vignette|Shimogamo-jinja. Les et sont une paire de sanctuaires shinto de Kyōto, au Japon. Ils comptent parmi les plus vieux du pays et sont tous deux dédiés à Kamo Wake-ikazuchi, le kami du tonnerre. Ils sont classés monuments historiques de l'ancienne Kyōto et font partie de la liste du patrimoine mondial de l'UNESCO. Kamo no Nagatsugu (1139-1172 ou 1173), le père du poète Kamo no Chōmei, officia en tant que supérieur au . Michael Ashkenazi, Handbook of Japanese Mythology, Santa Barbara, Californie, ABC-CLIO, 2003 . Theodore de Bary, Donald Keene et Yoshiko Kurata Dykstra, Sources of Japanese Tradition, New York, Columbia University Press, 1958 . John Benson, Japan, Londres, Dorling Kindersley, 2003 . John Breen et Mark Teeuwen, Shinto in History: Ways of the Kami, Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 2000 . Sylvie Guichard-Anguis et Okpyo Moon, Japanese Tourism and Travel Culture, Londres, Taylor & Francis, 2009 . John Whitney Hall, Donald Shively et William H. McCullough, The Cambridge History of Japan: Heian Japan, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999 . John K. Nelson, Enduring Identities: The Guise of Shinto in Contemporary Japan, Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 2000 . George W. Perkins, The Clear Mirror: A Chronicle of the Japanese Court During the Kamakura Period (1185-1333), Stanford, Stanford University Press, 1998 . Richard Ponsonby-Fane, Kamo-mioya Shrine, Kobé, J. L. Thompson, 1934 . Richard Ponsonby-Fane, Kyoto: The Old Capital of Japan, 794-1869, Kyoto, Ponsonby Memorial Society, 1956 . Richard Ponsonby-Fane, The Imperial House of Japan, Kyoto, Ponsonby Memorial Society, 1959 . Richard Ponsonby-Fane, Studies in Shinto and Shrines, Kyoto, Ponsonby Memorial Society, 1962 . Richard Ponsonby-Fane, Vicissitudes of Shinto, Kyoto, Ponsonby Memorial Society, 1963 . Richard Ponsonby-Fane, Visiting Famous Shrines in Japan, Kyoto, Ponsonby-Fane Memorial Society, 1964 . Thomas Philip Terry, Terry's Japanese empire: including Korea and Formosa, with chapters on Manchuria, the Trans-Siberian railway, and the chief ocean routes to Japan; a guidebook for travelers, New York, Houghton Mifflin, 1914 .