普通の外にいくつかの著名な品質を持っている、と畏敬の念を起こさせるあるいかなるビーイングは、カミと呼ばれています。
Saitama-ken, Fujimi-shi, Mizuko 1762
埼玉県富士見市水子1762
水宮神社
Mizumiya Jinja
Nearest station
Mizuhodai
Tōbu Tōjō Line
December 22, 2016
The shrine’s home page (Japanese) traces its roots back to a temple founded in the Muromachi Period. A document called the Hanyain Bunsho, which has been designated as a tangible cultural asset by Fujimi-shi, notes the foundation of a temple, Shūgen-dera, as a sub-temple of the Kyōto-based Shōgo-in. As a result of the government-enforced separation of shrines and temples (shin-butsu bunri) in the early Meiji Period a new religious institution, the Mizumiya Shinden, where Amaterasu Ōkami and four other gods were worshipped was set up. Over a century later, in 1993, this was renamed Mizumiya Jinja.
As shown in the photos below, Mizumiya Jinja has no koma-inu, rather it has koma-kaeru (frog)
Enshrined Deities:
木花開耶姫命 Konohanasakuya-no-mikoto
誉田別命 Hondawake-no-mikoto
罔象女神 Mizuha-no-me-no-kami
In-ground Shrines:
稲荷神社 Inari Jinja
Earliest mention of: Unclear
Annual Festival: April 29