Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, Volume 27, Issues 3-4International Institute for the Study of Religions, 2000 - Japan |
Contents
Volume 27 Numbers 34 Fall | 163 |
Shinto Funerals in the Edo Period | 239 |
Changes in Japanese Urban Funeral Customs during | 335 |
Copyright | |
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altar Amida ancestor ASAKA ASOYA and TANUMA Awashima bodily relics body bones Buddha Buddhist Buddhist priests Bunchi burial buried burning century ceremony Chinese coffin company funerals Confucian corpse cremated remains cremation crematories crematorium custom dead death deceased doctrine Edo period Ekū Enshō-ji enshrined example family members father filial funeral company funeral manual funeral practices funeral procession funerary Genchi grave graveyards guests Gyōki Gyokusen'in hari kuyō Hashimoto hearse Honganji imperial funeral incense Japan Japanese funeral Kakunyo kami Kanemi Kanemigi's kokubetsu-shiki Kōmei's kuyō rites Kyoto Meiji era Meiji period memorial tablet modern monks monomasa mortuary rites mourners mourning myōgō Myōshin-ji needles Nemoto's funeral nenbutsu Nihon shoki offerings officials Osaka performed Princeton Pure Land Buddhism religious Rennyo rites for objects ritual scholars Sensō-ji shinbun Shinran Shinshū Shinto funerals Shinto priests Shōkoku-ji shrine Sōgi sōsai spirit sutras symbolic Taishō Taishō era temple tion Tokugawa Tokyo traditional worship Yoshida