Inari$532188$ - translation to Αγγλικά
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Inari$532188$ - translation to Αγγλικά

JAPANESE KAMI OF FOXES, OF FERTILITY, RICE, TEA AND SAKE, OF AGRICULTURE AND INDUSTRY ETC
Inari (god); Inari (mythology); Inari Okami; Inari faith
  • Inari appears to a warrior.  This portrayal of Inari shows the influence of [[Dakiniten]] concepts from [[Buddhism]].
  • Inari and their fox spirits help the blacksmith Munechika forge the blade ''kogitsune-maru'' (''Little Fox'') in the late 10th century.  This legend is the subject of the [[noh]] drama ''Sanjo Kokaji''.
  • Statue of a ''[[kitsune]]'' adorned with a red votive bib in a shrine at [[Inuyama Castle]].  Many castles in Japan contain Inari shrines.
  • Tenkei o motte sōkai o saguru no zu}}. Painting by Kobayashi Eitaku, 1880–90 (MFA, Boston). Izanagi to the right, Izanami to the left.
  • The Hokkaido red fox

Inari      
n. Inari, japanische Gottheit der Fruchtbarkeit Reis und Füchse; See im Norden Finnlands

Βικιπαίδεια

Inari Ōkami

Inari Ōkami (Japanese: 稲荷大神), also called Ō-Inari (大稲荷), is the Japanese kami of foxes, fertility, rice, tea and sake, of agriculture and industry, of general prosperity and worldly success, and one of the principal kami of Shinto. In earlier Japan, Inari was also the patron of swordsmiths and merchants. Represented as male, female, or androgynous, Inari is sometimes seen as a collective of three or five individual kami. Inari appears to have been worshipped since the founding of a shrine at Inari Mountain in 711 AD, although some scholars believe that worship started in the late 5th century.

By the 16th century, Inari had become the patron of blacksmiths and the protector of warriors, and worship of Inari spread across Japan in the Edo period. Inari is a popular figure in both Shinto and Buddhist beliefs in Japan. More than one-third (32,000) of the Shinto shrines in Japan are dedicated to Inari. Modern corporations, such as cosmetic company Shiseido, continue to revere Inari as a patron kami, with shrines atop their corporate headquarters.

Inari's foxes, or kitsune, are pure white and act as their messengers.

According to myth, Inari, as a goddess, was said to have come to Japan at the time of its creation amidst a harsh famine that struck the land. "She [Inari] descended from Heaven riding on a white fox, and in her hand she carried sheaves of cereal or grain. Ine, the word now used for rice, is the name for this cereal. What she carried was not rice but some cereal that grows in swamps. According to legend, in the ancient times Japan was water and swamp land."