When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Japanese mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_mythology

    Japanese mythology is a collection of traditional stories, folktales, and beliefs that emerged in the islands of the Japanese archipelago. Shinto traditions are the ...

  3. Japanese creation myth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_creation_myth

    Table illustrating the kami that appeared during the creation of Heaven and Earth according to Japanese mythology.. In Japanese mythology, the Japanese Creation Myth (天地開闢, Tenchi-kaibyaku, Literally "Creation of Heaven & Earth") is the story that describes the legendary birth of the celestial and creative world, the birth of the first gods, and the birth of the Japanese archipelago.

  4. List of Japanese deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_deities

    Fūjin (風神) Also known as Kaze-no-kami, he is the Japanese god of the wind and one of the eldest Shinto gods, said to have been present at the creation of the world. He is often depicted as an oni with a bag slung over his back. Hachiman (八幡神) is the god of war and the divine protector of Japan

  5. List of legendary creatures from Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_legendary...

    The Japanese Buddhist version of angels. Tenome A ghostly blind man with his eyes on his palms. Tenson kōrin The descent of Amaterasu's grandson Ninigi-no-Mikoto from Takamagahara to the land of Japan (then known as Ashihara no Nakatsukuni) to become its ruler. Soon after this, Hoori and his siblings Hoderi and Hosuseri were born.

  6. Kami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kami

    Kami (Japanese: 神, ) are the deities, divinities, spirits, mythological, spiritual, or natural phenomena that are venerated in the Shinto religion. They can be elements of the landscape, forces of nature, beings and the qualities that these beings express, and/or the spirits of venerated dead people.

  7. Tenjin (kami) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenjin_(kami)

    For the first few centuries, then, Tenjin was seen as a god of natural disasters, worshiped to placate him and avoid his curses.However, Michizane was a famous poet and scholar in his lifetime, one of the greatest of the Heian period, and in the Edo period scholars and educators came to regard him as a patron of scholarship.

  8. History of Shinto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Shinto

    [153] This theorized the ancient Japanese view of the spirit, and became the theoretical basis for the Shinto funeral ritual. [154] He also argued that all national myths, ranging from Chinese mythology, Indian mythology, and even Christian mythology by Adam and Eve, are "accents" of Japanese mythology, representing the same facts in different ...

  9. Japanese dragon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_dragon

    Chinese dragon mythology is the source of Japanese dragon mythology. Japanese words for "dragon" are written with kanji ("Chinese characters"), either simplified shinjitai 竜 or traditional kyūjitai 龍 from Chinese long 龍. These kanji can be read tatsu in native Japanese kun'yomi, [b] and ryū or ryō in Sino-Japanese on'yomi. [c]