The Japanese gods who crossed the sea to Taiwan left more than 500 relics on Taiwan's main and outlying islands during the past 50 years, including shrines, Gounai shrines, Fengan halls, shrines, and monuments to local gods. Although most of them have been destroyed and demolished or used for other purposes (Martyrs' Shrine, Confucius Temple, temples, flag-raising platform, bronze statue base and slide, etc.), they still have historical and tourist value.
The APP collects information about more than 500 shrines in Taiwan and displays them as icons on the map to provide reference.
Images, provide current and past images as much as possible. If there is street view data, you can also open GOOGLE Street View for reference.
In addition, the last page only shows the location of the existing Komonu ruins, and there are about 61 of them. Among them, except for the Sakuma Shrine Koma Inu and the Tainan Normal School On-campus Koma Inu, they are in the warehouse respectively.
Most of the information is compiled from the Internet, literature and reference resources. We apologize for any errors. Some images of the remains are difficult to find, and you are welcome to provide images or missing information. In addition, since the image is included in the app and is limited in capacity, the reduction process affects the image quality.
Reference resources:
The current status of Taiwan’s shrines below YuケルGuanbi Shrine
Google Street View
Wikipedia
national cultural database
Database affiliated to the Ministry of Culture
Lin Zhengfang related research
National Central Library Taiwan Branch Information
Articles related to Professor Cai Jintang
Mr. Kaneko Nobuya's website and "Japanese Gods who came to Taiwan: A field trip to Taiwan's shrines during the Japanese occupation"
Mr. Lin Bingyan’s website information
Remains of the shrine
Crying black bear
Martians on Earth - Chin (Wild Travels)
time traveler
Hualien Humanities and Food Information Station in Ah Wing, Hualien (Mr. Huang Jiarong)
Beitou Hongye Studio (Mr. Yang Ye)
Waiting for multiple BLOG information
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Pennsylvania College of Lafayette Internet Information
Yunhe's Taiwanese Travel
Xuan Songzi's memory
god. photograph
How are Taiwan’s Japanese-style dormitories doing these days?
Puli Image Story Museum
History of microorganisms
Ershui Wandering Trip-Dongluo Field Studio
Historic places of Āu-Suann
Wandering in the mountains and forests. 𝐒𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐬𝐞𝐬𝐞
Remains of Taiwanese shrines
The Shrine and the History of the Shrine
Taiwan’s Black Golden Years
Mr. Ye Boqiang
Juyuan Literature and History Studio
Waiting for Facebook information
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Permission request:
Location (you can decide to use precise or rough location) to display the shrine ruins near your location.
Instructions for using device location data:
The [Location] permission needs to be enabled. After the application is closed or is not in use, the "Taiwan Shrine Heritage Map Application" will not collect the device's location data.
illustrate:
The exact location of some monuments is unknown today, and the icons indicate approximate locations, not actual locations.
Special statement: [Taiwan Shrine Heritage Map Application] does not represent the government, political entities or organizations. Some shrine ruins are located on private property or are in inaccessible places in remote mountains. If you want to visit, please pay more attention to your own safety.