稲荷神社

Japanese Name稲荷神社
PrefectureOkayama
ReligionShinto
Primary DeityInari
Typeinari Shrine
Coordinates34.6201859, 134.0987752

⛩ AI-enriched content

About this Shrine

Located in the Okayama Prefecture, the Inari Shrine is a Shinto shrine dedicated to the kami of rice and fertility. The shrine complex is famous for its thousands of vermilion torii gates that form a tunnel leading up the mountain. Visitors can explore the shrine grounds and climb the many paths to pray for good harvests, prosperity, and blessings.

Cultural Significance

The Inari Shrine is famous for its 'tsukimi' (moon viewing) festival in October, where devotees pray for good harvests and fertility under the full moon. The shrine's architecture reflects its status as an important center of Shinto industry and agriculture, with many rooms dedicated to the kami of rice and other grains.

Enshrined Deities

Inari

Location

Spot an error?

This shrine data is sourced from OpenStreetMap. You can submit a correction or edit it on OpenStreetMap.

Shrine data © OpenStreetMap contributors, under the Open Database License.

Browse shrines by prefecture

Jump to Shinto shrines across Japan — 108 prefectures in our directory.

Japanese Culture Network

Japanese Wood Joints

Ancient joinery techniques of Japanese master craftsmen

ShrinePuzzle

Directory of Japanese board games and traditional games

Kohibou

Japanese coffee culture — kissaten, third wave and brewing guides

E2Japan

Explore Japan's landmarks, shrines and hidden locations

The 725 Club

SNES and Super Famicom collection tracker

Spaceship Adventures

Hoshi no Isan — a Japanese-aesthetic space RPG in development

Uptown Zero

Pixel art life sim MMO — start at zero, build your life

Book Fairy Tales

AI-powered educational stories for kids

CSSKitsune

Japanese-aesthetic design tokens & AI-ready UI prompts

Shinto Wisdom app icon
Free App · No Ads · Offline

Shinto Wisdom Daily Practice

by 10k Game Studio

Every day, one teaching. One moment of stillness.
Kanji, meaning, and a quiet reflection — rooted in the philosophy behind Japan's forests, seasons, and sacred silences.

結び Musubi 清め Harae 自然 Shizen 間 Ma 誠 Makoto + 45 more
Get it on Google Play