Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/State_Shinto> ?p ?o }
- State_Shinto abstract "State Shintō (国家神道, Kokka Shintō) describes Imperial Japan's ideological use of the native folk traditions of Shinto. The state strongly encouraged Shinto practices to emphasize the Emperor as a divine being. This was exercised through control of finances and training regimes for priests.The State Shinto ideology emerged at the start of the Meiji era, as government officials defined freedom of religion within the Meiji Constitution. Scholars believed that Shinto reflected the historical fact of the Emperor's divine origins, not religious belief, and that it should enjoy a privileged relationship with the Japanese state. For the state, Shinto was seen as a non-religious moral tradition and patriotic practice.Early Meiji-era attempts to unite Shinto and state failed, but this non-religious concept of ideological Shinto was incorporated into state bureaucracy. Shrines were defined as patriotic, not religious, institutions, which served state purposes such as honoring the war dead. The state also integrated local shrines into political functions, occasionally spurring local opposition and resentment. With fewer shrines financed by the state, nearly 80,000 closed or merged with neighbors. Many shrines and shrine organizations began to independently embrace these state directives, regardless of funding. By 1940, Shinto priests risked persecution for performing traditionally \"religious\" Shinto ceremonies.Imperial Japan did not draw a distinction between ideological Shinto and traditional Shinto. US military leaders introduced the term \"State Shinto\" to differentiate the state's ideology from traditional Shinto practices in the 1945 Shinto Directive. That decree established Shinto as a religion, and banned further ideological uses of Shinto by the state. Controversy continues to surround the use of Shinto symbols in state functions.".
- State_Shinto thumbnail Empire_of_Japan_50_sen_banknote_with_Yasukuni_Shrine.jpg?width=300.
- State_Shinto wikiPageID "2926778".
- State_Shinto wikiPageLength "37709".
- State_Shinto wikiPageOutDegree "74".
- State_Shinto wikiPageRevisionID "707253547".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Amaterasu.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Amulet.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Association_of_Shinto_Shrines.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Category:Empire_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_nationalism.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shinto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Christianity_in_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Chōsen_Jingū.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Congregation_for_the_Evangelization_of_Peoples.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Constitution_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Controversies_surrounding_Yasukuni_Shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Douglas_MacArthur.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Edo_period.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Meiji.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Empire_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Macarthur_hirohito.jpg.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Hainan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Hirata_Atsutane.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Hirohito.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Ho_Chi_Minh_City.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Humanity_Declaration.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_House_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_cult.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink International_Military_Tribunal_for_the_Far_East.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Ise_Grand_Shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_invasion_of_Taiwan_(1895).
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_nationalism.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_occupation_of_Singapore.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_occupation_of_the_Dutch_East_Indies.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kami.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kanda_Shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kannushi.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kogakkan_University.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kojiki.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kokugaku.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kokugakuin_University.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Kokutai.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Korea_under_Japanese_rule.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_Constitution.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_period.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Ministry_of_Education,_Culture,_Sports,_Science_and_Technology.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Mission_(Christianity).
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Nihon_Shoki.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Occupation_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Oomoto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Pacifism.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Prime_Minister_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Religion.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Religion_in_Japan.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Sakhalin.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Second_Sino-Japanese_War.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_Directive.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_in_Korea.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_sects_and_schools.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_wedding.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Supreme_Commander_for_the_Allied_Powers.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Torii.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Yasukuni_Shrine.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink Ōkuninushi.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Empire_of_Japan_(1868-1945).png.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Empire_of_Japan_50_sen_banknote_with_Yasukuni_Shrine.jpg.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Meiji-tenno_among_kami_and_emperors.JPG.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Portrait_of_Atsutane_Hirata.jpg.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Yasukuni_1st_Torii_20060122.jpg.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLink File:Yasukuni_Shrine_2012.JPG.
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "''Koshitsu Shinto''".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shinto became the state religion".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shintoism was set as the state religion".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "State Shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "fundamentalist shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "government supported shrines".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "state Shinto".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "state religion".
- State_Shinto wikiPageWikiLinkText "worship of the Emperor".
- State_Shinto author "Signed by various Shinto leaders, 1874".
- State_Shinto source "Source material".
- State_Shinto text "National Teaching is teaching the codes of national government to the people without error. Japan is called the divine land because it is ruled by the heavenly deities descendants, who consolidate the work of the deities. The Way of such consolidation and rule by divine descendants is called Shinto.".
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:JapanEmpireNavbox.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo3.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Religion_and_politics.
- State_Shinto wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Rp.
- State_Shinto subject Category:Empire_of_Japan.
- State_Shinto subject Category:Japanese_nationalism.
- State_Shinto subject Category:Shinto.
- State_Shinto type Religion.
- State_Shinto type Thing.
- State_Shinto comment "State Shintō (国家神道, Kokka Shintō) describes Imperial Japan's ideological use of the native folk traditions of Shinto. The state strongly encouraged Shinto practices to emphasize the Emperor as a divine being. This was exercised through control of finances and training regimes for priests.The State Shinto ideology emerged at the start of the Meiji era, as government officials defined freedom of religion within the Meiji Constitution.".