Kunitama Explained

Kunitama (国魂) is a type of kami or god who acts as a tutelary deity or guardian of a province of Japan or sometimes other areas in shinto.[1]

The term is sometimes treated as a specific deity itself especially with Hokkaidō Shrine, and other colonial shrines, a or as an epithet in the case of Okunitama Shrine or a part of a deity's name in the case of Yamato Okunitama, whose name is also sometimes interpreted as an epithet.

History

In ancient times it was believed that every province had a kunitama.

Yamato Okunitama is the Kunitama of Yamato Province. He is sometimes identified with Ōmononushi.[2] [3]

As the Yamato court grew in power shrines were made in more and more places outside of the Yamato region.

of the Musashi Province was traditionally identified as Ōkuninushi.

Hirata Atsutane said in his morning prayers that the deities to worship in Yamato Province were Ōmononushi, Okunitama, and Kotoshironushi.

Motoori Norinaga discussed the concept.

Outside of Japan

A generic "Kunitama" was among the, Ōkuninushi, and Sukunahikona used in Japanese colonial shrines.[4] [5] They are all Kunitsukami or earthly kami representing the land.

This started in the Matsumae Domain during haibutsu kishaku where many shrines in Hokkaido were forced to adopt such deities in that group. There was very little worship of such deities there at that time and as a result not much objection to it. This came to be later used in many overseas shrines to justify colonialism.

In Korea Kunitama and Amaterasu were enshrined together. as a pair at all nationally ranked shrines. The colonization of Korea marked the beginning of a shift frrom a meiji era "pioneer theology" to a universal theology and Amaterasu became more prominent and was generally paired with Kunitama.

In Korea

Some people identified Dangun with Susanoo-no-Mikoto, the government not wanting to take a stand on this enshrined the generic Okunitama at Chōsen Jingu so believers could have their own interpretations. was a strong advocate of these positions and his advocacy was associated with the enshrinement of Okunitama at both Chōsen Jingu, and Keijō Shrine. He advocated enshrining of Dangun at Chōsen Shrine, and others argued that in Korea Kunitama was Dangun and should be called Chosen kunitama.

In 1936 Keijō Shrine released a memo saying that Okunitama was in fact a generic title forr any Korean deity and not Dangun. The name was also changed to Kunitama-no-Okami as a parallel to Amaterasu Omikami

An ethnic Korean group proposed to take over Okunitama worship after the war but was denied.

State authorities at Chōsen Jingu however never allowed for Okunitama to be called "Chosen kunitama" and indigenous Dangun traditions were suppressed in favor of worshipping Amaterasu in the shrine.

Other areas

In Manchukuo there were proposals to identify Kunitama with Nurhaci but they were not accepted.

At Mōkyō Jinja Genghis Khan was venerated as Kunitama.

In Brazil in a Japanese settlement a shrine named Bogure Jinja was created and worshipped Kunitama, identified with indigenous people of the area in a burial mound.

List of Okunitama shrines

!Shrine!Deity!Province
Owari Ōkunitama ShrineŌkuninushiOwari Province
Izushi ShrineTajima Province
Ōyamato Shrine[6] Yamato OkunitamaYamato Province
Ōkunitama Shrine (Ōkuninushi)[7] Musashi Province
Hokkaidō ShrineHokkaido
Keijō Shrine, AmaterasuKorea under Japanese rule
Chōsen Shrine and Amaterasu Okami
Heijō Shrine
Ryūtōsan Shrine
Tsubaki Grand Shrine of AmericaAmerika Kokudo Kunitama-no-KamiNorth America

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nishioka . Kazuhiko . Kunitama . Kokugakuin University Encyclopedia of Shinto.
  2. Ellwood . Robert S. . 1990 . The Sujin Religious Revolution . Japanese Journal of Religious Studies . 17 . 2/3 . 199–217 . 10.18874/jjrs.17.2-3.1990.199-217 . 30234018 . 0304-1042. free .
  3. Book: Hardacre, Helen . Shinto: A History . 2017 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-062171-1 . en.
  4. Book: Shimizu . Karli . Overseas Shinto Shrines: Religion, Secularity and the Japanese Empire . Rambelli . Fabio . 2022-10-06 . Bloomsbury Academic . 978-1-350-23498-7 . London New York (N.Y.) Oxford . English.
  5. Kōji . Suga . 2010 . A Concept of "Overseas Shinto Shrines": A Pantheistic Attempt by Ogasawara Shōzō and Its Limitations . Japanese Journal of Religious Studies . 37 . 1 . 47–74 . 0304-1042 . 27822899.
  6. Book: Ponsonby-Fane, R. A. B. . Studies In Shinto & Shrines . 2016-05-11 . Routledge . 978-1-138-98322-9 . 1st . en . Oyamato Jinja.
  7. Nelson . John . 1994 . Land Calming and Claiming Rituals in Contemporary Japan . Journal of Ritual Studies . 8 . 2 . 19–40 . 0890-1112 . 44398814.