Hakke shintō

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Hakke Shintō (伯家神道) was a lineage of Shinto transmitted by the Shirakawa clan (白川伯王家), descendants of Emperor Kazan, who held the hereditary office of Jingi-haku (Chief of the Department of Divinities).[1] It is also known as Shirakawa Shintō (白川神道).[2]

Under the Ritsuryō system, the position of Jingi-haku was originally held by the Ōnakatomi clan and later by the Fujiwara clan and Minamoto clan.[3] Prince Nobunobu (延信王), grandson of Emperor Kazan, was granted the surname Minamoto and became Jingi-haku in 1046.[4] From the appointment of Prince Akihiro in 1165 onward, the office became hereditary within his descendants, who came to be known as the Shirakawa family or Hakke.[5][6][7]

In the late Muromachi period, Yoshida Kanetomo founded Yoshida Shintō and claimed the title Jingi-kanryō chōjō (Head of the Department of Divinities).[8][9] The Shirakawa head Prince Tadatomi (忠富王) studied under Kanetomo.[10]

Edo period

Meiji period and decline

References

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