Ningyo Sashichi Torimonocho Yoen Roku Shibijin
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as the name suggests, is a creature with both human and fish-like features, described in various pieces of
Japanese literature Japanese literature throughout most of its history has been influenced by cultural contact with neighboring Asian literatures, most notably China and its literature. Early texts were often written in pure Classical Chinese or , a Chinese-Japanes ...
. Though often translated as " mermaid", the term is technically not gender-specific and may include the "
mermen Mermen may refer to: * The Mermen, a music group *Merman Mermen, the male counterparts of the mythical female mermaids, are legendary creatures, which are male human from the waist up and fish-like from the waist down, but may assume normal hum ...
". The literal translation "human-fish" has also been applied.


Overview

The earliest records of the ''ningyo'' attested in written Japanese sources are freshwater beings allegedly captured in the 7th century ( §Asuka period), documented later in the '' Nihon Shoki''. But subsequent examples are usually seawater beings. In later medieval times ( §Kamakura period)), it was held to be a sign of ill omen, and its beaching ( §Omens in Michinoku) was blamed for subsequent bloody battles or calamity. The notion that eating its flesh imparts longevity is attached to the legend of the ('eight hundred ear oldBuddhist priestess', cf. §Yao Bikuni) During the Edo period, the ''ningyo'' was made the subject of burlesque '' gesaku'' novels (cf. §Saikaku, 1687 and
Santō Kyōden Santō Kyōden (山東 京伝, 13 September 1761 Edo – 27 October 1816) was a Japanese artist, writer, and the owner of a tobacco shop during the Edo period. His real name was Iwase Samuru (岩瀬 醒), and he was also known popularly as Kyō ...
's §''Hakoiri musume'', 1791). There were also preserved ''ningyo'' being manufactured using fish parts ( §Mummies or Feejee mermaids), and illustrated by some scholars of the period (e.g. §Baien gyofu); some such mummies are held by certain temples that have ningyo legend attached to them (cf. §Prince Shōtoku). The description of the ningyo as having a red cockscomb ( §Shokoku rijindan, and Saikaku) or light red hair ( §Kasshi yawa) corroborates the hypothesis that
oarfish Oarfish are huge, greatly elongated, pelagic lampriform fish belonging to the small family Regalecidae. Found in areas spanning from temperate ocean zones to tropical ones, yet rarely seen, the oarfish family contains three species in two gene ...
sightings led to ningyo lore. One giant ''ningyo'' was allegedly shot in 1805, even though it was held to be lucky, according to the news circulated in ''
kawaraban Japanese newspapers ( , or older spelling ), similar to their worldwide counterparts, run the gamut from general news-oriented papers to special-interest newspapers devoted to economics, sports, literature, industry, and trade. Newspapers are ci ...
'' pamphlet form ( #Etchū Province ningyo, aka ''kairai''§Etchū Province ningyo, aka ''kairai'')


Terminology

The Japanese has been glossed in a noted dictionary ('' Kojien'') as a "fabulous creature" which is "half woman, half fish", later revised to "half human (usually woman) and half fish". Hence the term ''ningyo'' includes not just the mermaid but the merman also. Accordingly, the ''ningyo'' is sometimes referred to by the verbatim translation "human-fish" in English-language scholarship, thus allowing for the gender ambiguity. The term ''ningyo'' was not explicitly used in the earliest accounts (cf. §Asuka period, year 619) recorded in the '' Nihon shoki'' (720 AD). A later embellished account in involving Prince Shōtoku claims that the Prince Regent knew the term ''ningyo'', though this is regarded with skepticism. The term ''ningyo'' was likely absent from any of the primary sources used in compiling the ''Shoki'', and nonexistent in the Japanese vocabulary during the Prince's time. The term ''ningyo'' was also absent in medieval sources describing the
Kamakura Period The is a period of Japanese history that marks the governance by the Kamakura shogunate, officially established in 1192 in Kamakura by the first ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo after the conclusion of the Genpei War, which saw the struggle betwee ...
strandings in northern Japan §Omens in Michinoku) considered ominous. For example, a "large fish" washed ashore in the Hōji 1 (1247) according to 13th and 14th century texts. But these were called ''ningyo'' in a 17th-century recompilation.


Zoological hypotheses

The earliest examples (cf. §Asuka period) were caught in fresh waters, and it has been hypothesized they must have actually been
giant salamander The Cryptobranchidae are a family of fully aquatic salamanders commonly known as the giant salamanders. They include the largest living amphibians. The family is native to China, Japan, and the eastern United States. They constitute one of two li ...
s. Another prominent theory is that the misidentification of the '' dugong'' led to mermaid lore, but detractors pointed out that the dugong's range reaches only as far north as Okinawa (formerly the Kingdom of Ryūkyū), and so was not likely to have been seen during premodern times in various locations in Japan where mermaid legend (priestess who ate the mermaid) is known to occur. However, this argument is flawed, since there were other sea mammals of the '' Sirenia'' order, namely
Steller's sea cow Steller's sea cow (''Hydrodamalis gigas'') is an extinct sirenian described by Georg Wilhelm Steller in 1741. At that time, it was found only around the Commander Islands in the Bering Sea between Alaska and Russia; its range extended across ...
s which were native to the
Bering Sea The Bering Sea (, ; rus, Бе́рингово мо́ре, r=Béringovo móre) is a marginal sea of the Northern Pacific Ocean. It forms, along with the Bering Strait, the divide between the two largest landmasses on Earth: Eurasia and The Ameri ...
, and could have plausibly wandered into northern Japanese seas. Other sea mammals such as seals and dolphins are also candidates to have been mistaken for human-fish. An inscribed wooden slat ('' mokkan'') containing drawings of ningyo (13th century) suggest the actual animal captured may have been a pinniped, such as a seal (cf. §Ritual offering tablet). The ichthyologist's hypothesis that the ningyo legend originated from sightings of the red-crested
oarfish Oarfish are huge, greatly elongated, pelagic lampriform fish belonging to the small family Regalecidae. Found in areas spanning from temperate ocean zones to tropical ones, yet rarely seen, the oarfish family contains three species in two gene ...
is bolstered by the lore or reports that the ningyo has red cockscomb ( §Shokoku rijindan) or light red hair ( §Kasshi yawa). This cockscomb also is mentioned in the novel by §Saikaku.


Iconography

Despite the ''ningyo'' being defined as half-woman, half-fish in some modern dictionaries, the ''ningyo'' has been also depicted as having a human female head resting on a fish-like body, as in the well known Japanese woodblock print ''
kawaraban Japanese newspapers ( , or older spelling ), similar to their worldwide counterparts, run the gamut from general news-oriented papers to special-interest newspapers devoted to economics, sports, literature, industry, and trade. Newspapers are ci ...
'' pamphlet example (shown right, q.v. §Etchū Province ningyo, aka ''kairai''). The ''ningyo'' reportedly caught in the 7th century became associated with then Prince Regent Shōtōku, and the creature has been depicted as a gift presented to him in picture scrolls entitled ''Shōtōku Taishi eden'', the oldest surviving copy of this (1069) being the earliest piece of ningyo art in Japan. There are multiple copies of the scrolls in existence. Also, much later in the 19th century. An example is the ningyo represented as a composite of the goddess Kannon and a fish (cf. §Prince Shōtoku and fig.). The ningyo was human-headed in the 11th century anecdote involving the head of the Taira clan (cf. §Presented to Tadamori),, quoting from the anthology '' Kokon Chomonjū'' (1254), pp. 400–401
When the ex-magistrate Taira no Tadamori 平忠盛 (1096–1153) moved his residence to Beppo 別保 in the Ise 伊勢 domain.. e caughta big fish with a head similar to a man, endowed with hands, thick teeth like a fish, and a prominent mouth, which resembled that of a monkey. The body was like that of a normal fish.. (abridged)
The stranded ningyo had "four limbs" like a human or had hands and feet but was scaly and fish-headed. which were reported in Northern Japan in the 12th and 13th centuries and interpreted as omens (cf. §Omens in Michinoku) There has also been unearthed a wooden tablet with an illustration of such an ill-omened ningyo date to this period (c. 1286) (cf. ) But during the Edo period, illustrations of ''ningyo'' were varied, and in popular literature for entertainment (such as the ''kibyōshi'' genre), both human-headed fish type (armless) and half-human type with arms were illustrated (cf. §Two archetypes). One theory is that the two types derive from Classical Chinese literature, in particular the limbed ("hill-fish") and the limbless ("red ru fish") passed down from the ancient ''Shan hai jing'' (" Classic of Mountains and Seas") (cf. § Chinese ''lingyu'' and ''chiru'').


Chinese literature

However, this explanation is compromised by the fact that the Chinese "hill-fish" is considered four-limbed, and illustrated as such, whereas it was actually the Japanese work ''
Wakan sansai zue The is an illustrated Japanese ''leishu'' encyclopedia published in 1712 in the Edo period. It consists of 105 volumes in 81 books. Its compiler was Terashima or Terajima (), a doctor from Osaka. It describes and illustrates various activitie ...
'' (1712) which transformed the image of the Chinese "hill-fish" to that of a two-armed legless one (cf. fig. right), while equating it with the Japanese ''ningyo''. And this illustration has struck commentators as closely resembling the Western mermaid. (cf. § Ningyo in ''Wakan sansai zue'') The ''Wakan sansai zue'' did also give notice and print the facsimile illustration of the merfolk pronounced Teijin in Japanese (''Diren'' or in Chinese) mentioned in the classic ''Shan hai jing'', which were indeed illustrated as two-armed merfolk in Chinese sources. Also, what the yōkai wood-block print illustrator Toriyama Sekien drew (1781, fig. left) was not a Japanese ''ningyo'' but one dwelling in the far reaches of China west of a
World tree The world tree is a motif present in several religions and mythologies, particularly Indo-European religions, Siberian religions, and Native American religions. The world tree is represented as a colossal tree which supports the heavens, thereb ...
(''kenboku''; pinyin: ''jianmu'' ). The caption adds that such ''ningyo'' was also known as the people of the Di Nation.


Siren-mermaids recorded by Europeans

The Japanese
Shogunate , officially , was the title of the military dictators of Japan during most of the period spanning from 1185 to 1868. Nominally appointed by the Emperor, shoguns were usually the de facto rulers of the country, though during part of the Kamakur ...
had acquired a copy of Johannes Jonston's ''Natural History'' in Dutch (1660) already by 1663, containing illustrations of the Western siren-mermaid. But it is not clear whether such "Dutch" ('' Rangaku'', Western learning) images got widely disseminated in Japan before 's , which digested this and other works on the topic of mermaid, with reproduced illustrations. By the late Edo Period (mid to late 19th century), the visual iconography of the ''ningyo'' came gradually to match the half-human half-fish of the European mermaid.


Yao Bikuni

One of the most famous folk stories involving ''ningyo'' (or rather the flesh of the human-fish), purports that a girl who ate it acquired everlasting youth and longevity, and became the nun also read Happyaku Bikuni, living to the age of 800 years.


Summary

In the typical version the girl who ate the ningyo was from
Obama Barack Hussein Obama II ( ; born August 4, 1961) is an American politician who served as the 44th president of the United States from 2009 to 2017. A member of the Democratic Party, Obama was the first African-American president of the U ...
, Wakasa Province, and as a nun dwelled in a grass hut on the mountain at temple in the region. She traveled all over Japan in her life, but then she resolves to end her life in her home country, and sealed herself in a cave where she dwelled or has herself buried alive on the mountain at the temple, and requests a camellia tree be planted at the site as indicator of whether she still remains alive. In a version passed down at Obama, Wakasa, the sixteen-year-old girl eats the ningyo inadvertently, after her father receives the prepared dish as a guest, so that the family is not implicated in knowingly eating the ningyo or butchering it. The Kūin-ji temple history claims the father to have been a rich man named Takahashi, descended from the founder of the province, and when the daughter turned 16, the dragon king appeared in the guise of a white-bearded man and gave her the flesh as a gift. But there are versions known all over Japan, and the father is often identified as a fisherman. A fisherman reeled in the ningyo but discarded it due to its strangeness, but the young daughter had picked it up and eaten it, according to one telling.


Time period

The oldest written sources of the legend date from the 15th century, and one of these sources relate that the appeared in Kyoto in the middle of that century (year
1449 Year 1449 (Roman numerals, MCDXLIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events January–December * January 6 – Constantine XI Palaiologos is crowned Byzantine Emp ...
) at age 800. Assuming age 800 in keeping with her commonly used name, her birth can be back dated to around the mid-7th century, during the Asuka Period. Folklorist 's chronology makes her a survivor from an even older age. He dated Yao Bikuni eating ningyo flesh in the year 480 AD during the
Kofun Period The is an era in the history of Japan from about 300 to 538 AD (the date of the introduction of Buddhism), following the Yayoi period. The Kofun and the subsequent Asuka periods are sometimes collectively called the Yamato period. This period is ...
( Tumulus Period).Fujisawa (1931, pub. Rokubunkan) (pub. Daitōkaku), pp. 40–42. ''apud'' However, no written source for this could be evinced, according to a recent researcher, and an oral tradition is presumed.


Asuka period

In the 27th year of Empress Suiko ( 619, man-like fish were supposedly netted twice: on in Ōmi Province during the 4th month, and in Horie, Settsu Province (, an artificial canal no longer extant), according to the ''Nihon shoki''. They were freshwater creatures, and the description of it being "childlike" suggested its true identity to be the Japanese giant salamander according to
Minakata Kumagusu was a Japanese author, biologist, naturalist and ethnologist. Biography Minakata was born in Wakayama, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. In 1883, he moved to Tokyo, where he entered the preparatory school '' Kyōryū Gakkō''. The headmaster of ...
.


Prince Shōtoku

Crown Prince Shōtoku at age 48 was allegedly was presented with a ningyo from Settsu Province, but he abhorred the unlucky gift and ordered it to be discarded immediately. This account occurs in a picture scroll called ''Shōtoku Taishi eden''. There were some 40 copies of this made, of which the copy held by Hōryū-ji temple, dated to 1069 is the oldesg known pictorial depiction of the Japanese ningyo. While ''Shoki'' never used the term ''ningyo'' explicitly, Prince Shōtoku had been involved in the Gamō River incident and knew to use the term, according to the prince's abridged history or . Shōtoku also knew the ''ningyo'' to bring forth disaster according to the ''Denryaku'', and an annotation provides that it was customary for fishermen at the time to release a ''ningyo'' if ever caught in the net. When the prince was alarmed by the ill omen of a ningyo appearing in Ōmi Province, he had a statue of the Kannon goddess placed in the vicinity, according to document preserved at temple. According to the ''engi'' or foundation myth of , Prince Shōtoku met a ningyo in a pool near Lake Biwa who confessed to have been reborn in its shape due to poor deeds in past life, and the prince performed service to provide it salvation by building a temple to house a Kannon goddess statue, which was the origins of this temple.


Late Nara period

After the Asuka Period, the two oldest appearances of the ningyo are dated to the mid- to late Nara Period, and these were situated by the sea. An ''ningyo'' beached on Yasui-no-ura in
Izumo Province was an old province of Japan which today consists of the eastern part of Shimane Prefecture. It was sometimes called . The province is in the Chūgoku region. History During the early Kofun period (3rd century) this region was independent an ...
(a bay in present-day Yasugi, Shimane) in the Tenpyō-shōhō 8 or the year 756 AD, and later, another one appeared in in Noto Province (a peninsula in present-day
Suzu, Ishikawa is a Cities of Japan, city located in Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 13,531 in 6013 households, and a population density of 54.6 persons per km2. The total area of the city was . Etymology Suzu is thought ...
) in the year Hōki 9/
778 __NOTOC__ Year 778 ( DCCLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Julian calendar. The denomination 778 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method ...
. These reports are preserved in a .


Heian period


Presented to Tadamori

;(Ise Province. c. 1140s. In ''Kokon Chomonjū'') An anecdote of three presumed "ningyo" caught in a net in in Ise Province, is found in the '' Kokon Chomonjū'' ("Collection of Tales Heard, Present and Past",
1254 Year 1254 ( MCCLIV) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * Battle of Adrianople: Byzantine forces under Emperor Theodore II (Laskaris) de ...
) from the mid-
Kamakura Period The is a period of Japanese history that marks the governance by the Kamakura shogunate, officially established in 1192 in Kamakura by the first ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo after the conclusion of the Genpei War, which saw the struggle betwee ...
. The event dates a century earlier than the anthology: when Taira no Tadamori (d. 1153; father of
Kiyomori was a military leader and '' kugyō'' of the late Heian period of Japan. He established the first samurai-dominated administrative government in the history of Japan. Early life Kiyomori was born in Heian-kyō, Japan, in 1118 as the first ...
) had moved his residence to this place, populated by "bayside villagers" (fishermen). The big fish had human-like heads (but also sets of fine teeth like fish, and a protruding mouths like a monkey's), with fish-like bodies. When hauled to land and carried (by pairs of fishermen) with the tails dragging, the creatures screamed in high-pitched voice and shed tears like a human. The tale concludes with the presumption that creatures must have been ''ningyo'' (human-fish). The three ''ningyo'' were presented to Tadamori, but one was returned to the bay's villagers (fishermen), who carved it up and ate it. It was exquisitely delicious, and no special effects came of it.


Kamakura period


Omens in Michinoku

;(Mutsu and Dewa Provinces . ''Hōjō kudai ki'', ''Azuma kagami'', etc.) There had been frequent beachings of ''ningyo'' in Mutsu or Dewa Province (Michinoku region) according to the (printed 1641),, and each sighting is treated as an omen, associated with some armed conflict or ill fortune which struck afterwards: * Bunji 5 (
1189 Year 1189 ( MCLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. In English law, 1189 - specifically the beginning of the reign of Richard I - is considered the end of time immemorial. ...
) summer. Beaching at (in Mutsu). Presaging extermination of Fujiwara no Hidehira's sons * Kennin 3, (
1203 Year 1203 ( MCCIII) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. It was also the first year to have all digits different from each other since 1098. Events By place Fourth Crusad ...
), 4th month. Tsugaru-no-ura. Minamoto no Sanetomo harmed by evil zen priest. * Kenpo 1 (
1213 Year 1213 ( MCCXIII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events * May 15 – King John of England submits to Pope Innocent III, who in turn lifts the interdict of 1208 the ...
). Akita-no-ura, Dewa. Same year, . * Hōji 1 (
1247 Year 1247 ( MCCXLVII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * War of the Thuringian Succession: The claims on the Ludovingians' inheritance after t ...
). 11th day of 3rd month. Tsugaru-no-ura. Same year, 's uprising (i.e., the or bloodshed at Yuigahama) Actually all these cases, culminating in the Hōji 1 event, were recorded in much older '' Azuma kagami'' (chronicle up to year
1266 Year 1266 ( MCCLXVI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * January 2 – Siege of Murcia: King James I of Aragon (the Conqueror) marches with h ...
) and the ''Hōjō kudai ki'' (aka , 1331) except that the creature is not called a "ningyo" but rather a "large fish" (which was human cadaver-like with "four limbs"), or a creature "having hands and feet, covered in overlapping scales, and a head no different than a fish's". And these near-contemporary sources also interpret the ningyo ("big fish") appearances as presaging major warfare occurring within that year. In Hōji 1 when "big fish" was beached in the northern parts (Michinoku), the waters there had turned scarlet (possibly a red tide occurrence), and this was later believed to have foreshadowed the battle which took place at the beaches Yuigahama (near Kamakura), turning the water crimson (with blood). The Hōji 1 event was discussed in one late source, called the (published Jōkyō1/
1684 Events January–March * January 5 – King Charles II of England gives the title Duke of St Albans to Charles Beauclerk, his illegitimate son by Nell Gwyn. * January 15 (January 5 O.S.) - To demonstrate that the River Thames, froz ...
), but this miscopies the day to the "20th of the 3rd month", which makes it the probably direct source of Ihara Saikaku's fictional piece in which a ''ningyo'' appears. There are additional sightings during the Kamakura Period recorded in other literature (e.g. ''kagenki'' 嘉元記)."Table 1 Records of Appearances of Ningyo 人魚の出現記録」"; ;


Ritual offering tablet

A drawings of a ningyo was found on a piece of wooden tablet excavated in the Suzaki archaeological site at Ikawa, Akita. It was discovered at the remains of a well, The tablet measures 80.6 cm×14.5 cm×0.5 cm), and dated to some time close to 1286. The ningyo is human-headed and fish-bodied, except it has two arms and two legs alongside a finned tail. Except for the face its entirety is covered with marks which apparently represent scales. The actual animal was probably a seal, or some sort of pinniped, according to the archaeologists' report. The inscriptions have been transcribed as "''Ara, tsutanaya, teuchi ni tote sōrō, sowaka'' (Oh, pity, but let it be killed, sowaka)" and similarly "Oh, pity, bound up like that even though a human, sowaka". Since the beast was considered ill omen, the Buddhist priest (also illustrated on the tablet) probably made offering (Buddhism) in the form of prayer, "sowaka" being a Sanskrit word often chanted at the end of the mantra.


Edo period


Alleged sightings


Shokoku rijindan

A sighting of a ''ningyo'' alleged in Wakasa Province in the Hōei (era), probably c. 1705, was recorded by in ("Stories of Common Folk
rom the Provinces Rom, or ROM may refer to: Biomechanics and medicine * Risk of mortality, a medical classification to estimate the likelihood of death for a patient * Rupture of membranes, a term used during pregnancy to describe a rupture of the amniotic sac * ...
, 1740s). It reported had something like red cockscomb-like at the collar, which parallels what Saikaku stating in his novel (1674, cf. below) that that the ningyo possessed a cockscomb on its head.


Kasshi yawa

An mid-18th century account of a ningyo sighting was recorded by samurai
daimyo were powerful Japanese magnates, feudal lords who, from the 10th century to the early Meiji period in the middle 19th century, ruled most of Japan from their vast, hereditary land holdings. They were subordinate to the shogun and nominally ...
essayist
Matsura Seizan , born , was a ''daimyō'', essayist, and famed swordsman during the Edo period of Japan. Seizan was a practitioner of Iba Hideaki's Shingyōtō-ryū school of swordsmanship, in which Seizan was considered as an adept. Seizan adopted the name J ...
, in his . It occurred early part of the Enkyō era (1744–1748), and his named sources were his own uncle Hongaku-in (, ) and aunt Kōshō-in (). On their journey by sea from Hirado Domain en route to
Edo Edo ( ja, , , "bay-entrance" or "estuary"), also romanized as Jedo, Yedo or Yeddo, is the former name of Tokyo. Edo, formerly a ''jōkamachi'' (castle town) centered on Edo Castle located in Musashi Province, became the ''de facto'' capital of ...
, they encountered a ''ningyo'' around the Genkai Sea, in an area where no ''
ama Ama or AMA may refer to: Ama Languages * Ama language (New Guinea) * Ama language (Sudan) People * Ama (Ama Kōhei), former ring name for sumo wrestler Harumafuji Kōhei * Mary Ama, a New Zealand artist * Shola Ama, a British singer * Ām ...
'' (female diving fishermen) could be expected to operate. It surfaced more than 10 '' ken'' (≈20 meters) ahead of the vessel, and at first, its lower half could not be seen, but its "guise was woman-like, with pale bluish hue, and light red hair which was long"; then it smiled and dove down, at which point the fish-like tail-end made its appearance, allowing the witnesses to determine it was a ''ningyo''.


Etchū Province ningyo, aka ''kairai''

The aforementioned woodblock print from Bunka 2 (1805), entitled "" publicized the appearance of a ningyo also called . It happened on the 5th month of the year, in Yokata-ura, in what is now
Toyama Bay is a bay located on the northern shores of the Hokuriku region of Honshu, Japan on the Sea of Japan. The bay borders Toyama and Ishikawa prefectures. The bay is known for the mirages on the horizon during the winter months and for being a spaw ...
. This ''ningyo'' was a creature with head of a long-haired young woman's, a pair of golden horns, a red belly, three eyes on each side of its torso, and a
carp Carp are various species of oily freshwater fish from the family Cyprinidae, a very large group of fish native to Europe and Asia. While carp is consumed in many parts of the world, they are generally considered an invasive species in parts of ...
-like tail end, according the text of the flier. This mermaid purportedly measured 3
A is an approximately wooden staff, used in some Japanese martial arts. The martial art of wielding the jō is called ''jōjutsu'' or ''jōdō''. Also, '' aiki-jō'' is a set of techniques in aikido which uses the jō to illustrate aikido's ...
5
shaku Shaku may refer to: * Shaku (unit) * Shaku (ritual baton) * Buddhist surname In East Asian Buddhism, monks and nuns usually adopt a Buddhist surname and a Dharma name, which are combined in the surname-first East-Asian naming order. Since the 4th c ...
or . While the printed illustration only shows one side of the ningyo, the text itself confirms it had 3 eyes on each side of the body. The feature of eyes on the torso is shared by the prediction beast '' kudan'', also known to have appeared in Etchū Province, and the ''hakutaku'' (or '' baize'', of Chinese origin), as scholars have pointed out. The flier reports that the people grew frightened, and destroyed it with 450 rifles. Yet the flier also states that "A person who views this fish once will enjoy great longevity, avoid bad turns of events and disasters, and gain luck and virtue".


Edo popular fiction


Saikaku

The ''ningyo'' allegedly was remembered in popular tradition as having "a scarlet cockscomb on its head, and a face of a beautiful woman. Four limbs like they were wrought out of jewels, golden-gleaming scales, the flesh most fragrant, and serene voice like the skylark-whistle" according to Ihara Saikaku's ("Exemplary Tales of the Way of the Warrior", 1674), which features a ''ningyo'' as noted above. The text describes the ''ningyo'' as being equipped with four limbs but the illustration draws a mermaid without legs, and having a tail-fin instead; she also is drawn without any cockscomb-like appendage on the head. Another discrepancy is that the samurai named Kinnai had shot the ''ningyo'' with a bow (half-bow) according to the text, but the weapon has been swapped with a
firearm A firearm is any type of gun designed to be readily carried and used by an individual. The term is legally defined further in different countries (see Legal definitions). The first firearms originated in 10th-century China, when bamboo tubes ...
in the illustration.


Hakoiri musume

Santō Kyōden Santō Kyōden (山東 京伝, 13 September 1761 Edo – 27 October 1816) was a Japanese artist, writer, and the owner of a tobacco shop during the Edo period. His real name was Iwase Samuru (岩瀬 醒), and he was also known popularly as Kyō ...
's . is also well known as a work during the Tokugawa era which dealt with the ''ningyo'' mermaid topic. It is an example of work in the genre of '' kibyōshi'' or "yellow jacket", and a humorous, satirical piece, whose cast of characters include Urashima Tarō, who has an affair with a
carp Carp are various species of oily freshwater fish from the family Cyprinidae, a very large group of fish native to Europe and Asia. While carp is consumed in many parts of the world, they are generally considered an invasive species in parts of ...
mistress producing a mermaid daughter in the process. The abandoned mermaid is netted by a fisherman named Heiji. To make ends meet she engages in ''miuri'', i.e., selling herself into prostitution, but her fish-bodied '' oiran'' repulses customers. After discovering that licking a mermaid imparts longevity, Heiji opens a mermaid-licking shoppe, gains great wealth, and decides to marry her. She grows out of her outer skin, metamorphosing into a full-fledged woman with both arms and legs. Heiji sells the mermaid's skin
slough Slough () is a town and unparished area in the unitary authority of the same name in Berkshire, England, bordering west London. It lies in the Thames Valley, west of central London and north-east of Reading, at the intersection of the M4 ...
(''nukegara'') for profit.


Two archetypes

In the mid-Edo period, illustrations of the ''ningyo'' consisted of two broad types, as exemplified in illustrated fictional tales. Where she is depicted as half-human with a pair of arms/hands, examples are plentiful. She is depicted as human-headed by armless in some works, as in the case of Kyōden's ''Hakoiri musume'' just described.


Chinese ''lingyu'' and ''chiru''

The dual visual representation has been attributed to the Japanese familiarity with Chinese sources that depict both types, specifically, a human-armed type of mermaid called the and an armless (finned) type of mermaid called the . However this formulation for explaining Chinese origin does not quite succeed, since, as its proponent points out, the Chinese ''lingyu'' is actually four-legged, as is the ''renyu'' (, "human fish") aka ''tiyu'' (; Japanese:''teigyo'') and it was the Japanese ''
Wakan sansai zue The is an illustrated Japanese ''leishu'' encyclopedia published in 1712 in the Edo period. It consists of 105 volumes in 81 books. Its compiler was Terashima or Terajima (), a doctor from Osaka. It describes and illustrates various activitie ...
'' ("Illustrated Sino-Japanese ncyclopediaof the Three Realms", 1712) which for some reason altered the image of the ningyo/renyu (aka ryōgyo/lingyu ) into a two-armed but legless mermaid. A different commentator also regards the pictorialization of the ''ningyo'' in ''Wakan sansai zue'' to be an "addition.. with an illustration.. much like the Western idea of a mermaid".


Chinese vs. Western sources

As to the knowledge people held about the ''ningyo'' during the Edo Period, the influence of Classical Chinese literature is palpable. Even Kyōden's ''Hakoiri musume'' reveals the writer's literacy, as the work discusses the distinction between the ''teigyo'' (Chinese: ''tiyu'') and the ''geigyo'' (Chinese:''niyu'', ). Japanese scholars writing on the ''ningyo'' drew much from Chinese sources, for example, the '' Bencao Gangmu'' (1596), the compendium of Chinese ''materia medica'', which was introduced into Japan in 1607, and was frequently quoted on the subject of the mermaid. Thus
Kaibara Ekiken __NOTOC__ or Ekiken, also known as Atsunobu (篤信), was a Japanese Neo-Confucianist philosopher and botanist. Kaibara was born into a family of advisors to the ''daimyō'' of Fukuoka Domain in Chikuzen Province (modern-day Fukuoka Prefecture ...
(1709) cited it, and distinguishes the ''teigyo'' ("ningyo" in small print) from the ''geigyo'' ("salamander").


Ningyo in ''Wakan sansai zue''

The influential ''Wakan sansai zue'' was modeled after the Three Realms encyclopedia (Sancai Tuhui, 1609) of China, and also drew from such Chinese material on the topic of ''ningyo''. But as already noted the image of the ''ningyo'' was not faithful to Chinese sources. The work also equates the ''ningyo'' with the ( zh, 鯪魚/ 陵魚, but this synonymy is based on the gloss in the Japanese lexicon '' Wamyō Ruijushō'', not Chinese sources.


Peixe muller or heiushimureru

Since the ''Wakan sansai zue'' also describes the medical use of ''peixe muller'' (Japanese transliteration: ''heishmure u', "woman fish") according to the Dutch, it was using information derived ultimately from a European. However, its claim that the woman-fish bones works as a detoxicant differs from known accounts, and stymies identification of any possible source. A number of other Japanese scholarship on the ''ningyo'' also discussed the supposed siren-mermaid bones being trafficked by the Europeans as ''heishimureru'' (Spanish/Portuguese: ''peixe mulher''; gl, peixe muller, 'woman fish') One identifiable source was the Flemish Jesuit Verbiest ''aka'' Nan Huairen (mid-17c.) who wrote in Chinese, cited Ono Ranzan (1803), and possibly even used earlier by
Kaibara Ekiken __NOTOC__ or Ekiken, also known as Atsunobu (篤信), was a Japanese Neo-Confucianist philosopher and botanist. Kaibara was born into a family of advisors to the ''daimyō'' of Fukuoka Domain in Chikuzen Province (modern-day Fukuoka Prefecture ...
(1709), to describe the effects of the ''peixe muller'' medicine.


Ōtsuki Gentaku

In the interim, many other European works referring to the siren-mermaid were introduced to the Japanese literati: Johannes Jonston (Latin 1657, Dutch tr. 1660), Ambrose Paré (''Œuvres'', 1575; Dutch tr. 1593), and
François Valentyn François Valentyn or Valentijn (17 April 1666 – 6 August 1727) was a Dutch Calvinist minister, naturalist and author whose ''Oud en Nieuw Oost-Indiën'' ("Old and New East-India") describes the history of the Dutch East India Company while als ...
(1724–26, in Dutch), thanks to the efforts of 's , who gave translated digests from these works, accompanied by reproductions of siren-mermaid illustrations. And this endeavor was instrumental in forging the image/iconography of the ''ningyo'' during the era that was influenced by the European siren-mermaid.


Mummies or Feejee mermaids

Specimens of taxidermically crafted ''ningyo'' have been observed and illustrated during the Edo Period, including the painting in 'Baien gyofu'' (cf. below) and the sketch by natural historian dated Ansei 3/
1856 Events January–March * January 8 – Borax deposits are discovered in large quantities by John Veatch in California. * January 23 – American paddle steamer SS ''Pacific'' leaves Liverpool (England) for a transatlantic voyag ...
.


Baien gyofu

Mōri Baien (1798–1851) was a Japanese samurai and naturalist of the late Edo period. His given name was . He is known for his accurately illustrated works on the flora and fauna of Japan, which include the multi-volume . See also * Ono Ranzan , al ...
's ''Baien gyofu'' (, 'Baien's catalog of fishes', Bunsei 8/
1825 Events January–March * January 4 – King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies dies in Naples and is succeeded by his son, Francis. * February 3 – Vendsyssel-Thy, once part of the Jutland peninsula forming westernmost Denmark, becomes a ...
) contains a full-color hand-painted illustrations of a ''ningyo'' in frontal and side views. This has been determined to represent a so-called "stuffed" ningyo crafted by joining the tail-end of a fish, also called a Feejee mermaid in the West.


In popular culture

* , often incorrectly referred to as Mermen, are a race who appear throughout the entire anime/manga series of '' One Piece'' on a regular basis. They look like humans with fish features and are obviously inspired by the ''ningyo''. ''Fishman'' is written like ''ningyo'' but with the characters switched (人魚, Ningyo -> 魚人, Gyojin). appear in the series too. These are more peaceful of nature than the Fishmen and, like the mermaids and
mermen Mermen may refer to: * The Mermen, a music group *Merman Mermen, the male counterparts of the mythical female mermaids, are legendary creatures, which are male human from the waist up and fish-like from the waist down, but may assume normal hum ...
of folklore, their upper half is that of a human while the lower half is that of a fish, though male Merfolk are somewhat uncommon. * The manga/anime series ''
Mermaid Saga is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Rumiko Takahashi. It consists of 9 stories told in 16 chapters irregularly published in Shogakukan's '' Shōnen Sunday Zōkan'' and ''Weekly Shōnen Sunday'' from 1984 to 1994. In North A ...
'' by Rumiko Takahashi is based on the Yao Bikuni myth, in which the main characters become immortal by consuming the flesh of a mermaid. * There is a fake "ningyo" in the National Museum of Ethnology.驚異の伝承と新説 トンでも不思議発見 VOL.1「ミイラの謎が明かされた?!」
/ref> * The character Serilly from the '' Puyo Puyo'' series of games is a lonely ningyo who desires to make friends, but is often paranoid that everyone who approaches her wants to eat her. * In Okinawa, people have believed that eating ningyo would be unlucky. They also do not eat dugong. * The character "Ponyo" in the film of the same name is a ningyo or "human-faced fish". * The primary
antagonist An antagonist is a character in a story who is presented as the chief foe of the protagonist. Etymology The English word antagonist comes from the Greek ἀνταγωνιστής – ''antagonistēs'', "opponent, competitor, villain, enemy, riv ...
of the video game ''
Siren Siren or sirens may refer to: Common meanings * Siren (alarm), a loud acoustic alarm used to alert people to emergencies * Siren (mythology), an enchanting but dangerous monster in Greek mythology Places * Siren (town), Wisconsin * Siren, Wisco ...
'' is based on the character Yao Bikuni, and the background of the story is loosely based on the Yao Bikuni legend. * The 2010 '' Super Sentai'' series, '' Tensou Sentai Goseiger'' featured the antagonistic cryptid-themed monster group Yuumajuu. One of their members is Jogon of the Ningyo, who has the secondary theme of
silverfish The silverfish (''Lepisma saccharinum'') is a species of small, primitive, wingless insect in the order Zygentoma (formerly Thysanura). Its common name derives from the insect's silvery light grey colour, combined with the fish-like appearance ...
. * The CCG and roleplaying game '' Legend of the Five Rings'' has ningyo characters as members of the Mantis Clan. * The video game '' Mermaid Swamp'' is based on the myth of Yao Bikuni and the ningyo myth. * A host of ningyo characters feature prominently in the manga and anime series ''
Namiuchigiwa no Muromi-san is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Keiji Najima. It was adapted into an anime television series. Plot Takurō Mukōjima is a boy angler. He lands a ningyo (Japanese mermaid) by the name of Muromi- san and develops rapport ...
''. * In '' Yo-kai Watch'', Ningyo appears where its English dub name is Mermaidyn. She is depicted as a mermaid who is constantly caught on the hook of Nate Adams' fishing pole much to his annoyance. Yao Bikuni also appears as Mermadonna, who is Mermaidyn's evolved form. * Bikuni appears in the anime '' Konohana Kitan'' as a secondary character. * The film '' Lu Over the Wall'' revolves around an idiosyncratic interpretation of ningyo in which they can manipulate water and turn humans into immortal ningyo by biting them. * Yaobikuni is a playable character in the mobile RPG ''Onmyōji''. * Yaobikuni is a character in the manga series '' Blade of the Immortal''. * ''Mermaid'', a short film by Osamu Tezuka released on September 21, 1964. In a fictional place where using the imagination is banned, a boy saves a fish, which surprises everyone by turning into a mermaid and playing with him. The boy is arrested for imagining this "nonsense", and is robbed of his imagination as punishment. However, he regains this ability and turns himself into a mermaid, so they happily leave forever that totalitarian society to live their eternal love alone in the deep abyss. * In episode 15 of '' Vampire Princess Miyu'', the action presents a ningyo and a Yao Bikuni as well, where the protagonist (a '' Vampire'') kills the ningyo which is discovered to be a Shinma. The protagonist ignores Yao Bikuni's plea to make her live eternal happy dreams until the end of her life and instead lets her live the next 100 years to experience human suffering. * In the PC game '' Return of the Obra Dinn'', three Ningyos are captured and held captive by the crew of the ship, causing spider crabs (another Japanese game culture reference) and a giant kraken to attack in retaliation, resulting in the death of several crew members. * In the PC game '' Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice'', there are 3 Ningyos: one dead at the bottom of the fountainhead palace lake, one alive in the fountainhead palace lake and the Dragon is officially titled in the native Japanese version 'Ningyo Dragon'. There is also an incarnation of Yao Bikuni who is the True/Corrupted Monk who's official title in the native Japanese version of the game is 'Princess Yao'. The game writers directly drew the connection via demonstrating that a parasitic bug that existed in the Ningyo was the reason for the immortality, and this parasite is the cause of the True/Corrupted Monks immortality as well as a significant amount of others in the game. * In the mobile game '' Fate/Grand Order'', the character Sessyoin Kiara obtains a mermaid-like appearance and powers after having eaten Yao Bikuni.


See also

* Amabie * Fiji mermaid *
Jenny Haniver A Jenny Haniver is the carcass of a ray or a skate that has been modified by hand then dried, resulting in a mummified specimen intended to resemble a fanciful fictional creature, such as a demon or dragon. Name One suggestion for the origin of ...


Explanatory notes


References

;Citations ;Bibliography * * * * * * * * * * * * * **
htm edition
* * * * (Waseda University copy
National Diet Library copy
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URI
{{refend Mermaids Yōkai Mythological monsters Immortality ja:人魚