Religious Holidays Quiz
What kind of calendar do Shinto practitioners observe?
- It was much influenced by Chinese traditions.
- The Japanese imperial court set up a bureau of divination, called the Onmyoryo ("Office of Yin-Yang"), and one of the Onmyoryo's chief functions was to establish a liturgical calendar.
- Prior to the nineteenth century, many Shinto shrines maintained their own calendars of events, including uniquely regional and local festivities.
- Today some major events still take place according to various ways of adapting the lunar calendar to fit the solar.
Prior to the nineteenth century, many Shinto shrines maintained their own calendars of events, including uniquely regional and local festivities. Today some major events still take place according to various ways of adapting the lunar calendar to fit the solar. For example, some festivals now occur on the same numbered day within the same numbered month, but transferred to the solar reckoning. In other words, a festival that fell on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month now falls on July 7. Some festivals are now dated by keeping the day date but adding a solar month, so that a celebration once held on the seventh day of the seventh month now occurs on August 7. Finally, and more rarely, a few days retain their lunar dating completely, so that they rotate backward against the solar year. From the solar point of view, therefore, these are moveable feasts. Since the late nineteenth century, the timing of the major festivals has been coordinated so that all the larger shrines observe them at the same time. But there are still many distinctive local and regional festivities attached to individual shrines, such as the rituals dedicated to the patron deities of particular places. In addition to the liturgical calendar, an important related feature is the Japanese custom of dividing history according to imperial reigns or epochs. Emperor Hirohito died in 1989, ending the Showa era, and his son Akihito's accession inaugurated the Heisei epoch.
From The Handy Religion Answer Book, Second Edition by Jack Renard, Ph.D., (c) 2012 Visible Ink Press(R). Your Guide to the World's Major Faiths
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