
thumb|A himorogi at Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū thumb|Himorogi of Ame-no-hohi|Amenohohi-no-mikoto at [[Rokkosan Country House.]] in Shinto terminology are sacred spaces or altars used to worship. In their simplest form, they are square areas with green bamboo or sakaki at the corners without architecture. These in turn support sacred ropes (shimenawa) decorated with streamers called shide. A branch of sakaki or some other evergreen at the center acts as a yorishiro, a physical representation of the presence of the kami, a being which is in itself incorporeal.
thumb|A himorogi at Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū thumb|Himorogi of Ame-no-hohi|Amenohohi-no-mikoto at [[Rokkosan Country House.]] in Shinto terminology are sacred spaces or altars used to worship. In their simplest form, they are square areas with green bamboo or sakaki at the corners without architecture. These in turn support sacred ropes (shimenawa) decorated with streamers called shide. A branch of sakaki or some other evergreen at the center acts as a yorishiro, a physical representation of the presence of the kami, a being which is in itself incorporeal.
thumb|left|A himorogi built for a jichinsaiDuring the Aoi Festival in Kyoto the himorogi is a square space surrounded by green branches with an evergreen tree at the center as a yorishiro. A more elaborate himorogi can also be made with a straw mat on the ground with on it a ceremonial 8-legged stand called an '' decorated with shimenawa and sacred emblems.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).