Showing posts with label fate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fate. Show all posts

Monday, August 16, 2021

Japanese Legends: Ibaraki doji ...Oni Woman..

 

 

 

 

Art link https://www.wallpaperflare.com/ibaraki-douji-fate-grand-order-fate-series-women-blonde-wallpaper-zblow

 

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 Ibaraki Doji is also know as the “thorn tree child”

She  is one of the most well known as well as one of the most feared demons in Japanese folklore.

She was the chief deputy to Shuten doji, the Oni King. Not very much is known about Ibaraki doji’s
life; Most stories depict Ibaraki doji as a kijo, or a female oni; yet there are other stories which refer to Shuten doji’s  deputy as a male so its really anybodys gyuess at this point(Im going to go with the female version of the story). 



Ibaraki doji was a cruel and   terrifying monster, bent of wreaking as much havoc in the human world as she could.
 


Some visions claim she was not only Shuten Dojis second in command but also his lover


Ibaraki doji’s most famous story takes place at Rashomon, the southern gate of old Kyotos city walls. Rashomon was built in 789, but after  the Heian period it fell into serious disrepair and became known as an unsavory place. It was overgrown and unkempt. Thieves and bandits hung out near it.


 It even served as a dumping point for unwanted babies, and a spot to dispose of murder victims. But the scariest part of its haunted reputation was the
 

                                                         Rashomon Gate replica

 

legend of Rashomon no oni — the demon of Rashomon.


 

After his celebrated victory over Shuten doji, the hero Minamoto no Yorimitsu returned triumphant to Kyoto. He was celebrating at his home with his  deputies — Sakata no Kintoki, Urabe no Suetake, Usui Sadamitsu, and Watanabe no Tsuna — when Fujiwara no Yasumasa, a noble, informed them that an oni was seen haunting Rashomon gate. Watanabe no Tsuna, having just returned from a great battle with Shuten doji’s clan, could not believe that there were any oni left, and single-handedly went out to investigate. He mounted his horse and went south.

                                           Watanabe Tsuna fighting the demon  at the Rashomon



When Tsuna arrived at the gate, a great howling wind broke out and his horse could travel no further. He dismounted and went on foot. Approaching the gate in the fierce gale, he noticed an enormous hand suddenly reach out of the dark to grab his helmet. Tsuna wasted no time, and swung his great katana around, severing the arm of an enormous demon: it was Ibaraki doji, coming to avenge the murder of Shuten doji. 

The injured demon ran away, leaving her arm behind, and Rashomon was no longer haunted.

Ibaraki doji later returned to Rashomon, looking for her arm. 




She disguised herself as Watanabe no Tsuna’s wetnurse, and was able to steal back her severed arm and escape, After that, her whereabouts were unknown. though for many years after, occasionally in some town or another, villagers would claim that they had seen Ibaraki doji from time to time

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Rashomon Gate was destroyed in the mid 1900's 


 

There is now a monument in its place too commemorate it...



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More Oni post's coming soon



Saturday, August 7, 2021

Oni Myths, Shuten Doji the King of Oni.

 

 



Shuten Doji  was also called the “little drunkard”

He is considered among the most fearsome and evil yokai in all of Japanese folklore even among other Oni. 


However unlike most yokai, Shuten dōji was not born an oni. 

There are many stories about how he came to be, but most of them claim that he was originally a human boy who was born over a thousand years ago either in present-day Shiga or Toyama. 

His mother was a human woman and his father was the great dragon Yamata-no-Orochi. How he changed from boy to demon varies greatly from story to story, but the one popular version goes like this: There was a young boy who was supernaturally strong and abnormally intelligent for his age. 

Everyone around him constantly called him a demon child due to his incredible strength and wit, and he gradually became terribly anti-social and resentful of others. At age six, even his own mother abandoned him. Orphaned, he became an apprentice priest at Mt. Hiei in Kyoto. 

Naturally, he was the strongest and smartest of the young acolytes, and he grew resentful of them as well. He slacked off on his studies as a result and got into fights. He also fell into drinking, which was forbidden to monks; however he could out-drink anyone and everyone who was willing to sit down and drink against him. Because of his fondness for alcohol, he became known as Shuten dōji, “the little drunkard.”

One night there was a festival at the temple, and Shuten dōji showed up very drunk. He put on an oni mask and went around playing pranks on his fellow priests, jumping out from the darkness to scare them and such. At the end of the night, he tried to take off his mask but found he couldn’t — to his horror, it had fused to his body! Ashamed, scared, and scolded by his masters for being drunk, he fled into the mountains where he would no longer have to interact with other humans, whom he saw as weak, foolish, and hypocritical. He lived there on the outskirts of Kyoto for many years, stealing food and alcohol from villagers, and drinking vast quantities of alcohol. His banditry eventually attracted groups of thieves and criminals, who stuck with him loyally and became the foundation for his gang.

 

 


Living in exile, Shuten dōji grew in power and knowledge. He mastered strange, dark magic, and taught it to his thugs. He met another demon child like him, named Ibaraki dōji, who became his chief servant. Over time, the young man and his gang gradually transformed into oni, and eventually he had a whole clan of oni and yokai thugs who prowled the highways, terrorizing the people of Kyoto in a drunken rage. He and his gang eventually settled on Mount Ōe, where, in a dark castle, he plotted to conquer the capital and rule as emperor.

Shuten dōji and his gang rampaged through Kyoto, capturing noble virgins, drinking their blood and eating their organs raw. Finally, a band of heroes led by the legendary warrior Minamoto no Yorimitsu assaulted Shuten dōji’s palace, and with the help of some magical poison, were able to assault the oni band during a bout of heavy drinking. They cut off the drunken Shuten dōji’s head, but even after cutting it off, the head continued to bite at Minamoto no Yorimitsu.

Because the head belonged to an oni and was unholy, it was buried it outside of the city limits, at a mountain pass called Oinosaka. The cup and bottle of poison that Minamoto no Yorimitsu used are said to be kept at Nariai-ji temple in Kyoto.

 


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Modern Imagery

 

Shuten Doji From The Fate series

 

                                          https://www.artstation.com/artwork/GXPGqa

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                                           https://www.zerochan.net/3245251

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Saturday, February 13, 2021

Mythology: Aphrodite the Goddess of love.

 


 Febuary is the month of love and who better embody s that notion then the
goddess of love herself, i'm referring of course to Aphrodite.

Aphrodite is a greek goddess of love know for her stunning beauty.

though she also played a large part in the trojan war and was notorious for
her many sorted affairs.


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She is a goddess of love, beauty, pleasure, passion and procreation. Her symbols are roses, myrtles, doves, sparrows, and swans.......


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She has an odd origin story ..

Aphrodite was born from  the  god Uranus severed genitalia that had been
thrown into the sea near Cyprus.

 



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When Cronos castrated his father Uranus (Ouranos) with a sickle and threw
the genitalia into the sea, soon after Aphrodite appeared amidst the resulting sea foam.
 




In another versions, shes the daughter of Zeus and Dione, the Titaness.

Hesiod recounts the first version and Homer the second,  though the ancient Greeks had differing opinions on the two versions of her origin, some preferring the first and others the second.

With her birth near Cyprus, Aphrodite was especially worshiped in Paphos on the island -

Greece and the Near East had extensive cultural exchange prior to the 8th-century BCE Archaic Period,
during  the 5th-century  BCE Greek historian Herodotus states that the most ancient cult site to Aphrodite was at Ascalon in Syria.

This hints at her eastern origins as a fertility goddess and possible evolution from the Phoenician goddess  Astarte or the Near Eastern Inanna (Ishtar). It is also possible that the goddess derived from an entirely local  Cypriot deity.

The strong association with the island is evidenced in her common name,
Cypris, meaning ‘of Cyprus’.


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The cult of Aphrodite was believed to be largely derived from  or at least heavenly influenced by  the Phoenician goddess Astarte, or  goddess Ishtar, whose cult was based on the Sumerian cult of Inanna.
 

                                               ......Rin as Ishtar from the Fate Series...
                                                            ---------Ishtar Statue----------

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Aphrodite's main cult centers were Cythera, Cyprus, Corinth, and Athens.

Her main festival was the Aphrodisia, which was celebrated annually during the midsummer.
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In Laconia, Aphrodite was worshiped as a warrior goddess.

The goddess of love was also the patron goddess of prostitutes, this  association led early scholars to propose the concept of  "sacred prostitution" in Greco-Roman culture, an idea which is now generally seen as erroneous.


Aphrodite's main festival, the Aphrodisia, was celebrated all across Greece, but especially in Athens and Corinth. 


In Athens, the Aphrodisia was celebrated on the fourth day of the month of Hekatombaion in honor of Aphrodite's role in the unification of Attica.
 

 


 During this festival, the priests of Aphrodite would purify the temple of Aphrodite Pandemos on the southwestern slope of the Acropolis  with the blood of a sacrificed dove. Next, the altars would be anointed and the cult statues of Aphrodite Pandemos and Peitho would be escorted in a majestic procession to a place where they would be ritually bathed. Aphrodite was also honored in Athens as part of the Arrhephoria festival.
 

 


The fourth day of every month was sacred to Aphrodite.

Pausanias records state that  in Sparta, Aphrodite was worshiped as Aphrodite Areia, which means "warlike".



This name is derived from her connection to Ares the god of war.



Pausanias also records that, in Sparta  and on Cythera, a number of extremely ancient cult statues of Aphrodite portrayed her bearing arms. well Other cult statues showed her bound in chains. 



Aphrodite was the patron goddess of prostitutes of all kinds,  ranging from pornai (cheap street prostitutes typically owned as slaves by wealthy pimps)  to hetairai (expensive, well-educated hired companions, who were usually self-employed and sometimes provided sex to their customers).
 






The city of Corinth was renowned throughout the ancient world for its many hetairai, who had a widespread reputation for being among the most skilled, as well as the most expensive  prostitutes in the Greek world.  Corinth also had a major temple to Aphrodite located on the Acrocorinth and was one of the main centers of her cult.

Records of numerous dedications to Aphrodite made by successful courtesans have survived in poems and  pottery inscriptions to this day.
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In Greek mythology, Aphrodite was married to Hephaestus, the god of fire, blacksmiths and metalworking.



Being the goddess of love, she had many partners as such she was a somewhat unfaithful wife, prone to several affairs with other gods and even mortals.


A few of her Olympian trysts include, Ares, Hermes, and Dionysos.

In the Iliad, Aphrodite is the unmarried consort of Ares, the god of war,  and the wife of Hephaestus is a different goddess named Charis.

in Hesiod's Theogony, Aphrodite is unmarried and the wife of Hephaestus is Aglaea, the youngest of the three Charites.

but

In Book Eight of the Odyssey, the blind singer Demodocus describes Aphrodite as the wife of Hephaestus and tells how she committed adultery with  Ares during the Trojan War.


Hephaistos, was a crafty god and a master engineer, he built a special golden bed to catch his wife in the act.

One day when Aphrodite and Ares were in the middle of their most resent hook up, the bed sprang forth a golden net which locked the naked god's in  their illicit embrace. Afterwards Helios the sun god shone down his bright light  on the couple so that all of  Olympus could get a good look  at their disgrace and embarrassment. they where eventually freed, Ares later fled to Thrace and Aphrodite back to Cyprus.  

Other stories came about in later years to explain Aphrodite's marriage to Hephaestus.
In the most famous story, Zeus hastily married Aphrodite to Hephaestus in order to prevent the other gods from fighting over her.
 


In another version of the tale, Hephaestus gave his mother Hera a golden throne, but when she sat on it, she became trapped and he refused  to let her go until she agreed to give him Aphrodite's hand in marriage.



The Trojan War...

In Homer’s description of the Trojan War in the Iliad, Aphrodite is described as ‘golden’ and ‘smiling’ and supports the Trojans in the war.
 

 

-----------------------------------------Helen of Troy------------------------------------

==========================The Trojan Horse==================

During a few  notable events during the Trojan war Aphrodite protects her son Aeneas from Diomedes and saves the hapless Paris from the wrath of Menelaos.





Aphrodite is cited as partly responsible for the Trojan War. At the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, Eris (goddess of strife) offered a golden apple for the most beautiful goddess.

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                                                    -----------The Judgment of Paris-----------
The myth of the Judgement of Paris was only briefly mentioned in the Iliad, but is described in length in an epitome of the Cypria, a lost poem of the  Epic Cycle,  which records that all the gods and goddesses as well as various mortals were invited to the marriage of Peleus and Thetis (the eventual
parents of Achilles).  

All except Eris, the goddess of discord, she was not invited. maybe her invitation was just lost in the mail lol.... 





Eris was angered by this insult, so she crashed the wedding bringing with her a golden apple inscribed with the word(kallistei, "for the fairest"),  which she threw among the goddesses.





Aphrodite, Hera, and Athena all claimed to be the fairest, and thus the rightful owner of the apple.

The goddesses chose to place the matter before Zeus, who, not wanting to favor one of the goddesses over the other, put the choice into  the hands of Paris, a Trojan prince. After bathing in the spring of Mount Ida where Troy was situated, the goddesses appeared before  Paris for his decision.

In some versions of the Judgement of Paris, Aphrodite is depicted fully nude, in others she is not, and Athena and Hera are always fully clothed.

However since the Renaissance, Western paintings have typically portrayed all three goddesses as completely naked.


All three goddesses were the personification of beauty and Paris could not decide between them, so they resorted to bribes.

Hera tried to bribe Paris with power over all Asia and Europe,  and Athena offered wisdom, fame and glory in battle, but Aphrodite promised Paris that,  if he were to choose her as the fairest, she would let him marry the most beautiful mortal woman on earth.  

This woman was Helen, who unfortunately for Paris was already married to King Menelaus of Sparta.

Paris selected Aphrodite and awarded her the golden apple.

The other two goddesses were enraged and, as a direct result, sided with the Greeks in the Trojan War.


Aphrodite plays an important and active role throughout the entirety of Homer's Iliad. In Book III, she rescues Paris from Menelaus after he foolishly challenges him to a one-on-one duel. She then appears to Helen in the form of an old woman and attempts to persuade her to have sex with Paris, reminding her of his physical beauty and athletic prowess.

Helen immediately recognizes Aphrodite by her beautiful neck, perfect breasts, and flashing eyes
and chides the goddess, addressing her as her equal.  Aphrodite sharply rebukes Helen, reminding her that, if helen angers her, she will punish her just as much as she has favored her already.

Helen demurely obeys Aphrodite's command.

In Book V, Aphrodite charges into battle to rescue her son Aeneas from the Greek hero Diomedes.
Diomedes recognizes Aphrodite as a "weakling" goddess  and, thrusting his spear, nicks her wrist through her "ambrosial robe".Aphrodite borrows Ares's chariot to ride back to Mount Olympus.
Zeus chides her for putting herself in danger, reminding her that "her specialty is love, not war."

According to Walter Burkert, this scene directly parallels a scene from Tablet VI of the Epic of Gilgamesh in which Ishtar, Aphrodite's Akkadian precursor, cries to her mother Antu after the hero Gilgamesh rejects her sexual advances, but is mildly rebuked by her father Anu.
 


In Book XIV of the Iliad, during the Dios Apate episode, Aphrodite lends her kestos himas to Hera for the purpose of seducing Zeus and distracting him from the combat while Poseidon aids the Greek forces on the beach.

In the Theomachia in Book XXI, Aphrodite again enters the battlefield to carry Ares away after he is wounded.

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                                                 Image result for aphrodite dove pottery
In addition to her associations with doves, Aphrodite was also closely linked with sparrows  and she is described riding in a chariot pulled by sparrows in Sappho's "Ode to Aphrodite".
 
In ancient Greek pottery Aphrodite was frequently seen appearing with doves and the temple of Aphrodite Pandemos on the southwest slope of the Athenian Acropolis was also decorated with relief sculptures of doves with knotted fillets in their beaks. Votive offerings of small, white,  marble doves were also discovered in the temple of Aphrodite at Daphni.


                                                    Image result for aphrodite dove pottery
and

Because of her connections to the sea, Aphrodite was often associated with different types of water fowl, including swans, geese, and ducks.

Aphrodite's other symbols included the sea, conch shells, and roses.

The rose and myrtle flowers were both sacred to Aphrodite.

Her most important fruit emblem was the apple,  but she was also associated with pomegranates, possibly because the red seeds suggested sexuality or because Greek women sometimes used pomegranates as a method of birth control.

In Greek art, Aphrodite is often also accompanied by dolphins and Nereids.


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==Sappho's "Ode to Aphrodite===
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Rich-throned immortal Aphrodite,
scheming daughter of Zeus, I pray you,
with pain and sickness, Queen, crush not my heart,
but come, if ever in the past you heard my voice from afar and hearkened,
and left your father's halls and came, with gold
chariot yoked; and pretty sparrows
brought you swiftly across the dark earth
fluttering wings from heaven through the air.

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Ok thats all for now, hope you all have a fun Valentines Day!

Next post will be up in a week or so.