shinto myths and legends

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Okuninushi Meeting the Flayed White Hare of Inaba Weeping on the Beach

⛩️ Japanese MythologyHakuto Coast, Tottori, JapanOkuninushi • White Hare of Inaba • Eighty Brothers

While traveling to woo Princess Yakami of Inaba, the eighty brothers of Okuninushi trick a flayed hare into bathing in saltwater, causing it agonizing pain. Okuninushi, carrying his brothers' heavy baggage, discovers the weeping hare on the beach and provides compassionate healing advice. Through this act of benevolence, the hare prophesies that Okuninushi, despite his lowly status among his...

Susanoo Building an Eightfold Palace for His New Bride Kushinadahime in Izumo

⛩️ Japanese MythologySuga Shrine, Shimane, JapanSusanoo-no-Mikoto • Kushinadahime • Yamata no Orochi

After defeating the eight-headed serpent Yamata no Orochi, the storm god Susanoo-no-Mikoto sought a place to settle down with his new bride, Kushinadahime. Upon reaching the lands of Izumo, he saw beautiful, rising clouds and felt a profound sense of peace, prompting him to build a magnificent eightfold palace. This sacred construction marked the birth of Shinto shrine architecture and the...

Susanoo Testing Okuninushi by Locking Him in a Chamber Full of Venomous Snakes

⛩️ Japanese MythologyIzumo Region, Shimane, JapanSusanoo-no-Mikoto • Okuninushi • Suseri-hime

Seeking the hand of Princess Suseri-hime, the earthly god Okuninushi travels to Ne-no-Kuni, the underworld realm of her father, the storm god Susanoo. Susanoo subjects Okuninushi to a series of deadly trials, beginning by locking him in a chamber filled entirely with venomous snakes. With the help of Suseri-hime's magical scarf, Okuninushi survives this and subsequent trials to eventually...

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.

Susanoo Throwing a Flayed Horse into Amaterasu's Weaving Hall in a Wild Rage

⛩️ Japanese MythologyAma-no-Yassugawara, Miyazaki, JapanSusanoo • Amaterasu • Wakahirume

In Japanese mythology, the storm god Susanoo-no-Mikoto, drunk on pride after a sacred contest, goes on a destructive rampage in heaven. This culminates in him flaying a heavenly horse and throwing it through the roof of the sacred weaving hall of his sister, the sun goddess Amaterasu. Outraged and deeply grieved by the resulting death of a weaving maiden, Amaterasu retreats into the Heavenly...

Susanoo Born from Izanagi's Nose, Becoming the God of Storms and Seas

⛩️ Japanese MythologyYaegaki Shrine, Shimane, JapanSusanoo-no-Mikoto • Izanagi-no-Mikoto • Amaterasu-Omikami

This myth details the miraculous birth of the storm god Susanoo-no-Mikoto from the nose of the primordial creator god Izanagi during a ritual purification. Alongside his siblings Amaterasu and Tsukuyomi, he was named one of the Three Noble Children to rule the earthly and celestial domains. The story explores his chaotic, emotional nature, his banishment from the heavens, and his ultimate...

Izanami's Corpse and the Eight Thunder Gods Chasing Izanagi out of Yomi

⛩️ Japanese MythologyYomotsu Hirasaka, Shimane, JapanIzanagi • Izanami • Yomotsu-shikome

After his wife Izanami dies giving birth to the fire god, Izanagi ventures into Yomi, the land of the dead, to bring her back. He breaks his promise not to look at her, discovering her decaying corpse guarded by the Eight Thunder Gods. Terrified, Izanagi flees toward the mortal world while the monstrous forces of Yomi, led by the ugly hag Yomotsu-shikome, pursue him in a desperate chase.

The Eighty Brothers of Okuninushi Leaving Him to Carry Their Bags to Inaba

⛩️ Japanese MythologyTottori Coast (Ancient Inaba), JapanŌkuninushi • Ōnamuchi • Eighty Brothers

The myth of Ōnamuchi (later Ōkuninushi) and his eighty brothers who travel to the province of Inaba to court Princess Yakami. While his proud brothers force Ōnamuchi to carry all their heavy luggage, they encounter a suffering, skinless hare on the coast of Inaba. The brothers trick the hare with painful advice, but the compassionate Ōnamuchi offers the correct remedy, earning the gratitude...

Izanagi Throwing Three Peaches to Repel the Pursuing Underworld Hags

⛩️ Japanese MythologyYomotsu Hirasaka, Shimane, JapanIzanagi • Izanami • Yomotsu-shikome

In Japanese mythology, the creator god Izanagi journeys to the dark underworld of Yomi to rescue his deceased wife, Izanami. After breaking a sacred vow by looking upon her decayed form, he is forced to flee from her wrath and a terrifying army of hags and thunder deities. Reaching the boundary of the underworld at Yomotsu Hirasaka, Izanagi repels his monstrous pursuers by throwing three...

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...