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- en.wikipedia.org Kunōzan Tōshō-gūEnshrined kami[edit]. The primary kami of Kunōzan Tōshō-gū is the Tōshō-Daigongen (東照大権現), the deified spirit of Tokugawa Ieyasu.
- jref.com articles/kunōzan-tōshōgū-shrine.661/After he died in 1616, he was buried at Kunōzan, where Hidetada, Ieyasu's son, completed Kunōzan Tōshōgū in December 1617.
- tokyopast3.com shizuoka-kunozan-toshogu/To this day, Kunōzan Tōshōgū remains a spectacular feat—an ornate shrine fit for a fearsome ruler. Check outthe video below for more information.
- tokyostreetview.com kunozan-tosho-gu/Founded in 1617 on top of Mount Kuno, Kunozan Tosho-Gu is a Shinto shrine and the original burial place of famous Shogun of the Tokugawa Shogunate
- commons.wikimedia.org wiki/Category:Kunōzan_Tōshō…English: Category for the Kunōzan Tōshō-gū, a Shintō shrine in Shizuoka, Shizuoka, Japan. ... Kunosan Toshogu12c.jpg 3,183 × 2,085; 846 KB.
- japan-guide.com e/e6353.htmlKunozan Toshogu (久能山東照宮, Kunōzan Tōshōgū) is a shrine dedicated to the famous leader Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543-1616) who brought a long period...
- google.com travel/hotels/entity/ChcI7fTrmpuA6eX_…Kunōzan Tōshōgū. 390 Negoya, Suruga Ward, Shizuoka, 422-8011, Japan•+81 54-237-2438.
- justonecookbook.com kunozan-toshogu-shrine/It is rumored that Ieyasu’s body is actually buried at Kunozan and not the better known Nikko Toshogu.
- trip.com moments/detail/shizuoka-1217-120159523/Kunōzan Tōshōgū Museum. #thingstodo Amazingly well-maintained. Go on a weekday if you can.
- ducksoupeasytravel.blogspot.com 2020/02/kunozan-…Tokugawa Ieyasu is not buried at Nikkō Tōshōgū, but on the mountain chosen by Ieyasu himself at Kunōzan Tōshōgū Shrine in Nihondaira, near the city of...
- tripadvisor.com Attraction_Review-g298124-…Shizuoka Station is about an hour from Tokyo and 68 minutes from Nagoya by Shinkansen. I met a Japanese Facebook friend who lives in Florence, Italy...
- travel-around-japan.com k51-33-kunozan-…Kunozan Toshogu is a Shinto shrine located about 7 km east of JR Shizuoka station. ... The Emperor gave the name "Tosho-Daigongen" to the god of Ieyasu.