File:Kan'on reigenki-Saikoku junrei 32-Omi kanonji.jpg

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Summary

Description
English: Ningyo mermaid appeared from water before Prince Shōtoku as he visited the reed plain at Ishideramura (石寺村) [in Ganmō district 蒲生郡], Ōmi Province. This serves as a foundation myth of the "Kan'onji temple" [sic.] of the province, usually identified as Kannonshō-ji (as Catigliogni 2021), but purported to be Ishibaji (石場寺 [sic.]) in Saigoku sanjusansho kannon reijōki zue[1] Upper scenery signed Hiroshige II, lower mermaid signedd Toyokuni III aka Kunisada.

  Castiglioni describes the image as being "gendered as a beautiful young lady with a blue carp tail protruding from the lower part of a white tunic, the turquoise stole of which shows a shining scaly design".[2]

  The visual rendition of it looking like the Kannon goddess is clearly an embellishment, and this ningyo, meaning "human-fish" likely did not have maiden's from in the original telling. It had turned into this half-fish form as bad karma for slaughtering in past life as a human, according to the accompanying text here, and other sources say it used to be a fisherman (presumably male) at Katada; this source is quoted by Castiglioni, but concerning a different matter: the "human-fish" upon death revealed to the Prince in a dream its corpse was floating on water; the cadaver was recovered and became a mummy relic on display at Kannonshō-ji.
Date 1858–1859
Source Mantei Ōga (1858–1859), “Saikoku junrei 32 ban Ōmi Kannonji / Ningyo”, in Kan'on reigenki[1], Toyokuni III aka Kunisada; Hroshge II (illustr.), Nanden Nisanshō (National Diet Library copy)
Author Author

三代目歌川豊国(歌川国貞)

Licensing

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This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

  1. https://www.wul.waseda.ac.jp/kotenseki/html/ha04/ha04_01807/index.html
  2. Castiglioni, Andrea (2021). "The Human-Fish". Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 48: 25–26. DOI:10.18874/jjrs.48.1.2021.1-44.

Captions

Ningyo mermaid appears before Prince Shōtoku (foundation myth of Kan'onji temple in Ōmi)

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current19:53, 19 August 2022Thumbnail for version as of 19:53, 19 August 20223,071 × 4,591 (1.96 MB)KiyoweapUploaded a work by {{author|Hiroshige II}} from {{citation|author=Mantei Ōga |author-link=:ja:万亭応賀<!-- 1818-1890 --> |author-mask=Mantei Ōga (text) |others=Hiroshige II (illustr.) |chapter=Saikoku junrei 32 ban Ōmi Kannonji / Ningyo |script-chapter=ja:西國順礼三拾二番近江観音寺(さいこくじゅんれいおふみかんおんじ)<!--西国巡礼三拾二番近江観音寺--> 人魚 |title=Kan'on reigenki |script-title=ja:観音霊験記<!--カンオンレイゲンキ--> |publisher=Nanden Nisanshō<!--南伝弐山庄--> |date=1858–1859<!--安政5–6-->|url=https://dl.ndl.go.jp/info:ndljp/pid/1313508}} (Nati...
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