Azusa Yumi Explained

Classification:String

An is a sacred bow (yumi) used in certain Shinto rituals in Japan, as well as a Japanese musical bow, made from the wood of the Japanese or Japanese cherry birch tree (Betula grossa).[1] Playing an azusa yumi forms part of some Shinto rituals; in Japan, it is believed that merely the twanging of the bowstring will frighten ghosts and evil spirits away from a house. In Japanese poetry, the word azusa yumi functions as a makurakotoba ("pillow word", a kind of epithet).[2]

The story is told in Japanese mythology that a golden bird perched on the bow of Emperor Jimmu, the great-grandson of the sun goddess Amaterasu, and the first human ruler of Japan. This was seen as an extremely good omen; Jimmu's bow developed the power to dispel evil by the mere plucking of its string. His bow was made of azusa wood.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Loades, Mike . War Bows: Longbow, crossbow, composite bow and Japanese yumi . 2019-02-21 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-1-4728-2554-4 . 238 . en.
  2. Kabanoff . Alexander M. . 1992 . Review of A Blade of Grass: Japanese Poetry and Aesthetics in Dogen Zen . Journal of Japanese Studies . 18 . 1 . 181–185 . 10.2307/132713 . 132713 . 0095-6848.