From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A high priest in 1902, photographed by Kusakabe Kimbei

Shinkan (神官) were government officials serving at shakaku-ranked Shinto shrines in Japan. [1] [2] Commonly, shinkan were officially appointed kannushi. [3]

Terminology

According to the 1884 Daijō-kan decree, shinkan is an official who has been given the status of a government official ( kanri) to serve at a shakaku-ranked shrine. However, in 1887, at shrines ranking below kanpei-sha, with the exception of Ise Grand Shrine, the position of shinkan was abolished and the position of shinshoku was introduced. In 1945, Ise Grand Shrine abolished the position of shinkan. [2]

Today, the position of shinkan does not exist, and the kannushi of Shinto shrines are collectively referred to as shinshoku. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Oxford Languages. Google’s Japanese dictionary. 神官 (Shinkan).
  2. ^ a b c "神道用語辞典" [Okayama Prefectural Agency of Shinto Shrines. Shinto Terminology Encyclopedia]. 岡山県神社庁 (in Japanese). 神官 (Shinkan). Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  3. ^ Dejitaru Daijisen. APA. 2011. Shinkan (神官).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A high priest in 1902, photographed by Kusakabe Kimbei

Shinkan (神官) were government officials serving at shakaku-ranked Shinto shrines in Japan. [1] [2] Commonly, shinkan were officially appointed kannushi. [3]

Terminology

According to the 1884 Daijō-kan decree, shinkan is an official who has been given the status of a government official ( kanri) to serve at a shakaku-ranked shrine. However, in 1887, at shrines ranking below kanpei-sha, with the exception of Ise Grand Shrine, the position of shinkan was abolished and the position of shinshoku was introduced. In 1945, Ise Grand Shrine abolished the position of shinkan. [2]

Today, the position of shinkan does not exist, and the kannushi of Shinto shrines are collectively referred to as shinshoku. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Oxford Languages. Google’s Japanese dictionary. 神官 (Shinkan).
  2. ^ a b c "神道用語辞典" [Okayama Prefectural Agency of Shinto Shrines. Shinto Terminology Encyclopedia]. 岡山県神社庁 (in Japanese). 神官 (Shinkan). Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  3. ^ Dejitaru Daijisen. APA. 2011. Shinkan (神官).

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook