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Ide Kuniko

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Japanese religious leader
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In thisJapanese name, thesurname is Ide (井出).
Ide Kuniko
井出 国子
Ide Kuniko
Personal life
Born(1863-07-24)24 July 1863
Died6 September 1947(1947-09-06) (aged 84)
Resting placeAsahi Jinja (朝日神社),Miki, Hyōgo
NationalityJapanese
Home townMiki, Hyōgo
Known forFounding Asahi Jinja (朝日神社)
Other namesOyasama of Banshū (播州の親様)
Websitewww.ide-kuniko.com

Ide Kuniko (井出 国子) (24 July 1863[1] – 6 September 1947), also known asIde Kuni (井出 クニ), was a Japanese religious leader fromMiki,Hyōgo Prefecture who founded her own religious movement based onTenrikyo.[2] She experienced divine possession in 1908 and later foundedAsahi Jinja (朝日神社) in Miki.[3] She was also known as theOyasama ofBanshū (播州の親様) and the "Second Foundress" (Nidai no Kyōso 二代の教祖), since her followers revered her as the successor to Tenrikyo's founderNakayama Miki (also known asOyasama).[4]

In 1911, Ide Kuniko claimed to have divine powers at theTenrikyo Church Headquarters inTenri, Nara, where she was dragged out and beaten by other Tenrikyo followers.[2]

Ide Kuniko used a variant of theMikagura-uta called theNisei Mikagura-uta (二世御かぐら歌) (lit.'Second-generation Mikagura-uta').[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"クニの生家~吉永家".朝日神社教祖 播州の親様 (in Japanese). Retrieved2025-05-06.
  2. ^ab豊嶋 泰國 (1999).天理の霊能者: 天理教教祖・中山みきの実像に迫る 中山みきと神人群像 (in Japanese). 地方・小出版流通センター.ISBN 9784998069904.
  3. ^"朝日神社".朝日神社教祖 播州の親様 (in Japanese). 2024-05-10. Retrieved2025-05-06.
  4. ^Forbes, Roy Tetsuo (2005).Schism, orthodoxy and heresy in the history of Tenrikyō : three case studies (Thesis). University of Hawai'i Department of Religion. p. 123.
  5. ^"二世御かぐら歌│全".朝日神社教祖 – 井出国子 (in Japanese). 2022-11-20. Retrieved2025-04-27.

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