02 125 191 PDF
02 125 191 PDF
02 125 191 PDF
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99 Kuroki-zukuri House logs of the porch have also not been attached by nails but
lashed together by rope. This is probably intended to be a
Houses made from wood with practically no alterations depiction of a poor house of the times. In front of the house,
made from timber in its natural state were known as kuroki- on a support made of tree branches, is a small votive water
zukuri houses. When an important personage such as the container. As the house has no walls, nor even screen or lat-
emperor would use such a place to spend the night on his ice shutters standing in their place, it is probably not a house
way to exile, then the house would be known as a kuroki no used for actual dwelling. A priest is reading what appears to
gosho, or a kuroki palace. The house in the picture is of such a be a prayer inside the house. As he is not wearing formal
construction, with a roof made of grass thatching and the clothing, and merely has a kesa on over his ordinary kokui,
ridgepole even made of hay wound with rope. The support we may assume that this is not a special occasion; rather, it is
posts and porch are made from unaltered natural logs, while merely a very ordinary scene of everyday life.
the posts are attached to each other by means of rope. The
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101 Tatami 1
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square pillar
threshold
3 wooden floor
Tatami makes an appearance in the early dictionary Wamyō
4 tatami
ruijūshō, and was originally a temporary matting which was 5 kōrai pattern cloth edging
either rolled up as in this picture or folded and piled up when 6 man rolling up tatami
not in use. It featured decorative edgings on the long edges. 7 untidy hair
The Tsutsumi Chūnagon monogatari makes reference to “bro- 8 sleeveless kimino
9 hakama
cade edging, kōrai edging (a design featuring black flower
patterns on a white background), ungen edging and purple
edging”, while the Makura no sōshi (Pillow Book) also men-
tions ungen edging. The most prized tatami edgings were the
kōrai and ungen styles, which were only allowed to be used in
imperial buildings or temples, or in the half-mats in front of
religious alcoves in other buildings. The tatami in this pic-
ture has white edging with black patterns, indicating that it is
of the kōrai style. There were two different types within this
category: the daimon, which was only to be used by high-
ranking imperial officials, and the komon, which lower-ranked
aristocrats would use, and which we can see in this picture.
The man in the sleeveless garment rolling up the tatami is
probably a servant. A passage from the Makura no sōshi
detailing the beauty of the patterns on tatami edging indi-
cates that these were considered objects of great beauty in
this era.
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2 sleeveless kimono (with the right side over the left) 106 Loincloth
3 obi
4 loincloth This is a depiction of an oni, or demon, from the depiction
of the six stages of life in Scroll 8. Wearing a chihaya and a
loincloth, he is dragging the dead by their hair. The word
fundoshi, meaning loincloth, is extremely old, appearing in
the Wamyō ruijūshō and in Volume 16 of the Man’yōshū, in
which a beggar’s song talks of using a loincloth as makeshift
reins for a horse. Indeed, this was common practice, and loin-
cloths were also referred to as tazuna, or reins, in the
Yōshabako and the Moritake senku. Loincloths were used as a
form of clothing from long ago, and their use was not con-
fined to Japan but spread throughout south-east Asia as well.
As the “six stages of life” genre originated in China, it is prob-
able that such garments were worn in China also.
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107 Habaki
Habaki are a type of leggings, also known as kyahan, which
cover the shins from below the knee, and were in use from
very early in Japanese history. Evidence exists that this term
was used in the Heian era, in its listing in the dictionary
Wamyō ruijūshō. This work defines habaki as being made
from woven yew tree bark and worn when traveling, but as
the Ryōnogige refers to red habaki and white habaki, and the
Engishiki refers to crimson and white habaki, they were clear-
ly also made of cloth. This picture features cloth habaki.
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1 retainer
2 kanmuri (saiei)
108 Habaki
3 oikake
4 kachie Habaki, a type of leggings, were made of a wide variety of
5 sword materials. As explained earlier, they were commonly made of
6 sashinuki yew, but it is reported in the Engishiki that on the occasion of
7 leggings (habaki) the greeting of clan representatives on New Year’s Day or at
8 bow
an enthronement, retainers would serve their masters wear-
ing habaki made of cattail, and hemp shoes. Further, the
Butsugu shōzokushō notes that it was customary for horse
attendants and cart attendants to wear straw habaki. The
retainers in this picture are wearing saiei-style kanmuri and
what appear to be straw habaki. Their footwear are difficult to
make out, but are probably of straw. In this way, yew, straw,
and cattail were all used as material for habaki, while palm
wood was later used for the same purpose. These materials
would all be woven to make the habaki. Wearing these haba-
ki was said to make the legs feel lighter and traveling easier,
so they were often used on long journeys. However, habaki
made of cloth also began to gain in popularity over time, and
particularly as women in the Kyōto area and the west of Japan
did not wear any skirts from the Edo period onward, cloth
leggings known as kyahan came to be the norm there.
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1 retainer
109 Habaki 2 kanmuri (saiei)
3 kariginu
These two are retainers responsible for leading master 4 sashinuki
horses. They are wearing kanmuri of the saiei style, as well 5 bow
as oikake, kariginu and sashinuki. As in the previous picture, 6 leggings (habaki)
they appear to be wearing habaki made from straw, but in 7 shoe
8 oikake
this case they are clearly wearing shoes on their feet. As we
can see here, woven habaki of this style were left unwoven
and loose at the bottom. Not only did this serve to prevent
sand and other debris from entering the shoes, but also pro-
tected against rain and snow. Even today, such habaki can be
seen in the snowy regions of Japan. The Kokon chomonjū
includes a passage which describes Fujiwara no Sanesada’s
trip to Kumano to pray, in which he was said to wear “straw
shoes and habaki for his long walk”, which indicates that this
style was standard for a long journey.
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110 Long-handled Umbrella portion itself is made of oiled paper, silk or sedge; at the time
a variety of materials was used, and many umbrellas were
This is from Scroll 6, depicting the scene in which made of sedge if they were not intended to keep out the rain.
Sugawara no Michizane, having become the god of thunder, Naturally, the umbrella was made so that it could be folded.
attacks the Emperor’s house again. This is a depiction of a As this umbrella was for use in the court, it was probably
low-ranked courtier with his sleeves tucked up, wearing a made of silk or oiled paper. The length of the handle is
tate-eboshi and carrying a sword and a long-handled umbrella, between two and two and a half meters.
fleeing the scene. The umbrella has been opened, and
although most of it is off the page as a result, it is probably of
a type known as a tsumaori, or umbrella with its brim curved
downward. While the framework of the umbrella is almost
identical to those in use today, the handle featured a small
ring to keep the umbrella up. The handle has been lacquered
in black, and since no joints are visible, it must be made of
wood rather than bamboo. It is unclear whether the umbrella
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111 Chopping Board, Cooking Chopsticks used in the preparation of fish and meat dishes. In this pic-
ture, the chopsticks appear to have forked ends. Typically, in
This is one of the pictures of hell from the Rokudōe (illustra- Japan, cooking chopsticks were of about one shaku in length,
tions of the six realms of rebirth) of Scroll 7, in which an oni and were held in the left hand to keep fish or meat in place
has placed a dead man upon a chopping board and is cutting for cutting with a knife held in the right hand. It appears that
him into pieces. Chopping boards were used when cooking touching the food directly with one’s hands was not common-
fish or meat. Reference to the use of chopping boards for the ly practiced. Incidentally, the depiction of the prisoner with
preparation of fish and birds for eating are made in the his hands tied behind his back and his neck fixed in a pillory
Utsuho monogatari and the Konjaku monogatarishū, in which is not merely a fancy of the artist, but reflects the punitive
Mimasaka no kuni no Kami is made to stop the practice of practice of the age.
live sacrifices by a hunter. Cooking chopsticks were also
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3 resting on chin on hands 16 barefoot 112 Drinking Party
4 kosode 17 fruit
5 man singing 18 wide-sleeved kimono This is a depiction of the human realm from the Rokudōe. It
6 fruit 19 sake barrel is intended to suggest that enjoyable and relaxed drinking
7 paper 20 porch parties such as this one are nothing more than a dream. A
8 man singing 21 threshold
9 narrow-sleeved kimono 22 pillar woman is giving birth in the adjacent room, but this is not an
10 yonobakama 23 plank door official party to celebrate this event. The retainers of the
11 man dozing 24 porch household are simply celebrating informally as they see fit.
12 boring chest 25 sunoko Everyone is relaxed, and drinking sake, eating whatever hap-
13 fish (ayu?) 26 short supporting post
pens to be available with no formal trays, and the dishes are
used at random to accompany their drink.
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1 plank bridge
2 main post
3 railings
4 bridge plank
5 stake
6 horizontal planks to prevent to slippage
7 beam
8 moat
9 ikan
10 hō
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120 Wooden Bridge soil kept back by stakes driven in and horizontal planks
placed on the flanks of the moat. Support beams have then
There were many different types and styles of bridge built been wedged between the opposing banks to ensure that the
for safe passage across water. This picture is of a bridge out- pressure from the soil does not cause the wooden banks to
side the residence of Sugawara no Koreyoshi, Michizane’s break. The bridge is wooden; most probably round logs were
father and a great scholar who achieved the qualifications of first placed across the moat, which were in turn covered with
monjō hakase and tōgū gakushi, before going on to become a the planks we can see in this picture. The bridge has railings
state official and achieving the third rank. His house, known on both sides, which run from main posts on either side.
as the Sugawara-no-in, was located to the south of Kade-no- While this is an extremely common type of bridge often seen
kōji in Karasuma-ōji. It was said to be an entire city block in even today, it is of great interest to discover that such bridges
size, which means it was fairly substantial. There was an were already being built in the Heian era. As the moat is very
outer moat around the property, with a raised earthen wall narrow, there is no need for mid-bridge support posts in this
around the house itself. This is a good representation of the case. The practice of keeping back soil with wooden planks
houses of aristocrats of this era, but the moat around this one on the edges of moats or ditches can still be widely seen
is distinctive in that it is not banked with stone, but has the today.
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122 Adze are made by blacksmiths in Yamato-ōji and near the Inari
shrine.” This description accurately fits the adze in the pic-
This is a depiction of hell from Scroll 7. An oni is scraping ture. In the same work it says that the adze is used to shape
away at a dead person with an adze. The adze was known by the wood. Until the early modern age, there were no shaping
different names in different areas of Japan. In the Wamyō saws or jack-planes, so everything from the construction of a
ruijūshō it is written as te-ono. In the Kantō region it is known square post to the smoothing out of a plank of wood required
as a chōna, while in Kansai it is known as a chon’no. In the the use of an adze before the finishing of the job with a small-
Yōshūfushi it is described as “an object used by craftsmen er chisel-like implement. The dead person’s body has been
with a curved blade of around five sun in diameter and with a marked by a rope dipped in ink, along the lines of which the
two shaku wooden handle. One holds a piece of wood firmly oni is carving. Depictions of hell frequently feature such
between one’s legs and uses both hands on the adze handle tools, but it is thought they were all in actual use by crafts-
to shape the wood. This is known as a chōna or an ono. They men and tradesmen at the time.
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124 Rope Dipped in Ink the oni on the left is pulling the rope in the air ready to
release it, while the oni on the right is holding the other end
This is a depiction of hell from Scroll 7, in which two oni down, in place of a pin. This method was used from very
are using a rope dipped in ink to draw lines on a dead person. early on as the most efficient means of drawing a long
Such ink-ropes were used from long ago and feature in the straight line. It is thought that this technique came across
Wamyō ruijūshō as “a metaphor for anything on a very from the continent at the same time as the architectural tech-
straight line”. An inkpot was required for the use of an ink- niques used for building temples, shrines and palaces, but
rope. In this picture, the inkpot is under the knee of the oni this is unproven. Mention of ink-ropes is made in the fifth vol-
on the left. Cotton or some other substance would be dipped ume of the Man’yōshū, proving the extent of their history.
in the inkpot, and then the rope would be drawn through this “The task completed, on the day of return, as through the
ink-stained cotton. The opposite end of the rope is tied gods had set an ink-rope across the ship’s bow to guide it, the
around a spool. The rope would have a pin attached to one ship will sail straight from the cape of Chika to the shores of
end, which would be driven into the wood, after which, with Ōtomo Mitsu.” The inkpot would also have placed in it a
the rope in place, the rope would be pulled up and allowed to small length of split bamboo known as a sumisashi which
strike the wood, leaving behind a clear mark. In this picture, would be used in place of a brush.
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125 Winnow
A man wearing a headscarf known as an eri-bōshi, a kosode
and a sleeveless kimono over the top of this is on his knees
using a winnow. The winnow he would have used has not
changed up until today. There is a record of a winnow being
bought for two sheaves of rice in Kuwabara no shō in
Echizen (Fukui Prefecture today) in the Tōdaiji Temple docu-
ments of the seventh year of Tenpyōshōhō (755), indicating
the extent of their history. Winnows were usually made of
bamboo, wisteria or black kudzu vine. It is noted that at the
Kōtai Jingū in Ise (Mie Prefecture today), winnows from
Nabari in Iga (Mie Prefecture today) were used. It is said that
there were 360 chōbu of fields growing bamboo, wisteria and
black kudzu in Iga. According to the Engishiki, Yamato also
produced winnows, but it is thought that originally each
farmer would have made his own. Winnows were used both
for carrying harvested crops and for sifting out chaff, pebbles
and the like from the crops when there was no wind. The
crops would be tossed in the air and caught again in the win-
now, and the gust thereby generated would sweep away the
unwanted materials. This process was called hiru. This was a
necessary process for all farmers.
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130 Fallen Man and Running Man difficult for us to know what kinds of hairstyles were used.
This is one of the few resources we have to indicate
This is a scene of some retainers fleeing from the lightning hairstyles, and it shows that hairstyles, too, differed accord-
striking the Seiryōden. One man has fallen over, while the ing to rank.
other is running away. The kanmuri of the fallen retainer has
a saiei and decorations known as oikake on either side. His
hair has been tied in a vertical topknot. From this and the
previous picture we may deduce that such topknots were nor-
mal at this time. The running man wearing a kariginu and a
nubakama wears his hair loose; ox-herds and the like would
wear their hair in this way with no headwear. However, this
man is wearing footwear, and ox-herds were normally bare-
foot. When wearing an eboshi, this man would probably have
tied his hair up or put it in a topknot. Either a nae-eboshi or a
cloth headwear would have been worn on top of such hair. As
headwear were worn on an everyday basis at this time, it is
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131 People Fleeing and Carrying Belongings apron tied around the waist, and has shikire-zōri with an
untied heel on one foot. The child accompanying her has sim-
This is a scene from the housefire in Scroll 8. Three adults ply slipped her arms through the sleeves of her kimono, with-
are fleeing the fire, each carrying objects on their heads. On out tying it at the waist. She has short hair, but is nonetheless
the far left is a man. We have already seen a man carrying an a girl. The woman on the right is also wearing a kosode and is
object on his head. While this is an emergency situation, it is barefoot, with a bundle on her head probably containing
thought that this technique was used on an everyday basis. kimono. This scene also features individuals carrying things
However, as a topknot made such a method impossible, it on their back, shoulders, and in their hands, but the picture
was only practiced by a certain sector of the population: here features only those using their heads to carry belong-
specifically, priests or men of the lower classes with their ings.
hair let down. We may assume that the topless man on the
left of the picture is a priest. He is carrying on his head what
appears to be kyōgi, thin pieces of wood used for writing
sutras on, in a shallow rectangular basket. The woman in the
center of the picture is carrying a bucket on her head. Its
contents are unclear. She is wearing a kosode with a white
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132 Holding and Carrying on the Back left arm is of interest. This technique, which can be seen still
today in south-east Asia, prevailed in Japan as well at this
These two pictures are from Scrolls 2 and 8 respectively. time.
The top picture depicts four people: a woman in kazuki style The bottom picture is of a man carrying a woman on his
and a man with a priest-style zukin and a sedge hat on his back, using a horizontally held sword to support her. It was
back, and a man holding a child behind them. The fact that usual to employ some means of support when carrying some-
he is holding the child under his left shoulder with just his one on one’s back.
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134 Bystanders Watching Event the center is wearing a tate-eboshi, kariginu, nubakama and
shoes. The individual peering through the fork in the tree
This is a depiction from Scroll 2 of a group of people watch- appears to be a woman, and she wears no headwear. It was
ing Michizane practice archery at the mansion of Miyako no almost guaranteed that when aristocrats would travel or hold
Yoshika, from behind a tree. When such activities were held some sort of event, ordinary people would gather in this fash-
in the mansions of aristocrats, it was common practice to ion, as testified by the frequency of such depictions in the pic-
allow ordinary people to enter into the grounds to watch. ture scrolls. Word of mouth concerning these events would
These would often include women, children and priests. The then rapidly spread throughout the community. Incidentally,
three people in this picture are not necessarily of high rank. this is thought to be the first depiction of a fan with a rising
The man on the left is wearing an eboshi and a kariginu, and sun painted on it in any picture scroll.
holding a fan with the rising sun depicted on it. The man in
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1 oxcart 11 sashinuki
2 shaft 12 barefoot
3 yoke 13 sitting on the ground
4 shiji 14 ori-eboshi
5 sagiashi 15 kosode
6 rope 16 sitting with one knee up
7 lying on the stomach on the ground 17 child hanging from the cart shaft
8 tate-eboshi 18 untidy hair
9 resting chin on hands 19 sleeveless kimono
10 hitatare? 20 playing on the shaft
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137 Blowing One’s Nose paper used their hands in this manner. This would have been
a very common scene in everyday life.
These pictures are from Scrolls 2 and 4. The picture on the
right is of Michizane’s fiftieth birthday celebrations at the
Kisshōin Temple. The priest holding the piece of white paper
to his face is blowing his nose. Individuals of high rank used
white paper for this purpose, as indicated by several pictures
of this type. The man lying in front of the priest is sleeping
with his head on the threshold. Depictions of birthday rituals
often involve attendees in a variety of very relaxed poses,
seemingly oblivious to the formal proceedings. This very
informal and free attitude seems to have been the style at the
time for such events.
The picture on the left is of a retainer wiping his nose with
his hand in the scene in which Michizane mounts the oxcart
for his journey of exile to Dazaifu. Those who did not use
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1 priests crying
2 shaved head
138 People Crying
3 stripping to waist
4 white robe (kosode) This is a depiction of people crying in sadness at the depar-
5 barefoot ture of Michizane for Tsukushi (Fukuoka Prefecture today)
6 crying with one’s hand to one’s face in Scroll 4. The top picture features four priests sitting on the
7 crying with one’s hand on one’s head ground and crying. One has the back of his hand held against
8 crying while looking upward
9 supporting the body from behind with one’s hands his face. The use of the back of the hand to wipe away tears
10 sitting cross-legged and to wipe one’s nose was seen as early as this era. The bot-
11 crying while lying on one’s back tom picture features the same custom, as well as one other
12 tate-eboshi man looking up and crying unrestrainedly, similar to what
13 beard
14 kosode
can be seen today. Crying with one’s hand on one’s head was
15 ori-eboshi also a common crying custom. While not seen here, in the
16 wide-sleeved kimono original scroll there was also a man crying lying on the
17 nae-eboshi ground.
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1 tate-eboshi
2 kanmuri 140 Varieties of Beards
3 oikake
4 kanmuri (without oikake)
The Kitano Tenjin engi features an extremely high number
5 moustache and goatee beard
6 moustache with beard on cheek and jaw of men with facial hair; not only that, each is depicted in a
7 moustache and goatee beard very individual manner. The Japanese have never been a par-
8 moustache and beard on jaw ticularly hirsute race, so there are a number of men in the
9 moustache scrolls who have no facial hair. It seems that those who were
able to grow their facial hair did so as a kind of fashion acces-
sory, but there are few examples of richly detailed cheek or
jaw beards in picture scrolls. There are just two examples of
the full beard in the above picture; the remainder are mostly
thin moustaches or small goatee beards. Such facial hair was
occasionally kept in shape by shaving, but traditionally
excess hair would be plucked. The fact that facial hair was
rare among the lower classes was not necessarily because
they shaved it off. Incidentally, the common face shape of the
time was rounder than today’s, and often bottom-heavy. This
may well have been a particular trait of the Kyōto region.
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142 Prayer for Childbirth a yamabushi is stationed outside the birthing room to pray for
a safe birth. The extent of the ritual involved enables us to
This is a continuation of the previous picture from Scroll 8. perceive just how major an event childbirth was.
As the birth drew near, almost everything in and around the As regards the heigushi, a variety of styles were used. From
birthing room would be changed so that it was white in color. the fact that they are depicted elsewhere in a scene of hell in
Curtain hanging, folding screen, screen stand, tatami edging which the gaki, or hungry ghosts, are eating, we can see that
and the like would all be changed for white replacements, as they were also used in Buddhist rituals.
would the inner and outer garments of the women involved:
karaginu, omotegi, uchiginu, uchigi, hitoe and mo would all be
changed to white, a white hakama would be worn over a
crimson hakama, and white fans would be used. This would
continue until the seventh night after the birth. Here, howev-
er, an onmyōji, or ritual-performer, is dressed in colored
clothing. He has placed a small table in the garden near the
house, upon which he has erected seven heigushi, or votive
sticks used in rituals. He is reading a prayer. While it is not
visible in this picture, in the original a type of priest known as
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143
9
5 11
10
6 1
12
2 7
143 Invalid are a number of examples of the sick wearing headbands, but
there also was a custom of wearing a headband while sleep-
This is a scene from the six realms of rebirth series of ing. In the Tōhoku region, it was common practice up until
Scroll 8, depicting the struggles of human existence. The fairly recently for old women and girls to wear headbands
man in the center of the picture is extremely ill, and has known either as binjime or hachimaki while sleeping. This
called for a priest to pray because he knows he will not sur- custom is said to have arisen from a desire to keep the pillow
vive. There are in fact three priests in the picture in total, and bedclothes clean from hair wax, but whatever the origin,
although all but one are not visible in this extract. He is read- it is extremely old. In cases of illness, both men and women
ing sutras at the bedside of the ill man. His raised collar indi- would commonly wear headbands. The woman by the invalid
cates that he is of the Tendai sect. The invalid is lying on his with her sleeve drawn over her mouth is intended to be
back with a headband tied around his temple. He has expressing sadness. Such poses were commonly adopted by
removed his eboshi. Some historians theorize that eboshi were women up until the late Meiji period.
kept on even while reclining, but the picture scrolls feature a
number of cases in which people lying down have removed
their headwear. In this picture it appears that the man has
removed his eboshi and wears a headband due to the fact that
he is ill, but this is not necessarily due to illness. Also, there
22 10
24
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145 Burial such as hoes, shovels and spades are all being used in this
instance to dig the hole. When working, people would some-
This is a depiction of a burial from Scroll 8, and will be con- times use cords to tie back their sleeves, or tuck up their gar-
sidered in conjunction with the preceding picture. Burials in ments. Therefore, it is also clear that the diggers are all wear-
Japan were conducted at night from long ago, with only a ing loincloths, and are dressed in white. White clothing was
small number of people carrying the body out to its burial used in all significant events, such as birth and death.
spot. Guards carrying a halberd and others carrying torches
would always accompany the group. Those carrying the cof-
fin would wear a white hitai-eboshi. A priest would also
accompany the coffin, ringing a bell. The halberd and paddle-
shaped sticks held by the guards were intended to keep evil
spirits at bay. While cremation became increasingly popular
from the Heian era, burial continued to be common as well.
Further, while deep holes were dug for burial, such as in this
picture, occasionally no hole would be dug and the coffin
would be simply left on the ground. Agricultural implements
2 4
1 corpse
2 crow
146 Cemetery
3 dog
4 clothing This is a depiction of a desolate cemetery from Scroll 8.
5 rough straw matting Some coffins have been buried deep in the earth, as in the
6 sotoba previous picture, but other dead bodies have simply been left
7 stake in cemetery fence on the ground. These bodies have not been put in a coffin,
but merely left on top of a bed of straw on their backs, cov-
ered in a kimono. The heads of the dead have been shaved,
while crows and dogs are picking at the bodies. The body in
the lower half of the picture has almost entirely been
devoured by dogs. It is thought that this sort of treatment for
the dead bodies of commoners was typical for this time. It
seems that those for whom sotoba and mounds of earth were
created were in the minority.
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147
1 tamaya
2 ridge
147 Tamaya 3 plank roof
4 sotoba
In cases in which bodies were buried, the cemetery would
have in one corner a tamaya. A tamaya was a building to
which the coffin would initially be carried, where it would
stay while offerings of fragrant flowers would be made,
before being buried. This building seems a little small for a
tamaya of this era, but in later times, individual tamaya would
be constructed over every grave upon burial. In time, these
would sometimes develop into temples. In front of the
tamaya are sotoba, upon which there is writing in Sanskrit.
These are to console the dead, and they have been lined up
quite close together. This sort of scene can be found today at
the Oku-no-in at Mount Kōya in Wakayama or Osore-zan in
Aomori, but originally this would have been a common sight
at any cemetery. The vines growing all over the sotoba sug-
gest the desolation of the place; indeed, at this time, cemeter-
ies were extremely lonely and foreboding places to which
people would never generally go.
148 Sotoba
This is a depiction from Scroll 8. The custom of placing
sotoba on top of graves is thought to have become common-
place from around the tenth century. In the entry of the third
day of the fifth month in the third year of Tenroku (972) in
the Jie Daisōjō goyuigou, it is noted that “a temporary sotoba
should be erected, under which a hole of three to four shaku
in length should be dug, into which the bones are to be
placed, before being refilled. A new stone sotoba is to be
made within 49 days to replace the wooden one, and this will
be used as a marker for his disciples when they visit his
grave.” The role of the sotoba is explained clearly here. It
served as a grave-marker, and would eventually be replaced
by a stone version. The one in this picture is wooden, so we
may assume that it marks a fresh grave. However, poor peo-
ple could not replace the wooden sotoba with a stone one, and
therefore would leave the wooden one there permanently. A
mountain bird has alighted upon the sotoba, probably in
search of human flesh to eat.
1 mountain bird While sotoba were erected in cemeteries in this fashion,
2 sotoba similar prayer monuments, known as kuyōhi, began to be
built in temple grounds or on roadsides from around the
same time. It is a combination of sotoba and kuyōhi which has
evolved into modern day headstones.
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149
4
3
1 gaki
2 specially shaped rice (gakimeshi)
3 small dish
4 table
5 votive paper
149 Gaki and Gakimeshi while the Shōhōnenjo-kyō sutra lists 36 different types of gaki.
Gaki were believed to be the souls of those who had failed to
This is a depiction of a gaki, or “hungry ghost” of Buddhist reach Nirvana because of the impurity of their actions or
lore, from Scroll 8. The work Gaki zōshi discusses gaki in souls, and it was also believed that these gaki would possess
detail; the concept of the gaki spread throughout Japan with people who performed terrible acts, bringing about great
the arrival of Buddhism. The sutras known as Urabon-kyō, unhappiness. Gakimeshi, or rice for the gaki, would be
Shōhōnenjo-kyō and Enkōgakidarani-kyō all discuss gaki. The offered, along with votive sticks to keep the gaki at bay in
Urabon-kyō, in particular, features a story in which Mokuren times of death or other such occurrences.
Sonja rescues his mother, who has an evil heart, from becom-
ing a gaki. This story was also represented in pictorial form,
with the production of a work known as the Mokuren
Henbun. Henbun as a genre were a type of picture scroll from
China, the earliest of which were discovered in the area of
Dunhuang. Dunhuang lies on the transport network to north-
west India, and it is thought that Buddhism entered China
from India via this route. The concept of the gaki, therefore,
also entered China from India with the advent of Buddhism,
and then on to Japan. The Man’yōshū features poems which
suggest that statues of gaki were erected in major temples,
1
5
9
2 4
6
11
3 10
12
13
14
1 old man
2 eboshi
3 apron
4 hunched over through age
5 tate-eboshi
6 untidy hair
7 kosode
8 hakama
9 wearing one’s hair down
10 kosode
11 small table
12 apron
13 plank porch
14 pillar
150 World of Children child to visit the house of a rich man in Shibukawa. Gods and
Buddhas were said to borrow the shape of a child in order to
This is a picture from Scroll 8 of children, commonly depict- work wonders on the earthly plane. As a result, children were
ed in the picture scrolls. This frequent appearance of children considered very important, and allowed to do much as they
is significant. Most of the children depicted in these scrolls pleased. The characteristic of the depiction of children in the
lived in the Kyōto of the Heian period and middle ages, an scrolls is the great sense of freedom and fun they enjoyed.
era in which class distinctions and rituals and manners were Here, a boy is wearing an eboshi on top of his loose hair, and
of utmost importance; in this context they were free from is dressed in a kosode and hakama, pretending to be an adult.
such social constraints, and were free from the control of The girl has her hair down too, and has an apron tied around
adults. Not only was this freedom due to the lack of responsi- her waist and in carrying a small table at her side. This is in
bility required of children, but indeed it is believed that chil- fact a scene of a house-fire.
dren were seen as in some way sacred during this era. In
Scroll 1 of the Kitano Tenjin engi, a god is depicted in the
form of a child, visiting the house of Sugawara no Koreyoshi.
This visit brought about the birth of Michizane. In the
Kokawadera engi, also, the Senju Kannon transforms into a
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2
9 7
5
3
17
19
24
151 Children
21
These are depictions of children from Scrolls 2 and 6. The
picture on the top is of a child of the upper classes, with hair
cut at shoulder length and left hanging long. The middle pic-
18
ture is of two children with loose hair sitting cross-legged.
One is holding a fan. They are watching the celebrations for
Michizane’s fiftieth birthday at the Kisshōin Temple and imi-
tating the behavior of the retainers who are waiting for the
22 23
masters. The picture at the bottom is of a girl watching the 20
ceremony from beneath a porch.
11
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1
2
12
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5
152 Children to the courtier. He is carrying a fan in his left hand, with
which he is also grabbing the tip of the sword’s scabbard. It
This is Scroll 2, from the scene in which Michizane is prac- is not at all unusual for a child to be acting as an attendant to
ticing archery. The child is probably a servant. A courtier in a a high-ranking adult; some of these acted as chigo, or sexual
tate-eboshi and kariginu is seated in front and to the left of the partners to the man they served. In most cases they were
child, but cannot be seen in this picture. To the right of the good-looking boys kept as a sort of pet. There are many exam-
child is a man with a shaved head wearing a hitatare sitting ples of boys of this status in the Kitano Tenjin engi.
cross-legged. They are probably servants of the courtier
attending the practice just out of sight in this picture. There
is another child in a suikan just out of sight who is probably a
higher-ranked attendant. The child in this picture has his hair
let down but tied at the back, is wearing a wide-sleeved
kosode and is carrying a sword. The sword probably belongs
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153
1
4 3
2
5
6
7
1 man blowing a conch shell
2 kanbō
3 cord
4 conch shell
5 “Chinese-style” clothing 13 11
6 arm guard
7 waist band 8
8 hakama 14 9
9 shin-guard
10 shoe
11 saddle
12 stirrup 10
13 horse 15
14 reins 16
15 martingale
16 bit 12
17 messenger
18 tate-eboshi
19 kariginu
20 sashinuki
21 obi
22 sitting on one’s heels with knees together
23 message
24 balustrade
17
18
24
23
19
153 Conch Shell, Messenger
21
These pictures are from Scroll 8 and 1 respectively. There
were a wide variety of methods of long distance communica-
tion in ancient Japan, the most common of which were the
use of fire or sound, or the use of a messenger to send a writ-
ten message. For the use of light or sound, a code system 20
would be devised beforehand. One such technique was the
use of a conch shell, which could be blown into to produce a
loud sound. Above all, though, the use of a messenger was 22
the most common method of communication. Almost all
long-distance communication used this method; the only dis-
advantage is the long time this required. Conch shells were
often used over relatively short distances, and in battle.
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13
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12
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3
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10
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6 12
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157
12
10
4
11
5
3
13 7
6
8
6
2
1 thunder god
2 mallet
3 loincloth
4 hire
5 drums
6 lightning bolt
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157
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3
11
3
6
10
5
4
1 oxherd
2 suikan (patterned) 160 Ox
3 hakama
4 sitting cross-legged
5 straw sandals (waraji) The ox depicted in this scene is of the white-horned variety,
6 whip which appeared in the Sungyū ekotoba as a famous breed;
7 reins indeed, it was the first specified breed of cattle in Japan. The
8 ox reason they were specified as a particular breed was probably
9 horn (white)
10 curbstone
due to their rarity. After this, many other breeds came to be
11 wearing one’s hair down (tied) named. Judging from its horns, the ox in the picture appears
to have been presented to the emperor from Mikuriya in
Uno, Hizen. Mikuriya-gyū were large, with long horns, thick
legs, bones, skin and flesh. Many famous cattle from the era
were of this kind. In front of the ox sits an ox-herd. Ox-herds
were usually young men of seventeen or eighteen years of
age, but they were occasionally older.
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17
162 Boat well as an oar. The bottom of the boat has been dug out. This
is perhaps the most detailed representation of a boat in all of
The boat depicted in this picture is probably from the late the picture scrolls.
Heian period. It is a large boat designed for Inland Sea jour- At the very bow of the boat is a person known as a jisai,
neys, and was the one in which Michizane was exiled. who prayed for a safe voyage but who was sacrificed to pro-
Reference to Kenji Ishii’s book Japanese Boats reveals that tect the boat in times of danger. It is for this reason that he is
this boat is of a type known as a jun-kōzōsen, midway between clothed in white. Directly behind this is where the crew
the simple, hollowed log style of ancient times and the mod- would sleep under straw matting. Passengers would sleep in
ern, multi-piece design known as a kōzōsen. It demonstrates the main yakata, while the stern yakata was reserved for the
certain complexities of construction, notably the box-like ship’s captain and other important personnel, as well as the
design of the prow and the projecting flanks at the stern, helmsman.
which suggest links with later more sophisticated designs. From the end of the Heian era, ship-building techniques
The flanks of the boat are into two sections with the upper began to develop dramatically. Jun-kōzōsen were thus a first
part in wickerwork. Thwarts run through the flanks of the step in the development of ships for full-scale ocean voyages.
boat, creating lattice works upon which planks were placed to
create places for the rowers to sit. The main yakata, or hip-
shape roofed area, is a space for passengers, and is found
behind the main mast. The length of the yakata is roughly
five and a half meters, while its width is the entire width of
the boat. The roof is made of wooden planks. A second yaka-
ta is found behind the main one, in the stern, housing the
helmsman. There are posts known as tatsu in front of and
directly behind the main yakata. These are now known as
yokogami. These posts would be used for leaning the mast
against, or for tying the halyard to when the sails were up.
There is just one mast, which is collapsible when not in use.
The sail is made of woven straw, which made it heavy and dif-
ficult to handle, particularly when wet. Thus, to ensure the
stability of the boat, the oars would be used whenever possi-
ble. There are ten oars in all on the boat, which are each
made of a single piece of wood, and may be used as a pole as
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38
44
40
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45
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