Munakata Taisha
0 sources
Munakata Taisha
Summary
Munakata Taisha is a Munakata shrine[1]. It draws 547 Wikipedia views per month (munakata_shrine category, ranking #1 of 1).[2]
Key Facts
- Munakata Taisha is located in Munakata[3].
- Munakata Taisha is located in Munakata district[4].
- Munakata Taisha is located in Chikuzen Province[5].
- Munakata Taisha is in the country of Japan[6].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as Munakata shrine[7].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as taisha[8].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as Shikinaisha[9].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as Myōjin Taisha[10].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as Shinto shrine[11].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as Kokuhei-sha[12].
- Munakata Taisha's instance of is recorded as Shikinai Supershrine[13].
- Munakata Taisha's headquarters location is recorded as Hetsu-gū[14].
- Munakata Taisha's child organization or unit is recorded as Orihata Shrine[15].
- Munakata Taisha is part of Sacred Island of Okinoshima and Associated Sites in the Munakata Region[16].
- Munakata Taisha is part of List of Shikinaisha in Chikuzen Province[17].
- Munakata Taisha's Commons category is recorded as Munakata-taisha[18].
- Munakata Taisha comprises Okinoshima[19].
- Munakata Taisha comprises Okitsu-gū[20].
- Munakata Taisha comprises Nakatsu-gū[21].
- Munakata Taisha comprises Hetsu-gū[22].
- Munakata Taisha comprises Engishiki seat[23].
- Munakata Taisha's mother house is recorded as Autocthonous shrine[24].
- Munakata Taisha's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 33.830833, 'lon': 130.514167}[25].
- Munakata Taisha's significant event is recorded as Miare Festival[26].
- Munakata Taisha's dedicated to is recorded as Three Goddesses of Munakata[27].
Body
Geography
Munakata Taisha is in the country of Japan[6]. Located in include Munakata[3], a city of Japan[28], in Japan[29], founded in 1954[30]; Munakata district[4], a former district of Japan[31], in Japan[32], founded in 1878[33]; and Chikuzen Province[5], a province of Japan[34], in Japan[35]. Part of include Sacred Island of Okinoshima and Associated Sites in the Munakata Region[16], a group of geographic locations[36], in Japan[37] and List of Shikinaisha in Chikuzen Province[17], a list[38].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include Munakata shrine[7], taisha[8], Shikinaisha[9], Myōjin Taisha[10], Shinto shrine[11], and Kokuhei-sha[12]. Heritage statuses include part of UNESCO World Heritage Site[39], Important Cultural Property of Japan[40], and Historic Site of Japan[41].
Why It Matters
Munakata Taisha draws 547 Wikipedia views per month (munakata_shrine category, ranking #1 of 1).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[42] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[43]