(), also frequently referred to as (, "One-and-only Shintà Â") and Genpon Sà Âgen Shintà  (å ÂæÂ¬å®ÂæºÂç¥ÂéÂÂ, "Fundamental Elemental Shintà Â") and Urabe Shintà  (Ã¥ÂÂé¨ç¥ÂéÂÂ), was a prominent sect of Shintà  that arose during the Sengoku period through the teachings and work of Yoshida Kanetomo. The sect was originally an effort to organize Shintà  teachings into a coherent structure in order to assert its authority vis-a-vis Buddhism. However, by the Edo period, Yoshida Shintà  continued to dominate the Shintà  discourse, and influenced Neo-Confucian thinkers such as Hayashi Razan and Yamazaki Ansai in formulating Confucian Shintà  (). Yoshida Shintà Â's dominance rivaled that of Ise Shintà Â. Yoshida Shrine was the center of this sect.
Yoshida Shintà  reversed the honji suijaku teaching of Shin-Butsu Shuugo promulgated by Kukai in the Heian Period, asserting that the Buddhist deities were manifestations of the Shintà  kami, not the other way around. Yoshida Shinto held that Shintà  was the primal religion of the world, which in turn gave rise to Buddhism and Confucianism. However, Shintà  was seen not only as the source of creation, but also as the source of all principle in the world. In this sense, Shinto was seen as a divine essence or energy rather than a teaching. This essence was seen as present in all beings at birth, but obscured by petty desires and needs, which prevented Man from aligning himself with the Way of the Gods.
Among the ethic "principles" in Yoshida Shintà  and took on a great meaning within the sect. These key virtues were linked to well-known Shintà  rites as harae or misogi purification ceremonies. Yoshida Shinto redefined and redesigned such traditional rites in a fashion borrowed from Esoteric Buddhism. Also, its doctrines are formulated in the elliptical discourse of Esoteric Buddhism, which makes sense only in combination with ritual practice. Rites took on significance not just as an outward form of purity, but as means to achieve inner purity as well and cultivating the necessary virtues towards makoto. These concepts may be related to Buddhist salvation but in contrast to Buddhism, Yoshida Shinto rejected celibacy and the idea that human life always leads to suffering. There is no clear conception of the afterlife, however.
Yoshida Shintà  was an esoteric tradition also in terms of priestly organisation in that it consisted of several ranks achieved through secret initiations, with the highest rank accorded to only one man at a time, who would carry on the Yoshida family name. In cases where a suitable heir was lacking, one was adopted.
Kunitokotachi no mikoto or Soranaki-oomoto-mikoto-kami is considered to be a god of the origin of the world.
In spite of their alleged antiquity, Yoshida doctrines were created by Yoshida Kanetomo (1435âÂÂ1511) who served the Imperial Court in the Department of Shintà  Affairs. Yoshida Shinto gained prominence during the Momoyama period, when the family was involved in the deification of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and enhanced its influence during the Edo period under Yoshikawa Koretaru (1616âÂÂ1694), a Yoshida scion (but not a family member) with excellent contacts to the ruling elites in Edo. Koretaru was probably the driving force behind the fact that the Yoshida were decreed the de facto supervisors of all lesser Shinto shrines in the official of 1665. Later, however, Koretaru created his own version of Shintà  (Yoshikawa Shintà Â) with an emphasis on self-reflection and the nature of the Kami to Man, as well as Man's role in society (with an emphasis on the lord-vassal relationship common during this period).
Early Neo-Confucian scholars in Japan such as Hayashi Razan and Yamazaki Ansai likely encountered Yoshida Shintà  during their time as Buddhist priests, when guest lectures by Yoshida Shintà  priests were common. However, later when Neo-Confucian teachings gained prominence, these thinkers formulated their own theories and doctrines on the relationship between Confucianism and Shintà  and criticized Yoshida Shintà  for being influenced by Buddhism. Nevertheless, Yoshida vocabulary and Yoshida ideas can still be found in their writings. This trend persisted until the rise of National Learning which sought to separate Shintà  from both Buddhism and Confucianism and thus developed a completely new discourse on the native kami.
In terms of institutional history, Yoshida Shintà  was dominant until the late Edo period but decreased rapidly during the 19th century and has left hardly any trace in contemporary Japanese shrine worship. The Yoshida family's collection of ancient texts, however, still forms one of the most important sources of Shinto. Large parts of it are now stored in the library of Tenri University in Nara Prefecture.