Nakayama Miki

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Nakayama Miki (Maegawa)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Tenri, Nara, Japan
Death: January 26, 1887 (88)
Tenri, Nara, Japan
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Maegawa Hanshichi and Kinu Maegawa
Wife of Nakayama Zenbei
Mother of Shuji Nakayama; Omasa Nakayama; Oyasu Nakayama; Oharu Nakayama; Otsune Nakayama and 1 other

Managed by: Alex Bickle
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Nakayama Miki

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakayama_Miki

Nakayama Miki (中山 みき, 18 April 1798 – 26 January 1887 by the Japanese calendar) was a nineteenth-century Japanese farmer and religious leader. She is the primary figure of the Japanese new religion Tenrikyo. Followers, who refer to her as Oyasama (おやさま), believe that she was settled as the Shrine of Tsukihi from the moment she experienced a divine revelation in 1838 until her death in 1887.

Upon her divine revelation, she gave away most of her family's possessions and dismantled the family's house, thereby entering a state of poverty. She began to attract followers, who believed that she was a living goddess who could heal people and bless expectant mothers with safe childbirth. To leave a record of her teachings, she composed the Ofudesaki and taught the lyrics, choreography and music of the Service, which have become Tenrikyo's scripture and liturgy respectively. She identified what she claimed to be the place where God created human beings and instructed her followers to mark the place with a pillar and perform the liturgy around it, which she believed would advance humankind toward the salvific state of the Joyous Life. In the last several years of her life, she and her followers were arrested and detained a number of times by the Japanese authorities for forming a religious group without official authorization. A year after her death, Tenrikyo Church Headquarters received official authorization to be a church under the Shinto Main Bureau.

Tenrikyo doctrine maintains that Nakayama Miki was the fulfillment of God's promise to humankind at creation, which was that after a certain number of years had elapsed, God would be revealed through the soul of the mother of humankind at the place of creation and inform humankind of its origins, purpose, and means of salvation. Doctrine also maintains that as the Shrine of God, Nakayama's words and actions were in complete accordance with the divine will and that upon her death, her soul withdrew from physical existence and became everliving.

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Nakayama Miki's Timeline

1798
April 18, 1798
Tenri, Nara, Japan
1821
July 1821
1825
April 1825
1827
September 1827
1831
September 21, 1831
1833
November 7, 1833
1837
December 15, 1837
1887
January 26, 1887
Age 88
Tenri, Nara, Japan