1/30/2015

Omine no Kappa

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - ABC-Index -
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- Omine san no Kappa 大峰の河童 -



山伏の通り道に河童の棲家! - Kappa the Yamabushi

火野葦平の作品「石と釘」に書かれている山伏・堂丸総学が打ち込んだ
河童封じ地蔵  Jizo Bosatsu as Kappa fuji - subduing the Kappa
太い金属棒が、地蔵尊の背に突き刺さっています。
(From the story by Hino Shohei)

葦平氏の旧宅「河伯洞(河童の棲家)」にて三男・史太郎氏と談笑の時間あり。玄関上がり口の鶴と亀の彫りものや庭で虎を飼育していた。玉井金五郎は別宅で亡くなった話など、貴重な話を伺う事が出来た。
小説関係資料の他に河童関係の展示物が沢山あり。

河童の祖父(明治13年生)も伊予から筑豊の石炭労働の経験後、門司港で港湾運送の請負業を戦時体制まで営んだ経緯が玉井金五郎と同じである。

(虚空地蔵尊の釘は当初の釘と違う、つまり堂丸総学が打ち込んだ釘と違う謎を抱いて若松を離れる。)



Kappa no sumika 河童の棲家 Places where Kappa live
with some old maps of Kappa territory

河童の手作り弓具、「蟇目鏑に色塗り」
bow and arrow goods with Kappa

河童がかわながれを目撃
People who have seen a Kappa

饒速日命の墳墓を探す / 饒速日命(ニギハヤヒノミコト)


- - - - - Kappa goods


上高地のかっぱ from Kamikochi

河童と相撲 Kappa doing Sumo wrestling
「入之波(しおのは)のガタロウ伝説」

- source : omine-no-kappa

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Kappa fuji no Jizo 河童封じ地蔵 Jizo Bosatsu subduing the Kappa


CLICK for more photos !


. - カッパ封じ地蔵 Jizo subduing the Kappa - .
Legend from Kyushu


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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .

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. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .

- #kappaomine -
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1/24/2015

Kappa Jizo

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - Legends -
. Jizō - Jizo Bosatsu 地蔵菩薩 - ABC List .
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- Kappa Jizoo かっぱ地蔵 / 河童地蔵 Kappa and Jizo Bosatsu -
There are various legends and statues in Japan.


source : Rob on facebook

Inspired by this photo by Rob on facebook !

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- カッパ封じ地蔵 Jizo subduing the Kappa -

福岡県の民話 Legend from Fukuoka
福岡の若松の高塔山(高塔山公園)Kita Kyushu, Mount Takato (Mt. Koto) in Wakamatsu (124 m)
北九州市若松区修多羅 Sutara
The part is now famous for its Hortensia アジサイ ajisai, open air concerts and a Wallaby zoo.
It overlooks the nearby sea 玄界灘.


- source : wakamatude.gozaru.jp

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- - - - - Watch the story online
- source : nipponmukasibanasi


- - - - - summary
At the top of Mount Takatosan in Wakamatsu there is a pond where clear water is sprouting and many Kappa lived in the pond. They always fought abou their territory among themselves.

One year there was no rain at all, all was dry and the hot sun shone from the sky every day.
Most ponds and rivers in the region were out of water and only the pond on top of Mount Takatosan still had some water. So the Kappa of the region all moved here and fought about the last few drops of water. They also involved the villagers nearby and it was really a cruel fighting among humans and the Kappa for survival.

Mountain ascet and Priest 堂丸総学 Domaru Sogaku heared about the water shortage and came to Mount Takatosan. He had been involved with wicked Kappa before and fought them with leaves of the gourd ヘチマの葉. So he thought he could help the people by subduing the Kappa here too.

He asked the blacksmith of the village to make him a long nail of about 30 cm. Then he climbed Mount Takatosan, sat in front of the statue of Jizo at the top of the mountain and began his prayers to subdue the Kappa.
"If my prayers are answered, then this nail will stick out of the back of the Jizo statue and all the Kappa will be put under the earth, never to come up again!"

When the surprised Kappa heare his prayer, they wanted to stop him. So one of them changed into a beautiful lady and tried to seduce the monk. Others offered him money to stop, others changed into huge serpents and threatened him, but monk Sogaku did not move an inch and continued to pray.



On the last day of his prayer, when Sogaku was already very exhausted, he suddenly saw one place at the back of the Jizo statue become soft as tofu pudding. He called on all his strength and stuck the nail into the stone statue there.
And in that moment, all the Kappa who had been threatening Sogaku disappeared into thin air, never to come back.

Now the water flew back down the mountain to the village and all were saved.
Even now there is the nail in the back of the Jizo statue to be seen. It is left there so that the Kappa will never never come back again to Mount Takatosan. People rub it softly with this wish and the nail has become all soft and smooth over the years.


The Jizo hall at Mount Takatosan.
It seems the real statue is not Jizo but Kokuzo Bosatsu 虚空蔵菩薩.




龍匠外伝

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Another legend about priest 堂丸総学 Domaru Sogaku
小便 - told by Mizuki Shigeru

高塔山の地蔵にはある由来があった。その昔、あんまの東六が森の淵で小便をすると、千匹の河童が現れた。その淵は、禁忌を破った河童達が溶けて溜まったものだった。村人たちは蘇った河童の退治法を考え、山伏の堂丸総学に河童を封じてもらうよう頼む。
- source : ja.wikipedia.org


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河童地蔵尊 Kappa Jizo Son
神埼町 枝ヶ里 Kanzaki, Saga prefecture



Link with 7 photos
- source : www.kanzaki-museum.com


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Kappa Koen カッパ公園 Kappa Park

At the hot spring 猿ヶ京温泉 Sarugakyo Onsen
Gunma 群馬県 



Once upon a time
a Kappa raided all the cucumber fields of the local farmers and caused a lot of trouble.
When the farmers caught the Kappa he promised by the statue of a Jizo Bosatsu to show them how to make good medicine if they let him go.

Now there is even a local festival and ritual to keep the Kappa happy.
カッパ地蔵安泰祈願祭

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Nagasaki, near 眼鏡橋の川沿
- source : travelog-jpn.blogspot.jp/


. Nagasaki Suijin-Sha 水神社 Shrine of the Water Deity .
and Kappa Legends

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Jizo no Fuchi no Kappa 地蔵の渕の河童 The Kappa from Jizonofuchi River Pool
Akita, 東由利町 Higashiyurimachi

The river which flows past the small village of Kubo 久保集落 has a river pool, Jizunofuchi, where a Kappa lived, who liked to play tricks on people. At the home of 末吉 Sueyoshi there were many young horses. One day when Sueyoshi had washed them in the river, the Kappa followed him. The villagers, who all knew about the malicious deeds of this Kappa, took him prisoner.
Eventually Sueyoshi felt pity with the Kappa and helped him to get free.
From this day on, every year when Autumn came, he delivered two fine salmon at the home of Sueyoshi.


source : kappa hakubutsukan

kokeshi wooden doll of Kappa delivering two salmon


. Akita 秋田県 Kappa Legends 河童 .

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Nikaidoo Masahiro 二階堂正宏 Nikaido Masahiro



Painting by Nikaido Masahiro (1948 - )
from Kamakura.

This one is for the Shrine Egara Tenjin 荏柄天神社.

鎌倉在住の漫画家二階堂正宏さ んは荏柄天神社の河童塚創設に奔走された一人です。
- source : kikurotakagi

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Kappa from Shimantogawa Shikoku 四万十川カッパ造形大賞



made by 竹岡瑠美
- source : www.kisotengai.jp


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. Japanese Legends - 伝説 民話 昔話 – ABC-List .


.......................................................................................... Fukuoka 福岡県
鞍手郡 Kurate district



In front of 地蔵堂 the Jizo Hall there is a huge rock.
Once a Kappa, who wanted to steal the horse of the Lord, was kicked by it and caught. He had to swear he would not do it again and write this on a piece of paper.
The paper was buried in the ground below this rock.



.......................................................................................... Nagano 長野県

カワランベ Kawaranbe, local name for Kappa
Near the river crossing in Kiso there was a Kappa coming out with a suribachi 擂鉢 mortar on his head.
A bit further downriver was a rock called abura-ishi アブラ石 "fat rock) and many people came here to kill themselves.
When they carved the feature of Jizo Bosatsu in the rock, people stopped coming.



.......................................................................................... Niigata 新潟県
北蒲原郡 Kita-Kanbara district

Villagers were much troubled by a Kappa pulling children into the river.
So they put a stone statue of Jizo near the river bank and prayed to it.
Since then the trouble stopped and people called the stone statue
河童地蔵 Kappa Jizo.



.......................................................................................... Oita 大分県
佐伯市 Saiki city

Once upon a time 金田家 the Kanada family had a Jizo statue in front of their home. This place had been a swamp, where Kappa and ghosts used to come out.
When they put up the Jizo statue and prayed to it, nothing bad happened any more. Jizo would hide the children under his robes if a wicked Kappa showed up.



.......................................................................................... Tottori 鳥取県

If there was a place with a lot of damage by a Kappa, people placed a stone statue of Jizo nearby and prayed to it.
Once a strong Samurai came past and killed the Kappa, later praying to it as Jizo. The statue was soon called
河童地蔵 Kappa Jizo.


.......................................................................................... Yamaguchi 山口県

The Kappa in the river often killed people, so the villagers caught it.
He had to promise not to do any more harm until the bottom of the stone Jizo would rot away.



.......................................................................................... Yamanashi 山梨県
下部町 Shimobe town

wankashibuchi 椀貸淵 "river pool for trays and bowls"
The お地蔵淵 Jizo River Pool is also called 巴淵 Tomoegafuchi.
At the bottom under a rock there lives a Kappa. If the villagers had a meeting with many people they came here to ask for trays and bowls.
Once they forgot to bring them back and Kappa got angry, never lending them any more.

. Zenwanbuchi 膳椀淵 "river pool for trays and bowls" .


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- reference : Nichibun Yokai Database -

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. . . CLICK here for Photos !

- reference -


. Jizo Bosatsu (Kshitigarbha) 地蔵菩薩 .
- Introduction -

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Kappaishi 河童石 Kappa Stone
Nagasaki - Suijin-Sha 水神社 Shrine of the Water Deity



. Kappa ishi 河童石 Kappa stone legends .


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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .

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. hyootan 瓢箪 Hyotan gourd, calabash and Kappa .
. . . . hechima 糸瓜, 蛮瓜,布瓜 sponge gourd

. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .

- #kappajizo #jizokappa #jizobosatsu -
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1/22/2015

Kappa no kizugusuri

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - Legends -
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- Kappa no kusuri カッパの薬 / 河童の薬 Kappa and medicine -

There are various legends in Japan.

Most of them have a similar story about the Kappa trying to pull a horse into the water.

. komahiki 駒引き / 河童駒引 Kappa the “horse puller” .
- horse 駒 koma / 馬 . 午 uma -


. Kappa no myooyaku 河童の妙薬 - Myoyaku special medicine .


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- Kappa no kizugusuri カッパのきず薬 / 河童の傷薬
Kappa makes an ointment for wounds -


Legends from Yamanashi 山梨県の民話

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summary
Once upon a time, in the village of 韮崎の下条 Nirasaki, Gejo there lived a man called 五作 Gosaku and his wife お静 O-Shizu. Gosaku was a horse leader for luggage.

One day at the end of the year, when Gosaku was on his way home from town, he saw a young boy of about 12 years pulling at the tail of his horse. He got angry at this nuisance and took his bamboo stick to hit the boy to let go.



When he reached home he saw something hanging from the tail of his horse, it looked like the arm of a child. Gosaku felt annoyed, but he kept the arm in the entrance of his home over night.

Early in the morning he heard the voice of a boy:
"Hey, dear uncle, please give me back my arm."
But the boy was in fact a kappa that lived in the nearby river 釜無川 Kamanashigawa.
Finally Gosaku felt pity with the boy who apologized in tears and gave him the arm back.



The Kappa was so happy to have his arm back, he taught Gosaku how to make a Kappa miracle medicine 妙薬 to heal wounds and even put a cut-off arm back in place.
This medicine was even more effective when used on humans and was eventually called "The wound ointment from Gejo 下条の傷薬" and people used it from then on for many many many years.
- source : nihon mukashibanashi 甲州の伝説


韮崎市 Nirasaki shi 藤井町 Fujiicho
. Kappa ishi 河童石 Kappa stone legend .

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- quote
カッパのきず薬
Once upon a time
there was a retainer of the lord 武田信玄 Takeda Shingen named 主水頭守清 Mondo no Kami Morikiyo, who was a doctor.

One day Morikiyo was crossing a river on horseback, when his horse suddenly stopped.
When he looked down he saw a long yellowish arm reaching out of the water and grab one leg of his horse. When the creature did not let go after he shouted at it, he took his sword and cut the arm off.
The horse now crossed the river to the other side.

Morikiyo began to wonder about the cut-off arm, climbed down from his horse and looked for the arm. He found it and realized that the yellow-green arm belonged to a kappa.

"That's a special thing! Now I got something special!" and he carried the arm home.



At night after this exciting day when Morikiyo was asleep, someone tried to snoop into his bedroom. Morikiyo woke up, took his sword and threatened the thief.

"Wait,wait, I am the Kappa from this afternoon."
And indeed, a Kappa without one arm was sitting there.
"Please give me back my arm!" the Kappa pledged.

"Why should I? This cut-off arm would be of no help to you any more now."

"Please, if you give me back my arm, I show you how to make the best medicine to heal wounds ever seen in Japan!"
And the Kappa showed him a pair of clams filled with a yellow-green ointment.
"If this cream is so powerful, then use it here and now to put your arm back on!" Morikiyo demanded.

"No problem, let me show you" said the Kappa, spread some medicine on his arm and what do you know - in a second the arm was back in place and not even a scar to be seen.

Then the Kappa told the doctor how to prepare this special medicine and made him remember the process word by word.
Morikiyo the doctor felt very greatfull.



"Let's have a drink together" he invited the Kappa and pulled out a bottle of rice wine.
At this moment, Morikiyo woke up.

"Oh well, it was all just a dream!" He jumped out of bed and looked for the arm of the kappa but could not find it. He ran out to the veranda, but nobody was to be seen, only some hair and the footsteps of the Kappa.
"Oh well, so it was not just a dream!" Morikiyo was confused.

On the next morning, Morikiyo prepared the medicine as the Kappa had taught him and showed it to his lord, Shingen, at the castle.
He put some medicine on the wounded parts of the samurai, who were there in the quarters.
And indeed, the pain subsided soon and the wounds healed in no time.

"Wonderful, so this is really the best wound ointment in Japan" Morikiyo thought happily.
After that, Morikiyo quit his job as retainer of lord Shingen and opened a pharmacy selling his ointment カッパのきず薬.
People from all over Japan with bad wounds came to him to buy the medicine.
Even after the death of Morikiyo the store florished over many generations.

お し ま い - THE END
- source : hukumusume.com


. Takeda Shingen 武田信玄 .

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カッパ伝説のある河口湖
Kappa legends from Lake Kawaguchiko, Yamanashi


Kappa live in the lake and are seen as deities 水神, with great power to heal wounds.
The story here is similar to the above one's, the hero is a strong man called Hachiemon from Nagahama  長浜に八エ門. The Kappa tried to pull him into the lake, but Hachiemon prayed hard and the deity 大嵐の天神様 told him to put his three fingers into the three holes of the plate on top of the Kappa's head 皿には三つの穴が開いて.
The medicine Hachiemon later made was called 河董膏 Kappa Cream, put into a clam shell.




. . . . . and another legend

At the home of the village headman 安太郎 Yasutaro, there seemed to come a thief regularly to steal smoked fish from the pantry. Since the footprints on the veranda were wet and large, they soon knew it was a Kappa. One morning there was a piece of paper near the open hearth, with the detailed instructions how to prepare the Kappa Cream. The cream worked its wonders soon and Yasutaro became rich.
To show his gratitude to the Kappa Yasutaro made the smoked fish a special アブリ魚 souvenir of his village.
- source : www.fujigoko.tv



- cream in a clam shell - Edo-period medicine

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more legends of this kind in Japan

州両毛の創作民話 湯桧曽地区の伝承
河童柳の傷薬
- source : www.albsasa.com


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. Aichi - Kappa healer from Aichi legends 愛知県 .

Akita 秋田県
. chirirenge チリレンゲ spoon to mix medicine .
and others

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. - Tetsugi Jinja 手接神社 - Ibaraki .


Ibaraki
真木家「岩瀬万能膏」(茨城)
上岩瀬の医者真木了本が牛久沼の河童から伝授された膏薬で、代々真木家の夫人にだけ伝えられた。昭和初期まで一般家庭の常備薬として重宝がられた。
成分:鉛丹、胡麻油、没薬、乳香
効能:化膿せるきりきず、はれものなど。

Niigata
「アイス薬」(新潟)
糸魚川の西海に伝わる河童の妙薬は、打撲傷に良く効く“アイス”という薬で、あさしらげ(ハコベ)、にはとこ(クサニハトコ)、ろくたびなどでつくると伝えられている。クサニハトコは、生薬名を接骨木といい、糸魚川市羽生では伝説の草として大切に育てられている。


Tokushima
賀島家「河童の傷薬」(徳島)
賀島友井が桑野川(琴江川)の多門が淵の河童から秘伝を授けられたといういいつたえが残っている。幕政時代の傷薬として、さかんに利用され重宝がられたという。
効能:とげ抜き、血圧降下、便秘、胃腸病など

- source : kizakura

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Miyazaki 宮崎県
. Hyoosunbo ひょうすんぼ Hyosunbo .
and the 正一家 Masakazu family

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- quote -
BONE SETTING SKILLS, MEDICAL SKILLS
Kappa are mostly evil, but not always. When benevolent, the Kappa is supposedly a skilled teacher in the art of bone setting and other medical skills. In the real world of medicine, the term “kappa” refers to a monoclonal plasma cell related to bone marrow. In addition, the Kappa is always portrayed as trustworthy despite its many evil ways. When captured and forced to promise never again to harm anyone, the kappa always keeps its promise.
Kappa often help or mentor those who outwit them or capture them.
- source : Mark Schumacher

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. Michael Dylan Foster .
“The kappa is notorious for attempting to lure horses and cows to a watery death; but the key word here is attempting. In most versions of this legend, the kappa fails; its plan backfires and it (or just its arm) is pulled by the startled horse all the way to the stable. The kappa's success rate in fondling women's shiri in the toilet may be slightly higher, but often on its second attempt its arm is grabbed and yanked from the body. And when its mischief goes awry, when it is weakened from losing water from its sara or incapacitated (emasculated) by a yanked-off arm, the honest and benevolent side of the kappa's nature surfaces.
In order to be set free or receive back its arm (the arm can often be reattached within a certain number of days), the kappa will take an oath. It will pledge, for instance, to stop harassing people in the area, or to assist with work in the fields, or to teach its captor secret bone setting techniques and formulas for making medicine and salves.
It should be noted that this last trait - the kappa's familiarity with bone setting and other medical procedures - is one of the most widespread of the beliefs associated with the kappa).”



. Chinese Medicine (kanpo), medicine (kusuri) 漢方薬 .
- Introduction -

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Kappa legends about medicine form the prefectures
(from nichibun sources)
- source : www.moon.zaq.jp
tba

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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .

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. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .

- #kappamedicine #kappakusuri #kusuri #medicine -
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kokeshi wooden dolls

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - dolls -
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- kokeshi 河童こけし wooden dolls with Kappa -

Many people believe that early kokeshi were representations of girl children that were aborted or put to death after childbirth due to the inability to support a poor family of greater size.
Even the word, ko-keshi (ko o kesu 子を消す), can be loosely translated as "extinguished child" or “a child wiped out”.

It may be that kokeshi were kept as reminders of a dead child's plaything. Kokeshi are also given as charms to childless women in an effort to get pregnant. Kokeshi were kept in the family and passed down from generation to generation.

. kokeshi, こけし / 小芥子 / 子消し wooden doll .
- Introduction -
kinakina きなきな (Iwate)
kibokko 木ぼっこ / 木ぼこ kiboko
- - - - - (oboko おぼこ, an name for small children in Tohoku)



Medochi メドチ, めどち - a kind of mizuchi
The medochi use human females to have them bear their children. When the child is born, the Medochi comes to claim his child. If the woman throws the baby into the water to kill it, Medochi takes the bones with him.

. - Mizuchi 蛟 - water monster .


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There are many different types of Kappa Kokeshi.

Some are souvenirs from hot springs or from the three famous Kappa regions of Tono, Chiba and Kyushu.


CLICK for more samples !

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酒樽をかつぐ河童こけし carrying sake flasks



はっぴに書かれた a pair wearing a happi coat


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Kappa and Tanuki 河童と狸



- ebay -


. Kappa with other animals - Tanuki .


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source : facebook

Kappa with a walnut head - enjoying some noodles


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source : 河童博物館
黒い夫婦河童 Black couple of Kappa, about 8 cm high


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a Kappa group - shared in the Kokeshi Gallery, Facebook

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source : こけし天国

Two Kappa in a kyusu tea pot お茶の急須に入ったかっぱたち.



Turned to the side it looks like a Kappa couple taking a soak in a hot spring.

. kyuusu 急須 Kyusu tea pot and Daruma .

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- source : ebay -
- CLICK for more Kappa Kokeshi !

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. Hyosunbo Kappa Kokeshi ひょうすんぼ - Miyazaki .


. - female Kappa 女河童 onna Kappa kokeshi .


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source : zenmaitarow




. . . CLICK here for Photos !

- reference -




. . kokeshi こけし wooden dolls . .
- Introduction -

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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .


. MORE - kokeshi in our facebook group .   


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. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .

- #kappakokeshi #kokeshikappa -
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1/21/2015

mummy miira

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - types -
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- mummy - miira 河童のミイラ mummy of a Kappa, Mumie -



From the Matsuuraichi Sake brewery in Saga, Kyushu 佐賀県- 松浦一酒造
312 Yamashirocho Kusuku, Imari, Saga Prefecture 849-4251

「河童の酒蔵」Matsuura Ichi - The Kappa sake brewery
According to a company brochure, the mummified kappa was discovered inside a wooden box that carpenters found hidden in the ceiling when replacing the roof over 50 years.
Reckoning the creature was an old curiosity their ancestors had passed down for generations, the company owners built a small altar and enshrined the kappa mummy as a river god.



- source : matsuuraichi.com

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- quote -
Monster mummies of Japan
Zengyōji (善行寺) temple in the city of Kanazawa (Ishikawa prefecture) is home to the mummified head of a three-faced demon. Legend has it that a resident priest discovered the mummy in a temple storage chamber in the early 18th century. Imagine his surprise.
Nobody knows where the demon head came from, nor how or why it ended up in storage.

The mummified head has two overlapping faces up front, with another one (resembling that of a kappa) situated in back. The temple puts the head on public display each year around the spring equinox.

- Kappa mummies
Like the mermaid mummies, many kappa (river imp) mummies are thought to have been crafted by Edo-period artists using parts of animals ranging from monkeys and owls to stingrays.
- photo - Kappa mummy at the National Museum of Ethnology, Leiden (Netherlands)
This mummified kappa, which now resides in a Dutch museum, appears to consist of various animal parts put together in a seamless whole. It is believed to have been created for the purpose of carnival entertainment in the Edo period.

Another mummified kappa can be found at Zuiryūji temple in Osaka. The 70-centimeter long humanoid purportedly dates back to 1682.
- photo -
source : pinktentacle.com





Kappa – Mummies and Movies - Total-Japandemonium -

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. Kitano Tenmangu - Fukuoka 福岡県の北野天満宮 .
has a mummy of the arm / hand of a Kappa
- kahaku no te 河伯の手 / kappa no te 河童の手


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atama 河童の頭 - 明石市立文化博物館
The sara plate can be take off. The mouth is always closed.


Ibaraki
河童の手 旧満蔵寺 茨城 - Hand of Kappa
霞ヶ関に棲息していた河童の手と伝えられる。手の甲には緻密な毛が密集し、水掻きがある。

Kumamoto
河童の手 志岐八幡宮 熊本 - Hand of Kappa
天草の志岐八幡宮。伝わる河童の手には水掻きがある。悪さをして村人を困らせていた河童をこらしめるために、両手を切り落としたが、懇願するので左手は返したと伝えられている。

Nagasaki
河童の手 温泉山一乗院 長崎 - Hand of Kappa
雲仙は昔、温泉(うんぜん)と書いた。温泉山は行基によって大宝元年(701)に開山されたのが始まり。伝説の僧赤峰法印が諏訪の池に棲む悪い河童と戦う事になり、どちらも死力をつくして争った。山へ逃げた法印を追ってきた河童が、湧きのぼる地獄の熱気で頭の皿の水分がなくなり、ばったり倒れたその時、もぎ取った手だと伝え

Tokyo
河童の手 曹源寺 東京 - Hand of Kappa
天明年間(1786年頃)この付近は大雨毎に一帯が洪水となったため、合羽商を営む合羽屋喜八が、私財を投じて水はけ工事を行った。喜八の義挙に感動した隅田川の河童が、工事を手伝ったという言い伝えが残っている。河童の手は、鋭い爪と水掻きがあり、箱書きには「水虎の手」と記されている。


and
- - - - - さいたま川の博物館 Saitamagawa Museum

蓋の表には「永嶽山水天之神身云」、箱身の底には「川太郎之右之手此ヲ所持スル人愛敬多呪力ヲ得ル」と記されている。


河童の手 個人蔵 熊本 - Hand of Kappa
親指と人差し指が欠けているが左手で、水掻きがある。切り傷や打撲などの薬材として、村民に請われるままに削って与えた。
指一本。甲は灰色の毛、掌は指紋が見られる

- source : kizakura

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Pink Tentacle about the Kappa - Monsters & Magic in Japan
Kappa, arguably Japan's most well-known creature of legend, are mischievous river imps notorious for luring people -- particularly children -- into the water to drown and eat them. They smell like fish, enjoy cucumbers and sumo, and are said to be very courteous despite their malicious tendencies.

Although kappa are typically about the size of a child and greenish in color, they can vary widely in appearance. They frequently have a turtle-like shell and scaly skin, but sometimes their skin is moist and slick, or coated in fur. Most walk upright on their hind legs, but they are occasionally seen on all fours. Regardless of body type, the top of the kappa's head usually features a bowl-shaped depression containing water. The water inside this bowl is the source of the kappa's power.

The Edo period (1603 to 1867) saw some serious scientific literature devoted to the study of these creatures. Suikokouryaku (1820), for example, is a compendium of kappa-related information gathered from a variety of sources from Japan and China. The book, which is housed in the Iwase Bunko Library, includes kappa sketches by artist Kurimoto Tanshu. Here are a few.
- photo -
The kappa on the left, sketched by Ito Chobei, was captured during the Meiwa period (1764 to 1772) in Edo, somewhere in present-day Tokyo's Edogawa ward. When the creature was shown to Ota Chogen, a noted herbalist of the time, he identified it as a kappa -- he happened to have a kappa sketch with him that showed a creature with strikingly similar features. According to the text in the book, this kappa measured 60 cm (2 ft) tall and had slippery skin like that of a catfish.

The middle picture above shows a type of kappa with no shell, and the picture on the right shows a kappa that was caught in a net in Mito, Japan in 1801. This kappa had a prominent chest, a crooked back and three anuses.
- photo -
Later in the Edo period, an illustrated guide to 12 types of kappa (Suiko juni-hin no zu) was produced based on information taken from Suikokouryaku. A portion of this document is shown above. Check out the complete, high-resolution version here.
- photo -
Ito Keisuke, a well-known man of medicine and prolific natural history artist in the Edo period, sometimes included depictions of mysterious creatures with his animal drawings -- like the kappa on the left above, for example. The middle picture shows a kappa that was observed in one of the moats around Edo castle in the late 18th century. The picture on the right shows a kappa observed in the early 17th century in what is now the city of Hita in Oita prefecture (Kyushu). This kappa looked sort of like a turtle standing on its hind legs, and it had a depression on its head, webbed fingers, and splotches on its chest and abdomen.
- photo -
The neneko (or neko) kappa, shown on the left above, was sketched by Akamatsu Sotan in his 1855 work entitled Tonegawa zushi ("Illustrated History of the Tone River"). This kappa was known to move to a new location along the river each year, causing trouble wherever it went.

The image on the right shows a kappa scroll and kappa hand belonging to Sougenji (Sogen-Ji, a.k.a. Kappa-dera, or "kappa temple") located in the Ueno-Asakusa area of Tokyo. The temple is one of countless places in Japan that has stories and legends of kappa associated with it. According to this temple's legend, the surrounding area was once a basin with poor drainage, making it prone to flooding. A local raincoat maker (the Japanese word for "raincoat" is "kappa") took it upon himself to construct a series of drainage ditches, which he was able to complete with the help of a kappa living in the Sumida River. It is said that people fortunate enough to lay eyes on this kappa were blessed with success in business.
source : Edo-period kappa sketches


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. . . CLICK here for Photos !

- reference -


. Sokushinbutsu, the Living Mummies of Japan .
- Miira 即身仏のミイラ - Introduction -

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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .

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. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .

- #kappamummy #kappamiira -
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1/20/2015

motorbike, car . . .

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - goods -
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- modern maschines and the Kappa -


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motorbike - inspiration at the Motor Show モーターショウ



It needs cucumbers to run properly, not gasoline.

- source : blue-bee.blog


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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .

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. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .


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horse uma

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- KAPPA - 河童 / かっぱ / カッパ - animals -
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- horse 駒 koma / 馬 . 午 uma -

komahiki 駒引き / 河童駒引 Kappa the “horse puller”

【河童駒引き(かっぱこまひき)】Kappa Komahiki 《「日本昔話事典」稲田浩ニ他》
【民俗学=河童駒引(かっぱこまひき)】Kappa Komahiki 《「柳田國男全集=山島民譚集」柳田國男》
【民俗学=河童駒引考】 石田英一郎著 副題「比較民族学的研究」  



saru hiki koma 猿曳駒 monkey (kappa) leading a horse
which is in fact a kappa leading the horse in the Tono Monogatari
from Tono Hayachine Jinja 遠野早池峰神社
- source : dostoev.exblog.jp


- quote
Monkey “Protector of the Horse”
Another striking overlap between Monkey and Kappa lore is the horse.
In Chinese tradition, the monkey is often shown riding the horse. This symbolism too stems from the classic Chinese story Journey to the West (Saiyuki), in which the Jade Emperor appoints the Monkey to the post of “Protector of Horses.”
The horse also appears quite regularly in Kappa mythology. Dozens of stories tell of the Kappa trying to drag a horse into the river, failing, then getting caught by the horse’s owner, and forced to promise to never again harm the horses of the village. In this roundabout fashion, might we not call the Kappa a “guardian deity” of the horse?
... here also discusses the serial stories called Kappa Heaven, which ran from Showa 28 to Showa 33 in the weekly Asahi Shukan. 実はそれ「清水崑 (Shimizu Kon ) manga aratist, wrote about the Kappa 漫画家が書いた「かっぱ天国
(昭和28年~33年まで『週刊朝日』にて連載)」の河童なんです。
See Ishida Eiichiro’s “The Kappa Legend” for details on the Kappa’s strong link to horses.
- source : Mark Schumacher


- quote
. . . The Kappa’s peculiar behavior of dragging horses into the water is also observed in northwestern European folklore, particularly Finland. In Finnish folklore, the horse-shaped water spirit Näkki resides in rivers and lakes, enticing children and horses to their watery deaths with its shape-shifting capabilities.
“It may also assume the appearance of a tree that has fallen into the water, and as soon as someone climbs on it, it disappears under water, carrying the person with it” (Ishida and Yoshida 1950, 29).
. . . In Greek mythology, the god of the sea,Poseidon, was also credited with fathering the first and many other extraordinary horses. In order to breed divine stallions, pasturing land was often placed near water, thus illuminating the Kappa’s penchant for drowning horses.
- source : Ken Lim


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- quote
Bon sugi medochi dan 盆過ぎメドチ談
After the Bon Festivities: Tales of Medochi [Kappa]

Yanagita Kunio 柳田 国男

"In this reason, such instances as the kappa festival in Tosa when horses are tethered to stakes by the waterside may probably be considered as a sort of an old-age pension paid to the mixuchi (mizushi), and such place-names as
Senzoku-no-ike (” Feet-washing pond “) and
Uma-arai-buchi (” Horse-washing pool “), as well as the name
Koma-tsunagi-no matsu (”Horse-tethering pine “),
- - - 洗足の池 /馬荒い淵 / 駒繋ぎの松 - - -

given to certain pine trees in all parts of our country and the reason for which has so far remained unknown, are most likely the relics of yearly rites held in ancient times at which horses were offered to the water-god, and which in course of time came to be regarded by the agricultural population simply as a means of safeguarding their horses from evil throughout the year, the origin of the practice becoming completely forgotten. The custom, however, of offering the heads of oxen and horses to the water-god to pray for rain was long preserved.”

. Medochi メドチ, めどち Medochi Kappa variations .

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- Legends -

. - Kappa no kizugusuri カッパのきず薬 / 河童の傷薬
Kappa makes an ointment for wounds - .


. . . One day Morikiyo was crossing a river on horseback, when his horse suddenly stopped.
When he looked down he saw a long yellowish arm reaching out of the water and grab one leg of his horse. When the creature did not let go after he shouted at it, he took his sword and cut the arm off. . . .


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koke 苔 moss

If horses eat a bit from the moss growing on the grave of Lord Ozumi 大積隆鎮 of Fukushima, a Kappa will not be able to pull them into water.
. Kappa legends from Fukushima .


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. . . CLICK here for Photos - 河童駒引 !

- reference -


. WKD - Horse, Pony (uma 馬, ポニー) .
- Introduction -

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. - - - Join my Kappa friends on facebook ! - - - .

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. Kappa densetsu 河童伝説, Kappa minwa 河童民話 - Legends - Introduction .

. Mingei 民芸 Regional Folk Art from Japan .

- #kappahorse #horse-
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