
Places of Worship
Suzuo
The thick rope or cord used to ring the shrine bell before prayer.
The suzuo is a thick cord, typically woven from red and white cloth or hemp rope, hanging from the bell to allow worshippers to ring it. Lengths vary with the height of the haiden but generally measure two to three meters.
During New Year's, the crush of visitors can actually snap the suzuo, prompting some shrines to replace them with extra-sturdy ropes for the holiday season. Worn suzuo are ceremonially burned and replaced with new ones, sometimes multiple times per year.
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Haiden
The outer hall of a shrine where visitors offer prayers, typically featuring a bell and offering box.
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Honden
The innermost sacred building of a shrine where the divine object (goshintai) is enshrined.
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Heiden
The hall between the haiden and honden where offerings are presented to the deity.
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Hondō
The central building of a Buddhist temple where the principal image of Buddha is enshrined.
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Gohonzon
The principal object of worship in a Buddhist temple — a statue, painting, or mandala of Buddha.
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Saisen
A monetary offering tossed into the offering box as a token of gratitude to the gods or Buddha.
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Saisenbako
A sturdy wooden box placed before the worship hall for visitors to deposit monetary offerings.
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Suzu
A large bell hung at the front of the worship hall, rung by visitors to announce their presence to the gods.
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Suzuo
The thick rope or cord used to ring the shrine bell before prayer.
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Waniguchi
A flat, disc-shaped metal gong hung at temple entrances — the Buddhist equivalent of a shrine bell.
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Nihai-Nihakushu-Ichihai
The standard Shinto worship sequence: two deep bows, two handclaps, and one final bow.
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Kashiwade
The practice of clapping hands together during shrine worship to show reverence and announce one's presence.
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Gasshō
The Buddhist prayer posture of pressing both palms together in front of the chest.
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Shōkō
The ritual of burning incense at a temple or funeral to honor Buddha or the deceased.
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Senkō
Thin sticks of incense offered before Buddhist altars to purify the space and nourish the spirit.
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Kōro
A large incense vessel at temple entrances where visitors waft smoke over themselves for purification.