Kawara Shrine
0 sources
Kawara Shrine
Summary
Kawara Shrine is a setsumatsusha[1].
Key Facts
- Kawara Shrine is located in Ise[2].
- Kawara Shrine is located in Ise Province[3].
- Kawara Shrine is located in Watarai district[4].
- Kawara Shrine is in the country of Japan[5].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as setsumatsusha[6].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Shikinaisha[7].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Sessha[8].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Massha[9].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Shinto shrine[10].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Kokuhei-sha[11].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Disputed Shikinaisha or Shikigeisha[12].
- Kawara Shrine's instance of is recorded as Shikinai Subshrine[13].
- Kawara Shrine's architectural style is recorded as Shinmei-zukuri[14].
- Kawara Shrine is part of 125 Shrines of Ise[15].
- Kawara Shrine is part of List of Shikinaisha in Ise Province[16].
- Kawara Shrine is part of Toyōke Daijingū[17].
- Kawara Shrine's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 34.51211111111111, 'longitude': 136.73686111111112, 'precision': 2.777777777777778e-05}[18].
- Kawara Shrine's parent organization or unit is recorded as Toyōke Daijingū[19].
- Kawara Shrine's official name is recorded as 川原大社[20].
- Kawara Shrine's different from is recorded as Kawara Shrine[21].
- Kawara Shrine's street address is recorded as 三重県伊勢市御薗町新開[22].
- Kawara Shrine's shrine ranking is recorded as Shikinai Shōsha[23].
- Kawara Shrine's shrine ranking is recorded as Kokuhei-sha[24].
Body
Geography
Kawara Shrine is in the country of Japan[5]. Located in include Ise[2], a city of Japan[25], in Japan[26], founded in 1955[27]; Ise Province[3], a province of Japan[28], in Japan[29]; and Watarai district[4], a district of Japan[30], in Japan[31], founded in 1879[32]. Part of include 125 Shrines of Ise[15], a list[33]; List of Shikinaisha in Ise Province[16], a list[34]; and Toyōke Daijingū[17], a jingū[35], in Japan[36].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include setsumatsusha[6], Shikinaisha[7], Sessha[8], Massha[9], Shinto shrine[10], and Kokuhei-sha[11].