Japanese creation myth

In Japanese mythology, the Japanese creation myth (天地開闢, Tenchikaibyaku lit. "creation of heaven and earth"?), is the story that describes the legendary birth of the celestial and earthly world, the birth of the first gods and the birth of the Japanese archipelago.

This story is described first hand at the beginning of the Kojiki, the first book written in Japan (712), and in the Nihon Shoki (720). Both form the literary basis of Japanese mythology and Shinto. However the story differs in some aspects between these works with the most accepted for the Japanese being the one of the Kojiki.

Contents

Story

At the beginning the universe was immersed in a beaten and shapeless kind of matter, sunk in silence. Later there were sounds indicating the movement of particles. With this movement, the light and the lightest particles rose but the particles were not as fast as the light and could not go higher. Thus, the light was at the top of the Universe, and below it, the particles formed first the clouds and then Heaven, which was to be called Takamagahara (高天原?, "High Plain of Heaven"). The rest of the particles that had not risen formed a huge mass, dense and dark, to be called Earth.[1]

When Takamagahara was formed, the first three gods of Japanese mythology appeared:[2]

Subsequently two gods emerged in Takamagahara from an object similar to a reed-shoot:[2]

These five deities are known as Kotoamatsukami appeared spontaneously, did not have a definite sex, did not have a partner (hitorigami) and went into hiding after their emergence. These gods are not mentioned in the rest of the mythology.[2]

Kamiyonanayo

Subsequently two other gods arose:[3]

These gods also emerged spontaneously, did not have a defined sex and nor partner and hid at birth.[3]

Then, five pairs of gods were born (total of ten deities), each pair consisting of a male deity and a female deity:[3]

All deities from Kuni-no-koto-tachi to Izanami, are collectively called as Kamiyonanayo (神世七代?, "Seven Divine Generations").[3]

Following the creation of Heaven and Earth and the appearance of these primordial gods, Izanagi and Izanami went on to create the Japanese archipelago (Kuniumi) and gave birth to a large number of gods (Kamiumi).[4]

References

This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the Spanish Wikipedia.
  1. ^ Chamberlain 2008, pp. 67–70
  2. ^ a b c Chamberlain 2008, p. 71
  3. ^ a b c d Chamberlain 2008, p. 72
  4. ^ Chamberlain 2008, pp. 73–86

Bibliography