Myths featuring Aso

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Okuninushi's Brothers Trapping Him with a Red-Hot Boulder Painted Like a Boar

⛩️ Japanese MythologyMount Tema, Tottori, JapanOnamuji • Yasogami • Sashikuni-wakahi-hime

Driven by intense jealousy, the eighty brothers of Onamuji plot to murder him on Mount Tema. They trick him into catching a red-hot boulder under the pretense that it is a giant red boar running down the mountain. Onamuji catches the scorching stone and is instantly killed, but he is subsequently resurrected by his mother and two celestial clam goddesses.

The Princess Yakami-hime Choosing Okuninushi Over His Eighty Jealous Brothers

⛩️ Japanese MythologyHakuto Shrine, Tottori, JapanOnamuchi-no-Kami • Yakami-hime • The White Hare of Inaba

This myth tells the story of the gentle god Okuninushi, then known as Onamuchi, who traveled to the land of Inaba alongside his eighty jealous brothers. Along the way, he showed compassion to the flayed White Hare of Inaba, who prophesied that Onamuchi would win the hand of the beautiful Princess Yakami-hime. Despite his brothers' cruelty and attempts on his life, the princess rejected the...

Okuninushi Advising the White Hare to Bathe in Fresh Water and Pollen to Heal

⛩️ Japanese MythologyHakuto Shrine, Tottori, JapanŌkuninushi • White Hare of Inaba • Eighty Gods (Yasogami)

During a journey to win the hand of Princess Yakami, the compassionate deity Ōkuninushi encountered the White Hare of Inaba, who had been flayed by sea beasts and further tormented by Ōkuninushi's cruel brothers. Ōkuninushi kindly advised the suffering hare to wash in a freshwater river and roll in the healing pollen of cattails. Once restored, the grateful hare prophesied that Ōkuninushi...

Set Sealing the Chest and Throwing It into the Nile

🏺 Egyptian MythologyMemphis, EgyptOsiris • Set • Isis

At a grand banquet in Memphis, the god Set tricks his brother Osiris into a custom-made chest. After Osiris lies down, Set and his conspirators seal the chest with molten lead and cast it into the Nile River. This pivotal act of betrayal initiates the death of the king and the subsequent mourning and quest of his wife, Isis.