Founding Territorial Cults in Early Japan
Traces of a Forgotten Ritual in Ancient Myths and Legends
Author(s)
Domenig, G.
Collection
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)Language
EnglishAbstract
The first book that deals with the territorial cults of early Japan by focusing on how such cults were founded in ownerless regions. Numerous ancient Japanese myths and legends are discussed to show that the typical founding ritual was a two-phase ritual that turned the territory into a horizontal microcosm, complete with its own ‘terrestrial heaven’ inhabited by local deities. Reversing Mircea Eliade’s popular thesis, the author concludes that the concept of the human-made horizontal microcosm is not a reflection but the source of the religious concept of the macrocosm with gods dwelling high up in the sky.
Keywords
Ancient Japan; charter myths; comparative studies; creation myths; divination; foundation rituals; founder worship; Fudoki; Kojiki; land-claiming; Landnámabók; Nihon shoki; sacred groves; settlement geography; Shinto; spatial anthropologyDOI
10.1163/9789004686458ISBN
9789004686458, 9789004685819, 9789004686458Publisher
BrillPublisher website
https://brill.com/Publication date and place
2023Classification
Asian history
Shintoism
Anthropology
Japan