- shamanism. En no Gyōja was
conferred the
posthumous title Jinben Daibosatsu (Great
Bodhisattva Jinben, 神変大菩薩) at a
ceremony held in 1799 to
commemorate the...
-
tentatively been
dated to 1831 or 1740 BCE.
Mandate of
Heaven "current text" (今本
jīnběn),
Bamboo Annals,
Records of Xia (夏記), "In the
seventh year (of King Fa's...
-
accessible at the time of the project.
Bamboo Annals, "current text" (今本
jīnběn),
Records of
Shang (殷紀), "五十一年,冬十一月戊子,周師渡盟津而還。王囚箕子,殺王子比干,微子出奔。" In the Book...
-
relationship to the
other versions is not known. The "current text" (今本
jīnběn) is a 2-scroll
version of the text
printed in the late 16th century. The...
- Raikō the "sake [which is]
divine elixir,
poisonous to demons" (神便鬼毒酒,
jinben kidoku shu)
which will rob the
ogres of
their ability to fly and stupefy...
-
which is
based on the ****anese
folklore concerning the
Great Bodhisattva Jinben Ozunu Enno, and it also has been
compared with
other titles in the same...
- miracle-worker and
mountain hermit En no Gyōja,
earthly incarnation of the
heavenly Jinben Daibosatsu,
raised the
child as his
disciple and
named him Utsunomiko, or...