"Nami-removal Inari" and "Nami-removal Inari"
great exorcism's New Year's Chinowa was seen at the shrine five days later. When I went out of the hall for shopping and wanted to visit Mr. Namiki, a great line of Chinowa. The psychology of praying for "dissolving evil" and "dispelling plague" is the same.
By the way, this Namiwa Inari Shrine is "wa", but Tsukuda's "Nami-Inari Shrine" is "Nami". This is the difference between "wave" and "Nami", but there seems to be no difference in the meaning of kanji. Tsukiji's Naniwa Inari is based on the fact that "a statue of Inari Myojin appeared from under the sea during landfill work", but it is said that Tsukuda's Naniwa Inari was founded and its history is unknown. According to one theory, the fishermen of Tsukuda are from Settsu and Osaka, so they used "Nami" of "Nami". Both Tsukiji and Tsukuda are landfills, so it is true that fisheries and water transport officials prayed for water shortages and big catches, but I'm worried.
And there is another company in Chuo-ku, Namishi Inari. It is "Higashi drama Nami Inari Shrine" sits in the parking lot of Higashi drama. When it was rebuilt into a high-rise building in 1975 (1975), it was enshrined here.
This is said to have been enshrined from Tsukiji's Nami-Inari. This eastern drama is now a cinema that performs cinema Kabuki, etc., but it opened in 1930 (1930), and until shortly after the war, it was a theater that performed theaters such as Kabuki. There is "backstage Inari" in the theater, so it would have been in the theater at that time. Since Kabukiza was burned down in the Great Tokyo Air Raid, this Tokyo Theater performed its first postwar "Chushingura" in November 1947.
The shape of the torii is Tsukuda and Higashi drama are Myojin Torii, and Tsukiji is Shinmei Torii. I don't know the difference, but "Shiranami Five Men" is still "Nami".