| Engishiki Code | 004-020 |
|---|---|
| Engishiki Entry | 稲荷神社 三座 Inarino |
| Current Identification | 伏見稲荷大社 Fushimi Inari Taisha |
| Prefecture | 京都府 Kyoto |
| Location | 京都市伏見区深草藪之内町68 |
| Principal Deity | 宇迦之御魂大神、大宮能売大神、佐田彦大神、四大神、田中大神 U Ka Yuki Mitama Daijin,oomiya Nou Bai Daijin,sada Hiko Daijin,yondai Kami,tanaka Daijin |
| Rank | 並名神大 Nami-Myojin-taisha |
| Nearest Station | JR稲荷駅 JR Inari Station |
| Historical Province | 山城国 |
| District | 紀伊郡 |
KIKI / Reiwa Engishiki Database. This entry prioritizes scan-friendly structured data for international researchers and travellers.
Activities Around Fushimi Inari Taisha
After paying respects at Fushimi Inari Taisha, the area around JR Inari Station opens into a deeper Kyoto experience shaped by ritual, fermentation, and mountain landscape. The selections below favor experiences with historical texture and local substance rather than generic sightseeing.
Traditional Culture: Tea Ceremony in a Kyoto Machiya
A short ride from Inari brings you to a tea room where the practice of chanoyu is presented not as spectacle, but as disciplined hospitality. Preparing matcha and seasonal wagashi after visiting the shrine creates a meaningful continuity between Shinto reverence and Kyoto’s cultivated etiquette.
Food Experience: Fushimi Sake District Walk & Tasting
Fushimi’s canal-side brewing quarter is one of Japan’s great sake landscapes. A guided tasting walk reveals how pure local water, merchant culture, and long brewing lineages shaped the district, making it one of the most convincing food-and-history excursions near the shrine.
Outdoor Experience: Hidden Morning Hike on Mount Inari
The torii-lined ascent is best understood on quieter paths beyond the most photographed approach. A guided morning hike reframes the mountain as sacred terrain, connecting subsidiary shrines, overlook points, and stories that are often missed in a quick visit.
Editorial Note
These recommendations were chosen to complete the pilgrimage arc of information, spirit, and experience. Together they connect shrine devotion, Kyoto’s craft discipline, and the lived geography of the Fushimi district in a way that feels rooted rather than merely touristic.
