Sannō Ichijitsu Shintō

Sannō Shintō was a syncretic shinto group with elements from Tendai buddhism.

In the case of Shinto, the difficulty is the reconciliation of the pantheon of Japanese gods (kami), as well as with the myriad spirits associated with places, shrines or objects, with Buddhist teachings.

[4] Sannō Shintō 山王神道 was a specifically Tendai branch of syncretic Buddhist-Shinto religious practice, which revered kamis called the Mountain Kings (Sannō) or Sanno Sansei 山王ニ聖 (The Three Sacred [Deities] of Sanno) and was based on Hie Taisha 日吉大社 a shrine on Mount Hiei.

These religious ideas eventually led to the development of a Japanese current of thought called honji suijaku (本地垂迹), which argued that kami are simply local manifestations (the suijaku or "traces") of the Buddhas (honji, "true nature").

This manifestation of the Buddhas was explained through the classic Mahayana doctrines of skillful means and the Trikaya.

Hie Taisha, a Sannō Shintō shrine on Mount Hiei