Hangul: | 산신 |
Hanja: | 山神 |
Rr: | Sansin |
Mr: | Sanshin |
C: | 山神 |
P: | shānshén |
Kanji: | 山の神 |
Kana: | やまのかみ |
Romaji: | Yama no Kami |
Qn: | sơn thần thần núi |
Chunom: | 神 |
Chuhan: | 山神 |
Mountain Gods (山神) are Asian tutelary deities associated with mountains.[1] They are related to landlord deities and tudigongs and City Gods.
They are well-known in Korea and some prominent Chinese mountains have shrines to similar deities in the Daoist traditions, called Shanshen 山神.The Japanese equivalent is the Yama-no-Kami (山の神; also pronounced as yamagami) and the Vietnamese equivalent is Sơn thần (山神).
Houtu is the overlord of all the Tudigongs ("Lord of Local Land"), Sheji ("the State"), Shan Shen ("God of Mountains"), City Gods ("God of Local City"), and landlord gods worldwide.
In China, legends about Shanshen 山神have a long history. The Classic of Mountains and Seas(Chinese: 山海经), which was written more than 2,000 years ago, has already recorded various legends about Shanshen. The Taiping Guangji (Chinese:太平广记) also contains the story of Dayu, who imprisoned the Shangzhang clan and the Dulu clan, among otherShanshen. The book Wuzang Shanjing (Chinese:五藏山经)also contains a detailed description of the appearance of the mountain gods.
Ancient Chinese people worshipped mountains by deifying them. From the Shanshen
Chinese mountain deities include the deities of the Five Sacred Mountains of China.
Sanshin or Sansin are local mountain-spirits in Korean Shamanism and folk-beliefs. In South Korea, most Buddhist temples and major Shamanic-shrines, and some traditionalist villages, have a dedicated shrine called a sanshin-gak or an altar called a sanshin-dan dedicated to the local sanshin. This nature-deity is typically represented in the enshrined icons (paintings and/or statues) as an elder male (in rare cases, mature female) figure in royal-Confucian clothing, always accompanied by at least one tiger and a Korean Red Pine tree. There are many other symbols being held by the Sanshin, offered to him by servants or in the backgrounds of the more elaborate paintings, derived from Oriental Daoism, Buddhism, Neo-Confucianism, shamanic-folklore and Korean 'spiritual-ethnic nationalism' -- making these multi-religious icons unique in the entire world.[2] [3]
The Sanshin faith is interpreted in the folk scene as a belief devoted to the mountain gods. The mountain's beauty, its mystery, and the perceived shape that soars toward the sky are combined to inspire mountain worship on an emotional level. The upper mountain slopes, cliffs and peaks are seen as is the realm of the spirits and the places to communicate with them and attain visions or enlightenment. The faith that the mountain is believed-in as a mystical body that provides abundance and protection is very ancient in all Korea, and continues today in public or private Sanshin-je (mountain-spirit ceremonies) Seonang-gut (tutelary-deity rituals). When the mountain is located between Heaven and the earth where human beings live, and serves as a link between those two worlds, it is believed to be a representation of the universal world mountain, thought by traditional religions like Hinduism, Buddhism and Geomancy to rise at the center of the world.[4]
There are particular shamanic-folklore individual Sanshins, such as Eunje-san Seongmo (Hangul: 운제산성모; Hanja: 雲梯山聖母), who is the wife of Namhae Yong-wang or Dragon King of the South Sea, Jiri-san Seongmo Cheonwang (Hangul: 지리산성모천왕) or Exquisite-Wisdom Mountain Holy-Mother Heaven-king, and Mireuk Sanshin Halmi (Hangeul: 미륵산신할미) or Future-Buddha Mountain-spirit Grandma, to name just a few.
Such deities are officially sanctioned symbols of Korean reunification, and are possibly moving towards being used as symbols of environmental preservation[5]
Yama-no-Kami (山の神) is the name given to a kami of the mountains of the Shinto religion of Japan.[6] These can be of two different types. The first type is a god of the mountains who is worshipped by hunters, woodcutters, and charcoal burners. The second is a god of agriculture who comes down from the mountains and is worshipped by farmers. This kami is generally considered as a goddess, or a female deity.[7]
A Kannabi is often associated with Mountain Gods. It is a natural area including a mountain which acts as a Shintai for a Kami.[8]
Yama-no-Kami appearing in Japanese mythology include:
Some of the most popularly worshiped mountain deities in Vietnam