Japan EARLY DEVELOPMENTS
Unavailable
Ancient ornaments, including several magatama,
or "curved jewels"
Courtesy The Mainichi Newspapers
Haniwa ship excavated at Osaka in 1988
Courtesy Asahi Shimbun
Mythological Origins
The literature of Shinto (Way of the Gods; see
Religious and Philosophical Traditions
, ch. 2) employs much mythology to
describe
the supposed historical origins of Japan. According to the
creation
story found in the Kojiki (Record of Ancient
Matters, dating
from A.D. 712) and the Nihongi or Nihon
shoki
(Chronicle of Japan, from A.D. 720), the Japanese islands
were
created by the gods, two of whom--the male Izanagi and the
female
Izanami--descended from heaven to carry out the task. They
also
brought into being other kami (deities or
supernatural
forces), such as those influencing the sea, rivers, wind,
woods,
and mountains. Two of these deities, the Sun Goddess,
Amaterasu
Omikami, and her brother, the Storm God, Susano-o, warred
against
each other, with Amaterasu emerging victorious.
Subsequently Amaterasu sent her grandson, Ninigi, to
rule over
the sacred islands. Ninigi took with him what became the
three
imperial regalia--a curved jewel (magatama), a
mirror, and
a "sword of gathered clouds"--and ruled over the island of
Kyushu.
Ninigi's great-grandson, Jimmu, recognized as the first
human
emperor of Japan, set out to conquer Yamato. On the main
island of
Honshu, according to tradition he established the unbroken
line of
imperial descent from the Sun Goddess and founded the Land
of the
Rising Sun in 660 B.C.
Data as of January 1994
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