Kubizuka

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Kubizuka (首塚, literally neck mound in Japanese, often translated as head tomb) is a burial mound built in Japan with purpose of rest for the souls whose heads were severed because they were killed in battles and fights, captured, or punished by beheadings.

In Japan war performances were verified by identifying the heads of those killed in the battle; in order to console those heads, many kubizuka were built.

There are kubizuka enshrining a single person (like an enemy samurai commander), so they do not become a vengeful onryō later, and kubizuka enshrining many soldiers killed in one battle (huge one like the Battle of Sekigahara) together, even though they were zohyo (common soldiers); a great number of both types of kubizuka still exist throughout Japan.

Related subjects[]

Mimizuka (耳塚, ear mound, an alteration of the original hanazuka 鼻塚, nose mound[1][2][3] ) is a tomb where the noses of the killed Korean and Chinese soldiers and civilians[4] in the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–1598) were gathered and buried as the substitute of heads, because it was impossible to bring back the severed heads from overseas; it has the same symbolic meaning as kubizuka. It is located near the front of present-day Toyokuni Shrine (Kyoto), and originally was in front of the gate of Hoko-ji Temple in Higashiyama Ward in Kyoto.

Kubizuka across Japan[]

References[]

  1. ^ Cho, Chung-hwa (1996). Dashi ssunum imjin waeran-sa (A Revelation of the History of the Imjin War). Seoul: Hakmin-sa. According to Cho Chung-hwa, this name change was made by the government-sponsored scholar Hayashi Rasan (1583–1657) in the early years of the Tokugawa era.
  2. ^ Hawley, Samuel (2005). The Imjin War: Japan's Sixteenth Century Invasion of Korea and Attempt to Conquer China. Royal Asiatic Society. p. 501. ISBN 89-954424-2-5.
  3. ^ The Inseparable Trinity: Japan's Relations with China and Korea, (in The Cambridge History of Japan. Vol. 4, Early Modern Japan). Cambridge University Press. 1991. pp. 235–300. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521223553.007.
  4. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (2002). Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War 1592–1598. Cassell. p. 230. ISBN 0-304-35948-3. Motoyama Yasumasa's account does not fail to mention that many of the noses and ears interred therein were not of fighting soldiers but ordinary civilians, because `Men and women, down to newborn infants, all were wiped out, none was left alive. Their noses were sliced off and pickled in salt.'
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