[[Nashinoki Shrine]], established in [[1885]] and located just outside the [[Kyoto Imperial Palace]], was dedicated in 1915 to the deified spirits of Sanetsumu and his son Sanetomi.<ref>Plaques on-site at Nashinoki Shrine, Kyoto.</ref> A set of fifteen handscroll paintings was similarly commissioned by the imperial court in [[1904]] from court painter [[Tanaka Yubi|Tanaka Yûbi]] chronicling Sanetsumu's accomplishments across his career.<ref>Gallery labels, "[http://www.kunaicho.go.jp/event/sannomaru/tenrankai66.html The two people who supported Emperor Meiji - Sanjo Sanetomi and Iwakura Tomomi - an account of the late Edo period to the Meiji Restoration in biographical picture scrolls]," The Museum of the Imperial Collections, [[Sannomaru Shozokan|Sannomaru Shôzôkan]], September 2014.</ref> | [[Nashinoki Shrine]], established in [[1885]] and located just outside the [[Kyoto Imperial Palace]], was dedicated in 1915 to the deified spirits of Sanetsumu and his son Sanetomi.<ref>Plaques on-site at Nashinoki Shrine, Kyoto.</ref> A set of fifteen handscroll paintings was similarly commissioned by the imperial court in [[1904]] from court painter [[Tanaka Yubi|Tanaka Yûbi]] chronicling Sanetsumu's accomplishments across his career.<ref>Gallery labels, "[http://www.kunaicho.go.jp/event/sannomaru/tenrankai66.html The two people who supported Emperor Meiji - Sanjo Sanetomi and Iwakura Tomomi - an account of the late Edo period to the Meiji Restoration in biographical picture scrolls]," The Museum of the Imperial Collections, [[Sannomaru Shozokan|Sannomaru Shôzôkan]], September 2014.</ref> |