Masumida Shrine
Masumida Shrine is a Shinto shrine in the Masumida neighborhood of the city of Ichinomiya in Aichi Prefecture, Japan. It is the ichinomiya of former Owari Province. The main festival of the shrine is held annually on April 3.
Enshrined ''kami''
The kami enshrined at Masumida Jinja is:'Amenohoakari, kami'' of the sun and agriculture, the younger brother of Ninigi, and the ancestor of the Owari clan, the prehistoric rulers of the area.History
The date of Masumida Shrine's foundation is unknown. Shrine tradition and the Kujiki records give the unlikely date of 628 BC, or the third day of the third month of the 33rd year in the reign of Emperor Jimmu, when the spirit of Amenohoakari was brought to Owari from the Mount Katsuragi in Yamato Province. Another tradition gives the date of foundation to the reign of the semi-legendary Emperor Suinin. The shrine is located near the site of the provincial capital of Owari Province, established in the Nara period and features in the Yamato Takeru myth cycle. During the early Heian period, it appears in the Rikkokushi and in the Engishiki records. It has been styled as the ichinomiya of Owari Province since at least the end of the Heian period.In 1584, after the shrine was damaged by an earthquake, it was rebuilt by Toyotomi Hideyoshi. It was subsequently supported by the Tokugawa shogunate and Owari Domain until the end of the Edo period. After the Meiji restoration, the shrine was given the rank of National shrine, 3rd rank in the Modern system of ranked Shinto shrines in 1885. It was promoted a National shrine, 2nd rank in 1914. The shrine was destroyed in the Ichinomiya in [World War">Ichinomiya, Aichi">Ichinomiya in [World War II|Ichinomiya air raid] of 1945 and was not rebuilt until 1951, with reconstruction taking ten years.
The shrine is located ten-minutes on foot from either Owari-Ichinomiya Station on the JR Central Tōkaidō Main Line or Meitetsu Ichinomiya Station on the Kintetsu Railway Nagoya Main Line
Cultural properties
[Important [Cultural Properties of Japan|Important Cultural Properties]]
Bugaku masks, set of 12, ten from the Kamakura period, two from the Muromachi period, donation from Juntoku Tenno- Red Lacquerware, Muromachi period; set of 25 items, including lacquer trays, saucers and bowls, dated 1457