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{{Short description|Mythology}} <!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see ] --> | |||
'''Japanese mythology''' is an extremely complex ] and system of beliefs. The ] ] alone boasts a collection of more than 8000 ] (Japanese for "]" or "]s"). Despite the influence of the ancient ] ], much of ] ] is uniquely their own. It embraces Shinto and ] traditions as well as agricultural-based ]. Moreover, unlike ], ] and ], it is very difficult to distinguish what is truly "]" to the Japanese. This article will only discuss the typical elements present in ] such as ], important deities and the most well-known Japanese stories. | |||
{{Redirect|Japanese legend|the Japanese pantheon|List of Japanese deities|urban legends|Japanese urban legends}} | |||
{{Japanese mythology and folklore}} | |||
{{Shinto}} | |||
'''Japanese mythology''' is a collection of traditional stories, folktales, and beliefs that emerged in the islands of the ]. ] traditions are the cornerstones of Japanese mythology.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Japanese mythology|last=Piggott, Juliet.|year=1983 |isbn=0-911745-09-2|edition=New revised|location=New York, N.Y.|pages=6–8|oclc=9971207}}</ref> The history of thousands of years of contact with ] and various Indian myths (such as ] and ]) are also key influences in Japanese religious belief.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Tylor|first=Edward B.|date=1877|title=Remarks on Japanese Mythology|journal=The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland|volume=6|pages=55–58|doi=10.2307/2841246|jstor=2841246|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1449540}}</ref><ref name=":11">{{Cite journal|last=Kitagawa|first=Joseph M.|date=1963|title=Prehistoric Background of Japanese Religion|journal=History of Religions|volume=2|issue=2|pages=292–328|issn=0018-2710|jstor=1062069|doi=10.1086/462466|s2cid=162362195}}</ref> | |||
Japanese myths are tied to the ] of the archipelago as well as agriculturally-based ], and the Shinto ] holds uncountable '']'' ("]" or "spirits").<ref name=":0" /> | |||
Mainstream Japanese myths, as generally recognized today, are based on the '']'' and some complementary books. The ''Kojiki'' or "Record of Ancient Things" is the oldest recognized book of myths, legends, and history of Japan. The ] explains origins of Japanese deities from a ] perspective while the '']'' records a substantially different version of mythology. | |||
Two important sources for Japanese myths, as they are recognized today, are the {{Lang|ja-latn|]}} and the {{Lang|ja-latn|]}}.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last=ANDASSOVA|first=Maral|date=2019|title=Emperor Jinmu in the Kojiki|journal=Japan Review|issue=32|pages=5–16|issn=0915-0986|jstor=26652947}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> The {{Lang|ja-latn|Kojiki}}, or "Record of Ancient Matters," is the oldest surviving account of Japan's myths, legends, and history.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Smits|first=Gregory J.|date=1991|title=Political Thought in Japanese Historical Writing: From Kojiki (712) to Tokushi Yoron (1712). By John S. Brownlee. Toronto: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1991. xvii, 158 pp. $35.00.|journal=The Journal of Asian Studies|volume=51|issue=3|pages=666–667|doi=10.2307/2057985|issn=0021-9118|jstor=2057985|s2cid=154761651 }}</ref> Additionally, the ] describes the origins of Japanese deities from a ] perspective.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Kadoya|first1=Atsushi|last2=門屋溫|last3=Padoan|first3=Tatsuma|date=2006|title=On the Formation of Shintō Icons|journal=Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie|volume=16|pages=151–182|issn=0766-1177|jstor=44171454|doi=10.3406/asie.2006.1255}}</ref> | |||
One notable result of Japanese mythology is that it explains the origin of the ], and assigned them godhood until the end of ]. | |||
One notable feature of Japanese mythology is its explanation of the origin of the ], which has been used historically to deify to the imperial line.<ref name=":3" /> | |||
==Spelling of proper nouns== | |||
Japanese is not transliterated consistently across all sources (see ]). | |||
A lot of deities appear on the stage of Japanese mythology, and many of them have multiple aliases. Furthermore, some of their names are so long that they can be tedious for the majority of readers. This article therefore lists only the most prominent names, and gives them in abbreviated form. Readers should be aware that other abbreviated forms are also in use. | |||
: For instance, ''Ninigi'', or ''Ame-Nigishikuni-Nigishiamatsuhiko-Hikono-no-'''Ninigi'''-no-Mikoto'' in full, may also be abbreviated as ''Hikoho-no-Ninigi'' or ''Hono-Ninigi''. | |||
== Sources == | |||
In this article, proper names are written in a historical manner. In this article, underlined ''<u>h</u>'', ''<u>y</u>'', and ''<u>w</u>'' denote silent letters; they are omitted from modern spelling. This underlining convention is peculiar to this article. Other syllables are modernized as follows (see also ] ]). Note that something in between are also used. | |||
Japanese myths are passed down through ], through ] sources (including traditional art), and through ] sources.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Jun'ichi|first1=Isomae|last2=一|first2=磯 前 順|last3=Thal|first3=Sarah E.|date=2000|title=Reappropriating the Japanese Myths: Motoori Norinaga and the Creation Myths of the Kojiki and Nihon shoki|journal=Japanese Journal of Religious Studies|volume=27|issue=1/2|pages=15–39|issn=0304-1042|jstor=30233639}}</ref> For much of Japan's history, communities were mostly isolated, which allowed for local legends and myths to grow around unique features of the geographic location where the people who told the stories lived.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
=== Literary sources === | |||
* ''hu'' is modernized as ''fu''. | |||
* ''zi'' and ''di'' are modernized as ''ji''. (distinction disappeared) | |||
* ''zu'' and ''du'' are modernized as ''dzu''. (distinction disappeared) | |||
* ''oo'' is modernized as ''o'' or ''oh''. | |||
: For instance, various spellings of ''O<u>h</u>onamudi'' include ''O<u>h</u>onamuji'', ''Oonamuji'', ''O<u>h</u>namuji'', and others. | |||
The Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki, completed in A.D. 712 and A.D. 720 respectively, had the two most referenced and oldest sources of Japanese mythology and ]<ref name=":1" /><ref name=":0" /> Written in the ], under the ], the two collections relate the cosmogony and mythic origins of the Japanese archipelago, its people, and the imperial family.<ref name=":22">{{Cite book|last=Duthie|first=Torquil|title=''Man'yōshū'' and the Imperial Imagination in Early Japan|chapter=Preliminary Material|date=2014-01-01|pages=i-xix|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-26454-0|doi=10.1163/9789004264540_001}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> It is based on the records of the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki that the imperial family claims direct descent from the sun goddess ] and her grandson ].<ref name=":22" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":0" /> | |||
By historical reasons, ''k'', ''s'', ''t'', and ''h'' are sometimes confused with ''g'', ''z'', ''d'', and ''b'' respectively. | |||
: For instance, various spellings of ''O<u>h</u>onamudi'' also include ''O<u>h</u>onamuti'' and ''O<u>h</u>onamuchi'' | |||
] enlisted the help of ] who committed to memory the history of Japan as it was recorded in two collections that are thought by historians to have existed before the Kojiki and ].<ref name=":0" /> Under ]'s rule, Hideya no Are's memory of the history of the Japanese archipelago and its mythological origins were recorded in spite of Emperor Temmu's death before its completion.<ref name=":0" /> As a result of Hideya no Are's account, the Kojiki was finally completed, transcribed in kanji characters, during ]'s time as sovereign.<ref name=":0" /> The Yamato state also produced '']'' and '']'', two more of the oldest surviving texts that relate the historical and mythical origins of Japan's people, culture, and the imperial family.<ref name=":22" /> | |||
==Creation myth== | |||
], an ] Japanese scholar, interpreted Kojiki and his commentary, annotations, and use of alternate sources to supplement his interpretations are studied by scholars today because of their influence on the current understanding of Japanese myths.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
The first gods summoned two divine beings into existence, the male ''Izanagi'' and the female ''Izanami'', and charged them with creating the first land. To help them do this, ''Izanagi'' and ''Izanami'' were given a ] decorated with jewels, named ''Amenonuhoko'' (heavenly spear). The two deities then went to the bridge between heaven and earth, ''Amenoukihashi'' (floating bridge of heaven) and churned the sea below with the spear. When drops of salty water fell from the spear, they formed into the island ''Onogoro'' (self-forming). They descended from the bridge of heaven and made their home on the island. Eventually they wished to be mated, so they built a pillar called ''Amenomihashira'' and around it they built a palace called ''Yahirodono'' (the room of eight footsteps?). ''Iznagi'' and ''Izanami'' circled the pillar in opposite directions, and when they met on the other side ''Izanami'', the female deity, spoke first in greeting. ''Izanagi'' didn't think that this was the proper thing to do, but they mated anyhow. They had two children, ''Hiruko'' (watery child) and ''Awashima'' (island of bubbles) but they were badly-made and are not considered deities. | |||
=== Archaeological sources === | |||
They put the children into a boat and set them out to sea, then petitioned the other gods for an answer as to what they did wrong. They were told that the male deity should have spoken first in greeting during the marriage ceremony. So ''Izanagi'' and ''Izanami'' went around the pillar again, and this time when they met ''Izanagi'' spoke first and their marriage was then successful. | |||
Archaeologists studying the history of the Japanese Archipelago separate the prehistoric history into three eras based on attributes of the discoveries associated with each era.<ref name=":11" /> The Jōmun period marks the first cases of pottery found on the archipelago, followed by the Yayoi period and the Kofun period.<ref name=":11" /> The Yayoi district of the Japanese capital Tokyo, is the namesake of the Yayoi period because archaeologists discovered pottery associated with the time period there.<ref name=":11" /> | |||
Contact with Korean civilization in the latter part of the Yayoi period influenced the culture of the Japanese Archipelago greatly, as evidenced by the discovery of artifacts that archaeologists associate with various cultural streams from Korea, and northeast Asia.<ref name=":11" /> Finally, Kofun period artifacts, ranging from A.D. 250 to A.D. 600, are the archaeological sources of what historians know about the Yamato kingdom — the same Yamato state that was responsible for the two most prominent literary sources of Japanese myth, the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki.<ref name=":11" /><ref name=":22" /> | |||
From their union were born the ''o<u>h</u>oyashima'', or the eight great islands of the Japanese chain: | |||
== Cosmogony == | |||
* ] | |||
* ] (later ]) | |||
* ] | |||
* ] (later ]) | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ''Yamato'' (later ]) | |||
: Note that ], ], and ] were not part of Japan in ancient times. | |||
=== Origins of Japan and the kami === | |||
They bore six more islands and many deities. ''Izanami'' was killed however by giving birth to the child ''Kagututi'' (incarnation of fire) or ''Ho-Masubi'' (causer of fire). In anger, ''Izanagi'' killed ''Kagututi''. His death also created dozens of deities. | |||
{{Main|Japanese creation myth}} | |||
==== Kuniumi and Kamiumi ==== | |||
The gods borne from ''Izanagi'' and ''Izanami'' are symbolic of important aspects of nature and culture, but they are too many to mention here. The fact that it was necessary for the male deity ''Izanagi'' to take the lead position while the female deity ''Izanami'' had to be second has led to a perception that this is an implied ] against the female gender. | |||
Japan's archipelago ] can be divided into the birth of the deities (]) and the birth of the land (]). The birth of the deities begins with the appearance of the ] who appeared out of primordial oil, a trio of gods who produced the next ].<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":5">{{Cite book|url=https://www.audible.com/pd/Mythology-Mega-Collection-Audiobook/B07KXVVBHV|title=Mythology: Mega Collection|last=Lewis|first=Scott|publisher=Scott Lewis|year=2018|language=en}}</ref> ] and ] were eventually born, siblings, and using a ] decorated with jewels, named ] ("Heavenly Jeweled Spear") that was gifted to them. Izanagi created the first islands of the Japanese Archipelago by dipping the Naginata into the primordial waters.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4">{{Cite book|url=https://www.audible.com/pd/Great-Mythologies-of-the-World-Audiobook/B013KRSIVC|title=Great Mythologies of the World|publisher=The Great Courses|year=2015|pages=250–350|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Pauley's guide : a dictionary of Japanese martial arts and culture|last=Pauley, Daniel C.|date=2009|publisher=Anaguma Seizan Publications|oclc=384268610}}</ref><ref name=":5" /> Historians have interpreted the myth of Izanagi's creation of the first Japanese Island Onogoro as an early example of phallocentrism in Japanese mythology.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" />]The earliest creation myths of Japanese mythology generally involve topics such as death, decay, loss, infanticide, and contamination.<ref name=":4" /> The creation myths place great importance on purification, ceremonial order, and the masculine.<ref name=":4" /> For example, the first child born to Izanagi and Izanami after they attempt a union ceremony is born with no limbs or bones, and the parents discard the child by sending him to sea in a boat.<ref name=":4" /> When Izanagi and Izanami ask the older gods why their child was born without bones or limbs, they are told it was because they did not conduct the ceremony properly and that the male must always speak before the female.<ref name=":4" /> Once they follow the directions of the older gods correctly, they produce many children, many of whom are the islands of the Japanese Archipelago.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" /> Among their children are the ], or the eight great islands of Japan — ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Japan encyclopedia|last=Louis-Frédéric, 1923-|date=2002|publisher=Belknap Press of Harvard University Press|others=Roth, Käthe.|isbn=0-674-00770-0|location=Cambridge, Mass.|oclc=48943301}}</ref> The last child that Izanami produces is a fire god, ] (incarnation of fire), whose flames kill her; and Izanagi murders the child in grief-driven anger.<ref name=":4" /> The child's corpse creates even more gods.<ref name=":4" /> Izanami was then buried on ], at the border of the ] of ] and ], near modern-day ] of ].<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Kōnoshi|first=Takamitsu|date=1984|title=The Land of Yomi: On the Mythical World of the Kojiki|journal=Japanese Journal of Religious Studies|volume=11|issue=1|pages=57–76|issn=0304-1042|jstor=30233312|doi=10.18874/jjrs.11.1.1984.57-76|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
Scholars of Japanese mythology have noted the ]uous themes of the creation myth as represented in the Kojiki, and the first scholar to write about Izanagi and Izanami as siblings was ].<ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last=Murakami|first=Fuminobu|date=1988|title=Incest and Rebirth in Kojiki|journal=Monumenta Nipponica|volume=43|issue=4|pages=455–463|doi=10.2307/2384797|issn=0027-0741|jstor=2384797}}</ref> Izanami is referred to in the Kojiki as Izanagi's ''imo'' (meaning both wife or little sister in Japanese) and other scholars dispute that the pair were siblings.<ref name=":6" /> Hattori Asake, another scholar, argued that Oka was correct because he drew evidence from another myth about humans who had incestuous relations because of a great flood wiping out the rest of the human population.<ref name=":6" /> Essentially, Hattori said the myth Oka used as evidence was too different to be the origin of the Izanagi and Izanami myth.<ref name=":6" /> In the Man'yōshū, Izanami is also referred to as ''imo'' by the compiler, suggesting that the compiler believed that Izanami was Izanagi's sister.<ref name=":6" /> While scholars disagree about the nature of Izanami and Izanagi's relationships, the gods Amaterasu and ], children of Izanagi, were sibling gods who created children together in a contest preceding Susanoo's desecration of Amaterasu's home which leads to her hiding in a cave.<ref name=":6" /> A unique aspect of Japanese mythology is its inclusion of graphic details, with disgusting and horrific images that are considered to be taboo in modern Japanese society, which has many cultural practices associated with purification and cleanliness.<ref name=":4" /> | |||
==Yomi, the shadowy land of the dead== | |||
==== Yomi ==== | |||
''Izanagi'' lamented the death of ''Izanami'' and undertook a journey to '']'' or "the shadowy land of the dead." ''Izanami'' found little difference between ''Yomi'' and the land above, save for the eternal darkness. However, this suffocating darkness was enough to make him ache for the light and life above. Quickly, he searched for ''Izanami'' and found her. At first, ''Izanagi'' could not see her at all for the shadows hid her appearance well. Nevertheless, he asked her to return with him. ''Izanami'' spat out at him, informing ''Izanagi'' that he was too late. She had already eaten the food of the underworld and was now one with the land of the dead. She could no longer return to the living. | |||
After '''Izanami's''' death, the myth of '''Izanagi's efforts to rescue her from ]''', an underworld described in Japanese mythology, explains the origins of the cycle of birth and death.<ref name=":0" /> After killing their child ], Izanagi was still grief-stricken, so he undertook the task of finding a way to bring Izanami back from the dead.<ref name=":4" /> After finally locating her, he disobeyed her order to not look at her while she went to ask permission to leave Yomi.<ref name=":4" /> He used his hair to create a flame, and when he gazed at Izanami's rotting, maggot-filled flesh he fled in fear and disgust.<ref name=":4" /> Izanami felt betrayed and tried to capture him, but he escaped by creating obstacles for Izanami's horde of ] including using peaches to threaten them. The myth of Izanagi's journey into Yomi features many themes of food, he creates grapes to distract the shikome who stop to eat them, granting him time to escape. The peaches he uses to scare the shikome off are then blessed, and peaches appear in many other Japanese myths, especially the tale of ]<ref name=":5" />{{Page needed|date=May 2024}} | |||
==== The Sun, Moon, and Storm ==== | |||
''Izanagi'' was shocked at this news but he refused to give in to her wishes of being left to the dark embrace of ''Yomi''. While ''Izanami'' was sleeping, he took the comb that bound his long hair and set it alight as a torch. Under the sudden burst of light, he saw the horrid form of the once beautiful and graceful ''Izanami''. She was now a rotting form of flesh with maggots and foul creatures running over her ravaged body. | |||
{{See also|Solar deity}} | |||
] | |||
The origins of the ] and the ] are accounted for in Japanese mythology through the myth of Izanagi's return from Yomi.<ref name=":0" /> After spending so much time in Yomi, Izanagi cleansed himself with a purification ceremony.<ref name=":4" /> As Izanagi cleansed himself, the water and robes that fell from his body created many more gods.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":0" /> Purification rituals still function as important traditions in Japan today, from shoe etiquette in households to ] purification ceremonies.<ref name=":4" /> Amaterasu, the Sun goddess and divine ancestor of the first Emperor Jimmu, was born from Izanagi's eye.<ref name=":0" /> The Moon god and ] the storm god were born at the same time as Amaterasu, when Izanagi washed his face.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
Myths related the Sun, the Moon, and the Storm kami are full of strife and conflict.<ref name=":4" /> The Sun goddess and her sibling the moon god's interpersonal conflicts explain, in Japanese myth, why the Sun and the Moon do not stay in the sky at the same time — their distaste for one another keeps them both turning away from the other.<ref name=":0" /> Meanwhile, the sun goddess and the storm god Susanoo's conflicts were intense and bloody.<ref name=":4" /> Various accounts of Susanoo's temper tantrum in Amaterasu's home depict a variety of disgusting and brutal behaviors (everything from smearing his feces across her home's walls to skinning her favorite horse alive and throwing it at her maid and killing the maid) but it is usually, in depictions of this particular myth, Susanoo's behavior that scares Amaterasu into hiding in a cave.<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal|last=Aston|first=W. G.|date=1899|title=Japanese Myth|journal=Folklore|volume=10|issue=3|pages=294–324|issn=0015-587X|jstor=1253583|doi=10.1080/0015587X.1899.9720502|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1836499}}</ref><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":0" /><ref name=":5" /><ref name=":2">{{Cite news|last=Hoffman|first=Michael|url=https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2009/07/12/general/land-of-the-sun-goddess/|title=Land of the Sun Goddess|date=2009-07-12|work=The Japan Times Online|access-date=2020-02-07|language=en-US|issn=0447-5763}}</ref> It would take the combined efforts of many other kami, and the ] dance of a particular goddess named Ame no Uzume, to lure Amaterasu from the cave again.<ref name=":7" /> Ame no Uzume exposed herself while dancing and created such commotion that Amaterasu peeked out from her cave.<ref name=":2" /> The myth of Amaterasu's entering and emerging from a cave is depicted in one of the most iconic images of Japanese mythology which is shown to the right. | |||
Crying out loud, ''Izanagi'' could no longer control his fear and started to run, intending to return to the living and abandon his death-ridden wife. ''Izanami'' woke up shrieking and indignant and chased after him. Wild ''shikome'' or foul women also hunted for the frightened ''Izanagi'', instructed by ''Izanami'' to bring him back. | |||
The sun goddess Amaterasu's importance in Japanese mythology is two-fold. She is the sun, and one of Izanagi's most beloved of children, as well as the ancestor of the Japanese imperial line, according to legend.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":7" /> Her status as a sun goddess had political ramifications for the imperial family, and the Yamato state most likely benefited from the myth when dealing with Korean influences because Korea also had myths of sun god ancestors for the Korean imperial family.<ref name=":2" /> | |||
''Izanagi'', thinking quickly, hurled down his headdress which became a bunch of black grapes. The ''shikome'' fell on these but continued pursuit. Next, ''Izanagi'' threw down his comb which became a clump of bamboo shoots. Now it was ''Yomi's'' creatures that began to give chase, but ''Izanagi'' urinated against a tree, creating a great river that increased his lead. Unfortunately, they still pursued ''Izanagi'', forcing him to hurl ]es at them. He knew this would not delay them for long, but he was nearly free, for the boundary of ''Yomi'' was now close at hand. | |||
==== First Emperor Jimmu ==== | |||
''Izanagi'' burst out of the entrance and quickly pushed a boulder in the mouth of the cavern that was the entrance of ''Yomi''. ''Izanami'' screamed from behind this impenetrable barricade and told ''Izanagi'' that if he left her she would destroy 1,000 residents of the living every day. He furiously replied he would give life to 1,500. | |||
] | |||
The tale of first ] is considered the origin of the Imperial family.<ref name=":0" /> Emperor Jimmu is considered to be the human descendant of Amaterasu the Sun goddess.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":22" /> His ascension to the throne marked the "Transition from ] to Human Age".<ref>Metevelis, Peter (1983). ''A Reference Guide to the Nihonshoki Myths'', ''Asian Folklore Studies.'' Vol 52, No 2, p. 383–8.</ref> After taking control of ], he established the imperial throne and ] in the year of ]] (conventionally dated to 660 B.C.).<ref name=":11" /> At the end of the seventh century, the Imperial court finally moved from where Emperor Jimmu was said to have founded it in Yamato.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
] | |||
The importance of this myth in particular is that it establishes the origins, and the power, of the Japanese imperial family as divine.<ref name=":22" /><ref name=":11" /> Although some scholars believe that the myths found in the Nihon Shoki and Kojiki are meant to give authority to the imperial family, others suggest that the myths in the Nihon Shoki and Kojiki are unique accounts meant to give authority to the mythic histories in themselves.<ref name=":22" /> The Nihon Shoki and Kojiki have varying accounts of the mythic history of Japan, and there are differences in the details of the origins of the imperial family between the two texts.<ref name=":22" /> The ] still has a role as a public symbol of the state and people, according to the current constitution of Japan.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Seagrave|first= Sterling|authorlink=Sterling Seagrave|title=]|date=2001|publisher=Broadway Books|others=Seagrave, Peggy.|isbn=0-7679-0497-4|edition=1st Broadway books trade pbk.|location=New York|oclc=47813347}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://japan.kantei.go.jp/constitution_and_government_of_japan/constitution_e.html|title=THE CONSTITUTION OF JAPAN|website=japan.kantei.go.jp|access-date=2020-02-07}}</ref> | |||
=== The Japanese pantheon === | |||
And so began the existence of Death, caused by the hands of the proud ''Izanami'', the abandoned wife of ''Izanagi''. | |||
Japanese gods and goddesses, called kami, are uniquely numerous (there are at least eight million) and varied in power and stature.<ref name=":0" /> They are usually descendants from the original trio of gods that were born from nothing in the primordial oil that was the world before the kami began to shape it.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":5" /> There are easily as many kami in Japanese myth as there are distinct natural features, and most kami are associated with natural phenomena.<ref name=":0" /> Kami can take many shapes and forms, some look almost human in depictions found by archaeologists; meanwhile, other kami look like hybrids of humans and creatures, or may not look human at all. One example of a kami who looks almost human in depictions is the ruler of ].<ref name=":0" /> On the other hand, kami like Ninigi and Amaterasu are often depicted as human in their forms.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
] originated in Japan, and the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki tell the tales of the Shinto pantheon's origins.<ref name=":0" /> Shinto is still practiced today in Japan. In Shinto belief, kami has multiple meanings and could also be translated as "spirit" and all objects in nature have a kami according to this system.<ref name=":0" /> Myths often tell stories of particular, local deities and kami; for example, the kami of a mountain or a nearby lake.<ref name=":0" /> Most kami take their origins from Shinto beliefs, but the influence of Buddhism also affected the pantheon.<ref name=":0" /> Contact with other cultures usually had some influence on Japanese myth. In the fourteenth century, Christianity found its way to Japan through St. Francis Xavier and there was also contact with westerners.<ref name=":0" /> However, during the ] Christians were executed in Japan.<ref name=":0" /> Twenty Christians were crucified before that while ] was consolidating his power after the assassination of ].<ref name=":0" /> Christianity was banned in Japan until well into the nineteenth century.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
==Sun, Moon, and Wind== | |||
==== Folklore heroes ==== | |||
As could be expected, Izanagi went on to purify himself after recovering from his descent to Yomi. As he undressed and removed the adornments of his body, each item he dropped to the ground formed a deity. Even more gods came into being when he went to the water to wash himself. The most important ones were created once he washed his face: | |||
As in other cultures, Japanese mythology accounts for not only the actions of supernatural beings but also the adventures and lives of folk heroes. There are many Japanese heroes that are associated with specific locations in Japan, and others that are more well known across the archipelago.<ref name=":0" /> Some heroes are thought to have been real people, such as the ], but their legacy has been transformed into great folktales that depict the historical figures as more gifted, powerful, or knowledgeable than the average person.<ref name=":0" /> The heroic adventures of these heroes range from acts of kindness and devotion, such as the myth of ], to battling frightful enemies, as in the tale of ]. | |||
<ref name=":5" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Antoni|first=Klaus|date=1991|title=Momotarō (The Peach Boy) and the Spirit of Japan: Concerning the Function of a Fairy Tale in Japanese Nationalism of the Early Shōwa Age|journal=Asian Folklore Studies|volume=50|issue=1|pages=155–188|doi=10.2307/1178189|issn=0385-2342|jstor=1178189}}</ref> | |||
Themes that appear in the folklore concerning heroes are moral lessons, or stories that function as parables. The tale of Shita-kiri Suzume, for example, warns of the dangers of greed, avarice, and jealousy through the example of an old couple's experiences with a fairy who disguised herself as a sparrow to test the old man.<ref name=":5" /> The influence of '']'' is noticeable in the behavior of heroes, and heroes often were also warriors.<ref name=":0" /> Momotaro, born from a peach for a childless couple to raise, is a mythic hero who embodied courage and dutifulness as he went on a journey to defeat '']'' who were kidnapping, raping, and pillaging his home island.<ref name=":0" /> The tale of Momotaro also shares in the themes of violence, sexual violence, and deities or demons devouring humans.<ref name=":10">{{Cite journal|last=Kelsey|first=W. Michael|date=1981|title=The Raging Deity in Japanese Mythology|journal=Asian Folklore Studies|volume=40|issue=2|pages=213–236|doi=10.2307/1177865|issn=0385-2342|jstor=1177865}}</ref> Stories of sexual violence are common in the Buddhist text '']'', while stories of people being devoured by mountain deities are found as if they are historical accounts in the fudoki.<ref name=":10" /> In Japanese folklore, heroes like Momotaro rescue women from violent ''kami'' and ''oni''. Although the exploits of heroes are well known, Japanese mythology also featured heroines.<ref name=":0" /> Ototachibana, the wife of Yamato Takeru, threw herself into the sea to save her husband's ship and quell the wrath of the storm that threatened them.<ref name=":0" /> Yamato Takeru, once safe, built a tomb for her and his mourning utterance for his wife caused ] to be called Adzuma.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
* ] (incarnation of the sun) from his left eye, | |||
* ] (incarnation of the moon) from his right eye, and | |||
* ] (incarnation of wind or storm) from his nose. | |||
==== Mythological creatures ==== | |||
Izanagi went on to divide the world between them with Amaterasu inheriting the heavens, Tukuyomi taking control of the night and moon and the storm god Susanowo owning the seas. | |||
{{Hatnote|See ] for a broad spectrum of creatures potentially classifiable as being "mythological creatures". ] or animals that interact with humans in ] are discussed in those pages.}} | |||
]'''] spider:''' The Jorōgumo spider is commonly known as a member of the Yōkai myths. The myth begins in a waterfall near the city of Izu. A man had been working long hours, and decided to take a nap. He rested near, the waterfall and there is when Jorōgumo, caught her first prey. Taking on the persona of a beautiful woman, the man simply thought she was merely a woman. After she saw he was asleep, she quickly turned to her true form, top half a beautiful woman and the bottom half is a spider. The man awoke in a web, and was lucky enough to escape said web, to tell the tale to local citizens. Unfortunately, a lumberjack who worked in that forest was not lucky enough to escape the mythological creature. | |||
The Jorōgumo spider is commonly told in Japanese folklore. The word itself translate to the meaning,"whore spider". Every story commonly states, that the creature captures it's prey by first seeming like a beautiful women than after seduction is complete turning into the much more bitter better half. This creature is believed to be over 400 years old. There is said to be a male version of this horrific creature, commonly called the Tschuigumo.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Sakura |first1=Hana |title=What is Jurogumo? |url=https://mythologyplanet.com/jorogumo-yokai-japanese-folklore/ |website=Mythology Planet |publisher=Richard Miller |access-date=5 December 2023}}</ref> | |||
==Amaterasu and Susano== | |||
==See also== | |||
Amaterasu, the powerful sun goddess of Japan, is the most well-known deity of Japanese mythology. Her feuding and uncontrollable brother Susano, however, is equally infamous and appears in several tales. One story tells of Susano's impossible behavior against Izanagi. Izanagi, tired of Susano's repeated complaints, banished him to Yomi. Susano grudgingly acquiesced but had unfinished business to attend to first. He went to ''Takamanohara'' (heaven) to bid farewell to his sister, ''Amaterasu''. ''Amaterasu'' knew her unpredictable brother did not have any good intentions in mind and prepared for battle. "What purpose do you come here for?" asked ''Amaterasu''. "To say farewell," answered ''Susano<u>w</u>o''. | |||
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But she did not believe his word and requested a contest for proof of his | |||
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good faith. A challenge was set as to who would bring forth the more noble divine child. ''Amaterasu'' made three women from ''Susano<u>w</u>o'''s sword, while ''Susano<u>w</u>o'' made five men from ''Amaterasu'''s ornament chain. ''Amaterasu'' claimed the title to the five men made from her belongings. Therefore, the three women were attributed to ''Susano<u>w</u>o''. | |||
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== Spelling of proper nouns == | |||
] at Ama-no-Iwato Shrine, ], ]]] | |||
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Suffice to say, both gods declared they were victors. Ametarasu's insistence in her claim drove Susano to violent campaigns that reached its climax when he hurled a half-flayed pony--an animal sacred to Amaterasu--into Amatarasu's weaving hall causing the death of one of her attendants. Amaterasu fled and hid into the cave called the ''Iwayado''. As the incarnation of the sun disappeared into the cave, darkness covered the world. | |||
Many deities appear in Japanese mythology, and many of them have multiple aliases. Furthermore, some of their names are comparatively long. This article, therefore, lists only the most prominent names and gives them in one of their abbreviated forms, other abbreviated forms are also in use. | |||
(For instance, ''Ninigi'', or ''Ame-Nigishikuni-Nigishiamatsuhiko-Hikono-no-'''Ninigi'''-no-Mikoto'' in full, may also be abbreviated as ''Hikoho-no-Ninigi'' or ''Hono-Ninigi''.) | |||
All the gods and goddesses in turn tried to coax Amaterasu out of the cave, but she refused them all. Finally, the ] of merriment, ], hatched a plan. She placed a large bronze mirror on a tree, facing Amaterasu's cave. Then Uzume clothed herself in flowers and leaves and overturned a washtub, and began to dance on it, drumming the tub with her feet. Finally, Uzume shed the leaves and flowers and danced naked. All the male gods roared with laughter, and Amaterasu became curious. When she peeked outside from her long stay in the dark, a ray of light called "dawn" escaped and Amaterasu was dazzled by her own reflection in the mirror. The god Ameno-Tajikarawo pulled her from the cave and it was sealed with a holy shirukume rope. Surrounded by the merriment, Amaterasu's depression disappeared and she agreed to return her light to the world. Uzume was from then on known as the kami of dawn as well as mirth. | |||
In some parts of this article, proper names are written in a historical manner. In this article, underlined ''<u>h</u>'', ''<u>y</u>'', and ''<u>w</u>'' denote silent letters; they are omitted from modern spelling. Other syllables are modernized as follows (see also ] ]). Note that some blend of these conventions is also often used. | |||
==Susanowo and Orochi== | |||
* ''hu'' is modernized as ''fu''. | |||
''Susano<u>w</u>o'', exiled from heaven, came to Idumo (now ]). It was not long before he met an old man and his wife sobbing beside their daughter. The old couple explained that they originally had eight daughters who were devoured one-by-one each year by the dragon named ''Yamata-no-orochi'' ("eight-forked serpent", who was said to originate from Kosi -- now ]). The terrible dragon had eight heads and eight tails. ''Kusinada'' or Kushinada-Hime (rice paddy princess) was the last of the eight daughters. . | |||
* ''zi'' and ''di'' are modernized as ''ji'' (the distinction disappeared). | |||
* ''oo'' is modernized as ''o'' or ''oh''. | |||
: For instance, various spellings of ''O<u>h</u>onamuji'' include ''Oonamuji'', ''O<u>h</u>namuji'', and others. | |||
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== References == | |||
''Susano<u>w</u>o'', who knew at once of the old couple's relation to the sun goddess Amaterasu, offered his assistance in return for their beautiful daughter's marriage. The parents accepted and ''Susano<u>w</u>o'' transformed Kushinada into a comb and hid her safely in his hair. He also ordered a fence built around the house, eight gates opened in the fence, eight tables placed at each gate, eight casks placed on each table, and the casks filled with eight-times brewed rice wine. | |||
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=== External links === | |||
The dragon, Orochi came and was allured by the wine. It drank it, and was slain by ''Susano<u>w</u>o'' in its stupor. A nearby river turned red with blood of the dragon. As ''Susano<u>w</u>o'' cut the dragon into pieces, he found an excellent sword from a tail of the dragon that his sword had been unable to cut. The sword was later presented to ''Amaterasu'' and named as ''Kusanagi'' (Grasscutter). This sword will be featured prominently in many other tales. | |||
*—Free to read and full-text search. | |||
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The Japanese ] '']'' is a follow-up to this legend, while the ] series '']'' also dealt with the Orochi deity. | |||
{{Japan topics}} | |||
<!--Susanowo-zinumi-kunusunu-yarehana-omidunu-huyukinu-ohonamudi--> | |||
==Prince Ohonamuji== | |||
O<u>h</u>onamuji (also known as O<u>h</u>okuninushi) was a descendant of Susanowo. He, along with his many brothers, competed for the hand of Princess Yakami of Inaba. While travelling from ] to ] to court her, the brothers met a skinned rabbit lying on a beach. Seeing this, they told the rabbit to bathe in the sea and dry in the wind at a high mountain. The rabbit believed them and thereby suffered in agony. O<u>h</u>onamuji, who was lagging behind his brothers, came and saw the rabbit in pain and instructed the rabbit to bathe in fresh water and be covered with powder of the ''gama'' (cattail) flower. The cured rabbit, who was in reality a deity, informed O<u>h</u>onamuji it was he who would marry Princess Yakami. | |||
The trials of O<u>h</u>onamuji were many and he died twice at the hands of his jealous brothers. Each time he would be saved by his mother Kusanda-hime. Pursued by his enemies, he ventured to Susano's realm where he would meet the vengeful god's daughter, Suseri-hime. The crafty Susano would test O<u>h</u>onamuji several times but in the end, Susano approved of the young boy and foretold his victory against his brothers. | |||
Although the Yamato tradition attributes the creation of the Japanese islands to Izanagi and Izanami, the Izumo tradition claims Ohonamuji, along with a dwarf god called Sukunabiko, would contribute or at least finish the creation of the islands of Japan. | |||
==Installation (19-20)== | |||
''Amaterasu'' ordered her grandson ''Ninigi'' to rule over the ground. She gave him the three treasures: | |||
* the ]s ] of '']'' (now situated in the ]); | |||
* the ] ] of '']'' (now in ]); and | |||
* the ] '']'' (the replica of which is now in ], ]). | |||
The first two were made to lure ''Amaterasu'' out of ''Iwayado''. The last was found in the eight-prong dragon. Of these three, the mirror is the token of ''Amaterasu''. The three together constitute the ]. | |||
''Ninigi'' and his company went down to the earth and came to ''Himuka'', there he founded his palace. | |||
==Prosperity and eternity== | |||
''Ninigi'' met the Princess ''Konohana-sakuya'' (symbol of flowers), the daughter of ''Yamatumi'' (master of mountains). They fell in love. ''Ninigi'' asked ''Yamatumi'' for his daughter's hand. The father was delighted and offered both of his daughters, Iwanaga (symbol of rocks) and Sakuya (symbol of flowers). But ''Ninigi'' married only ''Sakuya'' and refused ''Iwanaga''. | |||
"''Iwanaga'' is blessed with eternity and ''Sakuya'' with prosperity", ''Yamatumi'' said in regret, "by refusing ''Iwanaga'', your life will be brief from now on." Because of this, ''Ninigi'' and his descendants became mortal. | |||
''Sakuya'' conceived by a night and ''Ninigi'' doubt her. To prove legitimacy of her children, ''Sakuya'' swore by her luck and took a chance; she set fire to her room when she had given birth to her three babies. By this, ''Ninigi'' knew her chastity. The names of the children were ''Hoderi'', ''Hosuseri'', and ''Ho<u>w</u>ori''. | |||
==Ebb and flow== | |||
''Hoderi'' lived by fishing in sea while his brother ''Ho<u>w</u>ori'' lived by hunting in mountains. One day, "Ho<u>w</u>ori" asked his brother to swap places for a day. "Ho<u>w</u>ori" tried fishing, but he could not get a catch, and what was worse, he lost the fishhook he borrowed from his brother. ''Hoderi'' relentlessly accused his brother and did not accept his brother's apology. | |||
While "Ho<u>w</u>ori" was sitting on a beach, sorely perplexed, ''Shi<u>h</u>otuti'' told him to ride on a ship called the ''Manasikatuma'' and go wherever the current went. Following this advice, ''Ho<u>w</u>ori'' reached the house of ''Watatumi'' (master of seas). There he met ''Toyotama'', ''Watatumi'''s daughter, and married with her. After three years of marriage, he remembered his brother and his fishhook, then told ''Watatumi'' about it. | |||
''Watatumi'' soon found the fishhook in the throat of a bream and handed it ''Ho<u>w</u>ori''. ''Watatumi'' also gave him two magical balls, ''Si<u>h</u>omitutama'', which could cause a flood, and ''Si<u>h</u>ohirutama'', which could cause a ebb, and sent him off, along with his bride, to land. | |||
As ''Toyotama'' was giving birth, she asked ''Ho<u>w</u>ori'' not to look at her delivery. However, ''Ho<u>w</u>ori'', filled with curiosity, peeped in, and saw her transforming into a shark at the moment his son, ''Ugaya'', was born. Aware of this, ''Toyotama'' disappeared into sea and did not return, but she entrusted her sister ''Tamayori'' with her yearning for ''Howori''. | |||
''Ugaya'' married his aunt ''Tamayori'' and had five children, including ''Ituse'' and ''Yamatobiko''. | |||
==Legends (23-)== | |||
===First Emperor=== | |||
The first legendary emperor of Japan is ''Iwarebiko'', posthumous alias ]. He established the throne in 660 BCE. His pedigree is summarised as follows. | |||
* ''Iwarebiko'' is a son of ''Ugaya'' and ''Tamayori''. | |||
* ''Ugaya'' is a son of ''Ho<u>w</u>ori'' and ''Toyotama''. | |||
* ''Ho<u>w</u>ori'' is a son of ''Ninigi'' and ''Sakuya''. | |||
* ''Ninigi'' is a son of Osihomimi and ''Akidusi''. | |||
* ''Osihomimi'' is born from an ornament of ''Amaterasu''. | |||
* ''Amaterasu'' is born from the left eye of ''Izanagi''. | |||
* ''Izanagi'' is born of his own accord. | |||
===Conquest of the east (23-26)=== | |||
===Yamato Takeru (44-48)=== | |||
==See also== | |||
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{{Japanese folklore long}} | |||
==External link== | |||
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Latest revision as of 04:18, 6 January 2025
Mythology "Japanese legend" redirects here. For the Japanese pantheon, see List of Japanese deities. For urban legends, see Japanese urban legends.Part of a series on |
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Japanese mythology is a collection of traditional stories, folktales, and beliefs that emerged in the islands of the Japanese archipelago. Shinto traditions are the cornerstones of Japanese mythology. The history of thousands of years of contact with Chinese and various Indian myths (such as Buddhist and Hindu mythology) are also key influences in Japanese religious belief.
Japanese myths are tied to the topography of the archipelago as well as agriculturally-based folk religion, and the Shinto pantheon holds uncountable kami ("god(s)" or "spirits").
Two important sources for Japanese myths, as they are recognized today, are the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki. The Kojiki, or "Record of Ancient Matters," is the oldest surviving account of Japan's myths, legends, and history. Additionally, the Shintōshū describes the origins of Japanese deities from a Buddhist perspective.
One notable feature of Japanese mythology is its explanation of the origin of the Imperial Family, which has been used historically to deify to the imperial line.
Japanese is not transliterated consistently across all sources (see spelling of proper nouns).
Sources
Japanese myths are passed down through oral tradition, through literary sources (including traditional art), and through archaeological sources. For much of Japan's history, communities were mostly isolated, which allowed for local legends and myths to grow around unique features of the geographic location where the people who told the stories lived.
Literary sources
The Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki, completed in A.D. 712 and A.D. 720 respectively, had the two most referenced and oldest sources of Japanese mythology and pre-history. Written in the Eighth century, under the Yamato state, the two collections relate the cosmogony and mythic origins of the Japanese archipelago, its people, and the imperial family. It is based on the records of the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki that the imperial family claims direct descent from the sun goddess Amaterasu and her grandson Ninigi.
Emperor Temmu enlisted the help of Hiyeda no Are who committed to memory the history of Japan as it was recorded in two collections that are thought by historians to have existed before the Kojiki and Nihongi. Under Empress Gemmei's rule, Hideya no Are's memory of the history of the Japanese archipelago and its mythological origins were recorded in spite of Emperor Temmu's death before its completion. As a result of Hideya no Are's account, the Kojiki was finally completed, transcribed in kanji characters, during Empress Genshō's time as sovereign. The Yamato state also produced fudoki and Man'yōshū, two more of the oldest surviving texts that relate the historical and mythical origins of Japan's people, culture, and the imperial family.
Motoori Norinaga, an Edo-period Japanese scholar, interpreted Kojiki and his commentary, annotations, and use of alternate sources to supplement his interpretations are studied by scholars today because of their influence on the current understanding of Japanese myths.
Archaeological sources
Archaeologists studying the history of the Japanese Archipelago separate the prehistoric history into three eras based on attributes of the discoveries associated with each era. The Jōmun period marks the first cases of pottery found on the archipelago, followed by the Yayoi period and the Kofun period. The Yayoi district of the Japanese capital Tokyo, is the namesake of the Yayoi period because archaeologists discovered pottery associated with the time period there.
Contact with Korean civilization in the latter part of the Yayoi period influenced the culture of the Japanese Archipelago greatly, as evidenced by the discovery of artifacts that archaeologists associate with various cultural streams from Korea, and northeast Asia. Finally, Kofun period artifacts, ranging from A.D. 250 to A.D. 600, are the archaeological sources of what historians know about the Yamato kingdom — the same Yamato state that was responsible for the two most prominent literary sources of Japanese myth, the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki.
Cosmogony
Origins of Japan and the kami
Main article: Japanese creation mythKuniumi and Kamiumi
Japan's archipelago creation narrative can be divided into the birth of the deities (Kamiumi) and the birth of the land (Kuniumi). The birth of the deities begins with the appearance of the first generation of gods who appeared out of primordial oil, a trio of gods who produced the next seven generations of gods. Izanagi and Izanami were eventually born, siblings, and using a naginata decorated with jewels, named Ame-no-nuhoko ("Heavenly Jeweled Spear") that was gifted to them. Izanagi created the first islands of the Japanese Archipelago by dipping the Naginata into the primordial waters. Historians have interpreted the myth of Izanagi's creation of the first Japanese Island Onogoro as an early example of phallocentrism in Japanese mythology.
The earliest creation myths of Japanese mythology generally involve topics such as death, decay, loss, infanticide, and contamination. The creation myths place great importance on purification, ceremonial order, and the masculine. For example, the first child born to Izanagi and Izanami after they attempt a union ceremony is born with no limbs or bones, and the parents discard the child by sending him to sea in a boat. When Izanagi and Izanami ask the older gods why their child was born without bones or limbs, they are told it was because they did not conduct the ceremony properly and that the male must always speak before the female. Once they follow the directions of the older gods correctly, they produce many children, many of whom are the islands of the Japanese Archipelago. Among their children are the Ōyashima, or the eight great islands of Japan — Awaji, Iyo, Oki, Tsukushi, Iki, Tsushima, Sado, and Yamato. The last child that Izanami produces is a fire god, Kagutsuchi (incarnation of fire), whose flames kill her; and Izanagi murders the child in grief-driven anger. The child's corpse creates even more gods. Izanami was then buried on Mount Hiba, at the border of the old provinces of Izumo and Hoki, near modern-day Yasugi of Shimane Prefecture.
Scholars of Japanese mythology have noted the incestuous themes of the creation myth as represented in the Kojiki, and the first scholar to write about Izanagi and Izanami as siblings was Oka Masao. Izanami is referred to in the Kojiki as Izanagi's imo (meaning both wife or little sister in Japanese) and other scholars dispute that the pair were siblings. Hattori Asake, another scholar, argued that Oka was correct because he drew evidence from another myth about humans who had incestuous relations because of a great flood wiping out the rest of the human population. Essentially, Hattori said the myth Oka used as evidence was too different to be the origin of the Izanagi and Izanami myth. In the Man'yōshū, Izanami is also referred to as imo by the compiler, suggesting that the compiler believed that Izanami was Izanagi's sister. While scholars disagree about the nature of Izanami and Izanagi's relationships, the gods Amaterasu and Susanoo, children of Izanagi, were sibling gods who created children together in a contest preceding Susanoo's desecration of Amaterasu's home which leads to her hiding in a cave. A unique aspect of Japanese mythology is its inclusion of graphic details, with disgusting and horrific images that are considered to be taboo in modern Japanese society, which has many cultural practices associated with purification and cleanliness.
Yomi
After Izanami's death, the myth of Izanagi's efforts to rescue her from Yomi, an underworld described in Japanese mythology, explains the origins of the cycle of birth and death. After killing their child Kagutsuchi, Izanagi was still grief-stricken, so he undertook the task of finding a way to bring Izanami back from the dead. After finally locating her, he disobeyed her order to not look at her while she went to ask permission to leave Yomi. He used his hair to create a flame, and when he gazed at Izanami's rotting, maggot-filled flesh he fled in fear and disgust. Izanami felt betrayed and tried to capture him, but he escaped by creating obstacles for Izanami's horde of shikome including using peaches to threaten them. The myth of Izanagi's journey into Yomi features many themes of food, he creates grapes to distract the shikome who stop to eat them, granting him time to escape. The peaches he uses to scare the shikome off are then blessed, and peaches appear in many other Japanese myths, especially the tale of Momotarō the peach boy.
The Sun, Moon, and Storm
See also: Solar deityThe origins of the Sun and the Moon are accounted for in Japanese mythology through the myth of Izanagi's return from Yomi. After spending so much time in Yomi, Izanagi cleansed himself with a purification ceremony. As Izanagi cleansed himself, the water and robes that fell from his body created many more gods. Purification rituals still function as important traditions in Japan today, from shoe etiquette in households to sumo wrestling purification ceremonies. Amaterasu, the Sun goddess and divine ancestor of the first Emperor Jimmu, was born from Izanagi's eye. The Moon god and Susanoo the storm god were born at the same time as Amaterasu, when Izanagi washed his face.
Myths related the Sun, the Moon, and the Storm kami are full of strife and conflict. The Sun goddess and her sibling the moon god's interpersonal conflicts explain, in Japanese myth, why the Sun and the Moon do not stay in the sky at the same time — their distaste for one another keeps them both turning away from the other. Meanwhile, the sun goddess and the storm god Susanoo's conflicts were intense and bloody. Various accounts of Susanoo's temper tantrum in Amaterasu's home depict a variety of disgusting and brutal behaviors (everything from smearing his feces across her home's walls to skinning her favorite horse alive and throwing it at her maid and killing the maid) but it is usually, in depictions of this particular myth, Susanoo's behavior that scares Amaterasu into hiding in a cave. It would take the combined efforts of many other kami, and the erotic dance of a particular goddess named Ame no Uzume, to lure Amaterasu from the cave again. Ame no Uzume exposed herself while dancing and created such commotion that Amaterasu peeked out from her cave. The myth of Amaterasu's entering and emerging from a cave is depicted in one of the most iconic images of Japanese mythology which is shown to the right.
The sun goddess Amaterasu's importance in Japanese mythology is two-fold. She is the sun, and one of Izanagi's most beloved of children, as well as the ancestor of the Japanese imperial line, according to legend. Her status as a sun goddess had political ramifications for the imperial family, and the Yamato state most likely benefited from the myth when dealing with Korean influences because Korea also had myths of sun god ancestors for the Korean imperial family.
First Emperor Jimmu
The tale of first Emperor Jimmu is considered the origin of the Imperial family. Emperor Jimmu is considered to be the human descendant of Amaterasu the Sun goddess. His ascension to the throne marked the "Transition from Age of the Gods to Human Age". After taking control of Yamato province, he established the imperial throne and acceded in the year of kanototori (conventionally dated to 660 B.C.). At the end of the seventh century, the Imperial court finally moved from where Emperor Jimmu was said to have founded it in Yamato.
The importance of this myth in particular is that it establishes the origins, and the power, of the Japanese imperial family as divine. Although some scholars believe that the myths found in the Nihon Shoki and Kojiki are meant to give authority to the imperial family, others suggest that the myths in the Nihon Shoki and Kojiki are unique accounts meant to give authority to the mythic histories in themselves. The Nihon Shoki and Kojiki have varying accounts of the mythic history of Japan, and there are differences in the details of the origins of the imperial family between the two texts. The imperial dynasty still has a role as a public symbol of the state and people, according to the current constitution of Japan.
The Japanese pantheon
Japanese gods and goddesses, called kami, are uniquely numerous (there are at least eight million) and varied in power and stature. They are usually descendants from the original trio of gods that were born from nothing in the primordial oil that was the world before the kami began to shape it. There are easily as many kami in Japanese myth as there are distinct natural features, and most kami are associated with natural phenomena. Kami can take many shapes and forms, some look almost human in depictions found by archaeologists; meanwhile, other kami look like hybrids of humans and creatures, or may not look human at all. One example of a kami who looks almost human in depictions is the ruler of the Seas Ryujin. On the other hand, kami like Ninigi and Amaterasu are often depicted as human in their forms.
Shinto originated in Japan, and the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki tell the tales of the Shinto pantheon's origins. Shinto is still practiced today in Japan. In Shinto belief, kami has multiple meanings and could also be translated as "spirit" and all objects in nature have a kami according to this system. Myths often tell stories of particular, local deities and kami; for example, the kami of a mountain or a nearby lake. Most kami take their origins from Shinto beliefs, but the influence of Buddhism also affected the pantheon. Contact with other cultures usually had some influence on Japanese myth. In the fourteenth century, Christianity found its way to Japan through St. Francis Xavier and there was also contact with westerners. However, during the Tokugawa shogunate Christians were executed in Japan. Twenty Christians were crucified before that while Toyotomi Hideyoshi was consolidating his power after the assassination of Oda Nobunaga. Christianity was banned in Japan until well into the nineteenth century.
Folklore heroes
As in other cultures, Japanese mythology accounts for not only the actions of supernatural beings but also the adventures and lives of folk heroes. There are many Japanese heroes that are associated with specific locations in Japan, and others that are more well known across the archipelago. Some heroes are thought to have been real people, such as the Forty-seven rōnin, but their legacy has been transformed into great folktales that depict the historical figures as more gifted, powerful, or knowledgeable than the average person. The heroic adventures of these heroes range from acts of kindness and devotion, such as the myth of Shita-kiri Suzume, to battling frightful enemies, as in the tale of Momotaro.
Themes that appear in the folklore concerning heroes are moral lessons, or stories that function as parables. The tale of Shita-kiri Suzume, for example, warns of the dangers of greed, avarice, and jealousy through the example of an old couple's experiences with a fairy who disguised herself as a sparrow to test the old man. The influence of Bushido is noticeable in the behavior of heroes, and heroes often were also warriors. Momotaro, born from a peach for a childless couple to raise, is a mythic hero who embodied courage and dutifulness as he went on a journey to defeat oni who were kidnapping, raping, and pillaging his home island. The tale of Momotaro also shares in the themes of violence, sexual violence, and deities or demons devouring humans. Stories of sexual violence are common in the Buddhist text Nihon ryōiki, while stories of people being devoured by mountain deities are found as if they are historical accounts in the fudoki. In Japanese folklore, heroes like Momotaro rescue women from violent kami and oni. Although the exploits of heroes are well known, Japanese mythology also featured heroines. Ototachibana, the wife of Yamato Takeru, threw herself into the sea to save her husband's ship and quell the wrath of the storm that threatened them. Yamato Takeru, once safe, built a tomb for her and his mourning utterance for his wife caused Eastern Honshu to be called Adzuma.
Mythological creatures
See List of legendary creatures from Japan for a broad spectrum of creatures potentially classifiable as being "mythological creatures". Yōkai or animals that interact with humans in Japanese folklore are discussed in those pages.Jorōgumo spider: The Jorōgumo spider is commonly known as a member of the Yōkai myths. The myth begins in a waterfall near the city of Izu. A man had been working long hours, and decided to take a nap. He rested near, the waterfall and there is when Jorōgumo, caught her first prey. Taking on the persona of a beautiful woman, the man simply thought she was merely a woman. After she saw he was asleep, she quickly turned to her true form, top half a beautiful woman and the bottom half is a spider. The man awoke in a web, and was lucky enough to escape said web, to tell the tale to local citizens. Unfortunately, a lumberjack who worked in that forest was not lucky enough to escape the mythological creature.
The Jorōgumo spider is commonly told in Japanese folklore. The word itself translate to the meaning,"whore spider". Every story commonly states, that the creature captures it's prey by first seeming like a beautiful women than after seduction is complete turning into the much more bitter better half. This creature is believed to be over 400 years old. There is said to be a male version of this horrific creature, commonly called the Tschuigumo.
See also
- Ainu mythology
- Japanese Buddhism
- Japanese folklore
- Japanese mythology in popular culture
- Japanese urban legends
- Kami
- Kamui
- Kuni-yuzuri
- List of Japanese deities
- Seven Lucky Gods
- Hōsōshin demon
- Shinto
- Yokai
- Yurei
- Kaiju
Spelling of proper nouns
Spelling of proper nounsMany deities appear in Japanese mythology, and many of them have multiple aliases. Furthermore, some of their names are comparatively long. This article, therefore, lists only the most prominent names and gives them in one of their abbreviated forms, other abbreviated forms are also in use.
(For instance, Ninigi, or Ame-Nigishikuni-Nigishiamatsuhiko-Hikono-no-Ninigi-no-Mikoto in full, may also be abbreviated as Hikoho-no-Ninigi or Hono-Ninigi.)
In some parts of this article, proper names are written in a historical manner. In this article, underlined h, y, and w denote silent letters; they are omitted from modern spelling. Other syllables are modernized as follows (see also Japanese romanization systems). Note that some blend of these conventions is also often used.
- hu is modernized as fu.
- zi and di are modernized as ji (the distinction disappeared).
- oo is modernized as o or oh.
- For instance, various spellings of Ohonamuji include Oonamuji, Ohnamuji, and others.
References
- ^ Piggott, Juliet. (1983). Japanese mythology (New revised ed.). New York, N.Y. pp. 6–8. ISBN 0-911745-09-2. OCLC 9971207.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Tylor, Edward B. (1877). "Remarks on Japanese Mythology". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 6: 55–58. doi:10.2307/2841246. JSTOR 2841246.
- ^ Kitagawa, Joseph M. (1963). "Prehistoric Background of Japanese Religion". History of Religions. 2 (2): 292–328. doi:10.1086/462466. ISSN 0018-2710. JSTOR 1062069. S2CID 162362195.
- ^ ANDASSOVA, Maral (2019). "Emperor Jinmu in the Kojiki". Japan Review (32): 5–16. ISSN 0915-0986. JSTOR 26652947.
- ^ Jun'ichi, Isomae; 一, 磯 前 順; Thal, Sarah E. (2000). "Reappropriating the Japanese Myths: Motoori Norinaga and the Creation Myths of the Kojiki and Nihon shoki". Japanese Journal of Religious Studies. 27 (1/2): 15–39. ISSN 0304-1042. JSTOR 30233639.
- Smits, Gregory J. (1991). "Political Thought in Japanese Historical Writing: From Kojiki (712) to Tokushi Yoron (1712). By John S. Brownlee. Toronto: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1991. xvii, 158 pp. $35.00". The Journal of Asian Studies. 51 (3): 666–667. doi:10.2307/2057985. ISSN 0021-9118. JSTOR 2057985. S2CID 154761651.
- Kadoya, Atsushi; 門屋溫; Padoan, Tatsuma (2006). "On the Formation of Shintō Icons". Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie. 16: 151–182. doi:10.3406/asie.2006.1255. ISSN 0766-1177. JSTOR 44171454.
- ^ Duthie, Torquil (2014-01-01). "Preliminary Material". Man'yōshū and the Imperial Imagination in Early Japan. BRILL. pp. i–xix. doi:10.1163/9789004264540_001. ISBN 978-90-04-26454-0.
- ^ Lewis, Scott (2018). Mythology: Mega Collection. Scott Lewis.
- ^ Great Mythologies of the World. The Great Courses. 2015. pp. 250–350.
- Pauley, Daniel C. (2009). Pauley's guide : a dictionary of Japanese martial arts and culture. Anaguma Seizan Publications. OCLC 384268610.
- Louis-Frédéric, 1923- (2002). Japan encyclopedia. Roth, Käthe. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-00770-0. OCLC 48943301.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Kōnoshi, Takamitsu (1984). "The Land of Yomi: On the Mythical World of the Kojiki". Japanese Journal of Religious Studies. 11 (1): 57–76. doi:10.18874/jjrs.11.1.1984.57-76. ISSN 0304-1042. JSTOR 30233312.
- ^ Murakami, Fuminobu (1988). "Incest and Rebirth in Kojiki". Monumenta Nipponica. 43 (4): 455–463. doi:10.2307/2384797. ISSN 0027-0741. JSTOR 2384797.
- ^ Aston, W. G. (1899). "Japanese Myth". Folklore. 10 (3): 294–324. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1899.9720502. ISSN 0015-587X. JSTOR 1253583.
- ^ Hoffman, Michael (2009-07-12). "Land of the Sun Goddess". The Japan Times Online. ISSN 0447-5763. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
- Metevelis, Peter (1983). A Reference Guide to the Nihonshoki Myths, Asian Folklore Studies. Vol 52, No 2, p. 383–8.
- Seagrave, Sterling (2001). The Yamato dynasty : the secret history of Japan's imperial family. Seagrave, Peggy. (1st Broadway books trade pbk. ed.). New York: Broadway Books. ISBN 0-7679-0497-4. OCLC 47813347.
- "THE CONSTITUTION OF JAPAN". japan.kantei.go.jp. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
- Antoni, Klaus (1991). "Momotarō (The Peach Boy) and the Spirit of Japan: Concerning the Function of a Fairy Tale in Japanese Nationalism of the Early Shōwa Age". Asian Folklore Studies. 50 (1): 155–188. doi:10.2307/1178189. ISSN 0385-2342. JSTOR 1178189.
- ^ Kelsey, W. Michael (1981). "The Raging Deity in Japanese Mythology". Asian Folklore Studies. 40 (2): 213–236. doi:10.2307/1177865. ISSN 0385-2342. JSTOR 1177865.
- Sakura, Hana. "What is Jurogumo?". Mythology Planet. Richard Miller. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
External links
- Romance stories from old Japan, pre-1919—Free to read and full-text search.
- A Multilingual Electronic Text Collection of Folk Tales for Casual Users Using Off-the-Shelf Browsers
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