Sakura Jingu Shrine
桜神宮Sakura Jingu Shrine is a shrine that enshrines the gods of Japan, including Amaterasu, which was founded in Kanda Imagawakoji in Meiji 15 (enshrines gods centered on the Kiki mythology of Japan).
In the 4th year of the Taisho era, an oracle was issued to move the shrine to the west as soon as possible, and from the 8th to the 11th year of the Taisho era, the shrine was moved to the current site of Sakurashinmachi, Setagaya Ward. As a result, it was spared from the disasters of the Great Kanto Earthquake (Taisho 12) and the fires of the Pacific War, and was revered as a temple for fire and disaster protection.
Masaki Yoshimura, who founded the shrine, was a descendant of the 65th generation of the Ōnakatomi family, and in the early Meiji era, he served as the head of Ise Jingu Shrine, the director of the Tokyo Branch Office of the Jingu Branch Office (the predecessor of Tokyo Daijingu), and the priest of Tatsuta Jingu Shrine, and prayed for the health of Emperor Taisho for three years at the request of the First Rank Bureau (Keiko Nakayama), and gained the trust of many people in the Meiji government, the shrine community, and many others, and worked hard to indoctrinate people as a Shinto priest.
In the fifteenth year of the Meiji Era, Emperor Meiji granted a royal charter to establish a sect of Shintoism, the name of which was "Teachings of Divine Practice" that was given by an oracle from the life of Kohime while serving in the Jingu Shrine. For this reason, Sakura Jingu Shrine is revered by people all over the country as the main temple of ancient Shintoism.
Through the introduction of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Ministry of the Interior, a large number of Anglo-American people visited the shrine, which was unusual in the Meiji era.
In the same year, in response to the strong request of the Ontake predecessors in the eight provinces of the Kanto region, and with the permission of the governor of Nagano Prefecture and the consent of the shrine manager of the Ontake Shrine (the three shrines of Taki, Takei, and Mukai), the alter egos of the three gods of Ontake were enshrined in the Aiden, and many more people believed in them.