The evidentiary base for Shinto is distributed, practice-centered, and historically stratified, with no single canon or founding text anchoring authority. Core sources consist of court-compiled mytho-histories, shrine liturgies, and ritual-administrative documents whose authority derives from institutional use, lineage transmission, and political endorsement, rather than universal doctrinal closure. Early textual evidence is dominated by elite compilations (Kojiki, Nihon Shoki, Engishiki) that intertwine cosmology, ritual, and imperial legitimacy, while later interpretive corpora—medieval Shinto theologies, Kokugaku philology, and modern State Shinto documents—reflect successive waves of ideological reconfiguration. Oral tradition, sacred landscape practice, and festival cycles carry substantial evidenti weight but are highly vulnerable to local revision, syncretism, and state intervention. Archaeological and epigraphic records are strongest where Shinto intersects with durable patronage and governance, yet systematically underrepresent everyday purity practices and ephemeral ritual life. Historical records and modern ethnography allow triangulation between court ideology and lived shrine practice but require careful filtering for bias, especially in modern nationalist contexts. Overall, Shinto evidence must be dated, localized, and source-tagged to avoid projecting a coherent, timeless “Shinto” backward onto what is in fact a shifting constellation of ritual practices, institutional arrangements, and political theologies.

1. Scriptural / Textual

Canonical texts (scriptures, liturgies, doctrinal writings)

Non-canonical but influential texts (commentaries, philosophical treatises, doctrinal syntheses)

Issues: authorship, redaction, translation drift, canon formation

2. Oral Traditions

Stories (narrative transmission)

Hymns, chants, prayers

Genealogies

Sermons / preaching

Transmission characteristics

Vulnerabilities

3. Archaeological / Material

Temples / Shrines (built space)

Sacred landscapes

Artifacts

Dating methods

Material bias

4. Epigraphic / Inscriptions

Royal edicts / state inscriptions

Dedicatory inscriptions

Tomb markers / boundary stones

Interpretive limits

5. Historical Records

Chronicles / administrative registers

Shrine records

Traveler reports

Missionary / outsider accounts

Value

Cautions

6. Comparative / Cross-cultural Parallels

Motif tracking

Diffusion vs independent development

Method constraint

7. Modern Ethnography

Anthropological fieldwork

Interviews

Participant observation

Best use cases

Limits

8. Critical Evaluation

Rank evidence by:

Emic vs etic separation

Core caution for Shinto