Shinto — For other uses, see Shinto (disambiguation). Takachiho gawara. Here is a Sacred ground … Wikipedia
Canole — Cassotte Cassotte en bois du XVIIIe et en plastique du XXe sur un évier en pierre. Charente (France). Une cassotte en Charente[1], ou bien encore coussotte … Wikipédia en Français
Couade — Cassotte Cassotte en bois du XVIIIe et en plastique du XXe sur un évier en pierre. Charente (France). Une cassotte en Charente[1], ou bien encore coussotte … Wikipédia en Français
Coussotte — Cassotte Cassotte en bois du XVIIIe et en plastique du XXe sur un évier en pierre. Charente (France). Une cassotte en Charente[1], ou bien encore coussotte … Wikipédia en Français
Chōzuya — A chōzuya A chōzuya or temizuya (手水舎?) is a Shinto water ablution pavilion for a ceremonial purificati … Wikipedia
Heshikiya Chōbin — nihongo|Heshikiya Chōbin|平敷屋朝敏|(1700 1734) was one of the leaders of a plot to overthrow Sai On, chief royal advisor to King Shō Kei of the Ryūkyū Kingdom, a plot for which he was arrested and executed. Chōbin was a scholar of Japanese literature … Wikipedia
Misogi — (jap. 禊) ist ein Reinigungsritual (Waschung) in der Shintō Religion, welches zweimal im Jahr stattfindet. Die Gläubigen reinigen sich vor der Anbetung in einem Wasserfall oder in laufendem, meist kalten, Wasser, vor dem Sonnenaufgang. Für das… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Harae — Or harai, o harae, o barai. Purification, purity, the converse of kegare, pollution. Harae is a general term for ceremonies of purification designed to counter misfortune and pollution and restore ritual purity. Sprinkling water on face and… … A Popular Dictionary of Shinto
Misogi — Purification or purification ceremony. It can have the same range of meanings as Harai/Harae but refers especially to the use of salt water (or fresh water, cold or warm, or just salt) to remove tsumi or kegare, sins and pollution. At the… … A Popular Dictionary of Shinto
Mi-tarashi — The honorific term for hand rinsing [water] ; it refers to the pure water, preferably from a running source such as a clear river (mitarashi gawa or harae gawa), used for rinsing the hands and mouth before entering a shrine or participating in … A Popular Dictionary of Shinto