Tokyo Grand Shrine

Shinto shrinefield affiliated with a shrine (the tax-exempt proceeds of its harvest going to pay for shrine operations)

Tokyo Grand Shrine(Tokyo-daijingū)

marriage

It was founded in 1880 (Meiji 13). After the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923, it was moved to its current location in 1928 and renamed Iidabashi Daijingu (Iidabashi Grand Shrine). It is also called the “Ise Shrine of Tokyo” because it enshrines Amaterasu-Okami and Toyoke-Okami, the deities of the Ise Jingu Shrine. The shrine is famous as the originator of Shinto wedding ceremonies for the general public, and is also known for its blessings for marriage.

Spot OutlineOutline

address (e.g. of house) 2-4-1 Fujimi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
Access 5 min. from JR and Subway Iidabashi Sta.

phone 03-3262-3566
Business Hours 6:00 – 21:00 (Hours of worship)
regular closing day nashi (Pyrus pyrifolia, esp. var. culta)
External Links

Official Web Site

Founding and opening of business 1880 (13th year of Meiji)

新着・おすすめ情報

  1. Nihonbashi Kuroeya deals in lacquerware from all over Japan. Protecting the goodwill through innovation, not single-mindedness.

  2. How do you read “shicho”? What do the different expressions mean? Hina Dolls

  3. A Walk in Edo with Old Maps] No. 2: Kyobashi and Ginza from the Edo Period to the Heisei Era Traced by Rivers

  4. 【第26回】三色や五色といった色にまつわる蕎麦の話

  5. Hanazono Shrine

  6. 三島神社(東京・鶯谷)

  7. Ome Shinmachi Oido (Ome, Tokyo)

  8. Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum

  9. 麻布・赤坂・六本木

  10. Odai-ningyo” is a doll made of paulownia wood with a Gosho doll on top.

  11. Tsukiji Honganji Temple

  12. just after fall

  13. combined off-license and pub (licence)

  14. Eagle Shrine

  15. 【第18回】古くから食べられてきた「そばがき」の作り方