Shinto ── History of Medieval Shinto Thought. In medieval Japan, faith in Amaterasu-Omikami gave rise to multiple ideological systems such as Ise Shinto, Ryobu Shinto, Yoshida Shinto, and Suika Shinto. Ise Shinto (Kamakura-Muromachi periods) was formed by Ise priesthood lineages like the Watarai and Arakida families, producing Shinto scriptures like the "Shinto Gobusho." Ryobu Shinto (Kamakura period) was a syncretism with Shingon Esoteric Buddhism, centered on the "Honji Suijaku" theory that identified Amaterasu with Mahavairocana (Dainichi Nyorai). Yoshida Shinto (Muromachi period) was a unique system formed by Kanetomo Yoshida (1435-1511), advocating "Yuiitsu Shinto," which positioned Shinto above Buddhism and Confucianism. Suika Shinto (Edo period) was a system integrating Confucianism, Neo-Confucianism, and Shinto by Ansai Yamazaki (1618-1682), emphasizing Shinto ethics centered on Amaterasu. These medieval and early modern Shinto thoughts evolved around Amaterasu-Omikami as their central axis, playing a decisive role in the formation of Japan's indigenous religious philosophy. Amaterasu-Omikami in the 21st Century ── From National Tutelary Deity to Individual Spirituality. Under the post-war constitutional system of separation of religion and state and popular sovereignty, Amaterasu-Omikami has been redefined from a political status as the "core of pre-war State Shinto" to a religious status as the "tutelary deity of the entire nation and the spiritual pillar of individuals." With over 8 million annual visitors to Ise Jingu, the nationwide distribution of Jingu Taima (amulets) centered on Ise Jingu, and the organizational structure of Shinto groups and the Association of Shinto Shrines, faith in Amaterasu remains at the foundation of Japanese daily religious life in the 21st century. At the same time, she has become a modern icon repeatedly reimagined in subcultures, games, and manga, making this a rare case where ancient myth and the spiritual culture of modern Japanese people maintain continuity across two millennia. Beyond merely a deity appearing in myths, she is a presence that holds sustained meaning as a core symbol running through the entirety of Japanese culture.

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