Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 17, 2026

Gohei

Gohei , onbe , or heisoku are wooden wands, decorated with two shide used in Shinto rituals. It may be considered an Ōnusa with only two Shide.

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Jun 17, 2026
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Gohei in front of Shinto shrine source ↗

Gohei (御幣), onbe (御幣), or heisoku (幣束) are wooden wands, decorated with two shide (zigzagging paper streamers) used in Shinto rituals. It may be considered an Ōnusa with only two Shide.

The streamers are usually white, although they can also be gold, silver, jade, or a mixture of several colors, and are often attached as decorations to straw ropes (shimenawa) used to mark sacred precincts.

The shrine priest or attendants (miko) use the gohei to bless or sanctify a person or object in various Shinto rituals. The gohei is used for some ceremonies, but its usual purpose is to cleanse a sacred place in temples and to cleanse, bless, or exorcise any object that is thought to have negative energy. In addition to its use in purification rituals, it may be included in an ōnusa (wooden wand with many shide), and serve as the object of veneration (shintai) in a Shinto shrine.

A type of food called Goheimochi is thought to have been named after the staff.1

See also

See also

References

References

  1. "Food: The Gohei mochi in the Edo era". Tajimi Tourism Association. Retrieved 26 February 2024.

Bibliography