In [[1908]], due to construction in the port, the temple was moved to the Naha neighborhood of Sumiyoshi-chô, where it came to incorporate a number of [[Shinto shrine]]s, including a [[Kumano gongen]] shrine, and a [[Hachiman]] shrine; as a result of its newfound association with [[Shinto]], the temple was renamed Oki-gû, or Oki Shrine. | In [[1908]], due to construction in the port, the temple was moved to the Naha neighborhood of Sumiyoshi-chô, where it came to incorporate a number of [[Shinto shrine]]s, including a [[Kumano gongen]] shrine, and a [[Hachiman]] shrine; as a result of its newfound association with [[Shinto]], the temple was renamed Oki-gû, or Oki Shrine. |