Friday, February 5, 2016

xiv. Grave of the Nue (鵺塚) in Osaka or "Dead Nue" Part 2

Location: Miyakojima Ward (near subway Miyakojima Stn.), Osaka City; about 6 min. from Osaka + 3-4 min. walking time

Associated with: Nue aka "the Japanese chimera"

Yorimasa's defeat of the nue in 1153 is often referred to in Japanese as the nuetaiji (鵺退治), or literally, "nue extermination." It's an interesting turn of phrase, as the way the nue's body was handled often reminds me of times I'm called upon to dispose of panic-inducing insects in my house. The phrase that sums up that general feeling after a well-placed spray or swat would be something like, "Ew! Get rid of it!" And the best way to do that? Well, I can tell you that a toilet will do the trick in thoroughly removing a dead insect out of sight and out of mind. I am in this way a modern-day Yorimasa.

The people of Kyoto likewise once viewed their rivers as a vast flushing toilet, as reflected in the charming old saying, "Osaka drinks our toilet water." This is in reference to water from Lake Biwa flowing through Kyoto and into Osaka (and finally out into Osaka Bay). Sufficed to say, this is how Yorimasa dealt with the dead nue... yet another apparent case of the old capital letting Osaka deal with its shit.

The details differ slightly depending on the account. Yorimasa cut the nue's corpse into pieces, or didn't, and sent it down the Kamo River in either a dugout canoe or bamboo raft. Whatever the circumstances, the people of Kyoto were happy to be rid of a pest. The Kamo is the large river you see when you exit Shichijo, Kiyomizu-Gojo, Gion-Shijo and Sanjo stations to name a few. From there it eventually merges with the Katsuragawa (Katsura River), and that later joins the Yodo River, or Yodogawa. This was the route that the dead nue took Milo-and-Otis style until the craft finally washed ashore. The local folk gave the nue a proper burial and entombed it in a nuezuka (鵺塚), or a "nue mound."

Where the nue ended up is disputed, but the first site in terms of distance relative to Kyoto is in Miyakojima Ward, Osaka City. If you follow the Kamo, Katsuragawa and Yodo rivers, it indeed flows past the general area of where the mound lies, but the nearby Okawa River (大川), looks to be a closer and therefore better candidate, and in fact it is. Just before the Nagarabashi Bridge crosses the Yodogawa, the Okawa River abruptly branches south. The Okawa River here was once part of the original Yodogawa, which took a different route to the current Yodo River (which from this point is actually an artificial channel). The Nuezuka is just east of the Okawa River and near subway Miyakojima Stn.
Nansuitei Yoshiyuki, 1860 (Source: Tokyo Metro Library, https://www.library.metro.tokyo.jp/ via http://ukiyo-e.org)

When the nue washed ashore here in Osaka, the local folk first notified the head priest of nearby Boon-ji Temple (Google Map Search: "Boon-ji Temple Miyakojima" ...it's still there if you're super keen) before building the mound at his instruction. The original mound is thought to have been near the temple, and the story goes that it was torn down during the Meiji period. Deprived of its resting place, the nue's reawakened spirit began wreaking havoc on the local populace. Because of that, the mound was rebuilt in its current location in 1870. The actual shrine that you can see today was built by locals in 1957. (Remember the key points here because we'll see this basic series of events again later.) 

Comments: Miyakojima is a nice enough place and centrally located, but there is not a whole lot to do while you're there. That said, if you had even a spare hour at the end of the day, it's by no means a difficult trip to make. The mound is close to a Japanese-style shopping arcade, or shotengai. Like many such arcades, it's seen better days.

Getting There

The starting point on the Midosuji subway line is Umeda Stn. Our destination is Miyakojima Stn., also on the subway line.

The Osaka subway system is a crisscross of spaghetti, like many subway networks around the world. Where one line intersects with another it's possible to get off and change lines without exiting the station and voiding your ticket. Umeda Stn. is a little unique in this respect. Within walking distance are Nishi-Umeda Stn. (Yotsubashi Line) and Higashi-Umeda Stn. (Tanimachi Line). However, there are no tunnels or passageways within the stations connecting them and you need to physically exit one to enter the other. Unfortunately for us though, the quickest way to get to Miyakojima Stn. is to travel from Higashi-Umeda Stn. This would normally involve having to exit the station and buy another ticket.

If you are in the Osaka Station/Umeda area, but not stuck inside subway Umeda Stn., of course it's no problem. Follow the signs to the Tanimachi Line and/or Higashi-Umeda Stn. and you're good to go. If you have a ticket to get you to Miyakojima Stn. you may be able exit subway Umeda Stn. with your ticket in hand to enter back into Higashi-Umeda, but you need to be quick about it. First, go to the ticket gate of Umeda Stn., but don't put your ticket through the ticket wicket because it will eat it up and you'll never get it back. Instead, show it to the attendant at the window and in your most overbearing accented Japanese say "Higashi-Umeda, Miyakojima." If it worked, you'll be allowed to leave the station with your ticket in hand. Now follow the signs and go straight to Higashi-Umeda Stn., show your ticket to the attendant there and again say "Miyakojima." If that works, he'll wave you through and you can be on your merry way. However, be careful. If too much time has elapsed since you bought the ticket, you may not be allowed though.

The Tanimachi Line also has a direct connection in the south with Tennoji Stn. It takes longer, but you can jump on the subway there and go straight to Miyakojima Stn. in about 20 minutes. 

Getting Your Bearings at Miyakojima Station

The geometry around Miyakojima Stn. is a little odd, but all you do is go out Exit 1 and then take your second right and then the first right after that. That will put you inside the arcade. From there, take your third left to get to the mound. Refer to the map below.
Map courtesy of Google Maps

Here is a satellite view of the final left turn.

Map/image courtesy of Google Maps
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus


Driver Gragma (yokaitourbus "at" mail "dot" com)
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/yokaitourbus/

The Master List (Osaka)
http://yokaitourbus.blogspot.jp/2015/08/6-the-master-list-osaka.html

(yokai) Nue (鵺)
Site: Grave of the Nue, or Nuezuka (鵺塚) in Osaka
Nearest Station: Subway Miyakojima Stn. (都島駅)
Google Map Search: NA

Monday, January 25, 2016

xiii. The Pond of the Nue (鵺池) and the Nue Shrine (鵺大明神) or "Dead Nue" Part 1

Location: Kamigyo Ward (near subway Nijojo-mae Stn.), Kyoto City; about 50 min. from Osaka or about 15 min. from Kyoto + 15 min. walking time

Associated with: Nue aka "the Japanese chimera"

I am a bird trapped in a cage. My mind feels as helpless as a blind turtle holding on a floating piece of wood, just sinking in the darkness. Although I am just like sunken wood, I have never completely sunk. Why does my dead soul alone remain in this world?
From the Noh play "Nue" (source: http://www.the-noh.com)

We now come to the moment of the nue's death, marking its transition from one world into the next and also its transformation from an antagonist to a tragic but still-feared entity. The nue has almost as much presence in death as it did in life, as seen in the Noh dialog above (spoken by the deceased nue).

As you'll recall, in our last entry Yorimasa took aim and let his arrow fly into the center of the cloud. A terrible cry was heard and out of the vortex fell something to the ground. A retainer of Yorimasa's, a fellow by the name I no Hayata (his clan name is "I," pronounced the same as the letter "E"), rushed in to confront the thing. What he discovered was a wounded, writhing creature whose body was a disturbing mish-mash of animals... a monstrous chimera. Hayata bravely dealt the animal several finishing blows, and the nue was dead.
Utagawa Kuniyasu, Date Unknown (Source: Waseda University Theatre Museum, https://www.waseda.jp/enpaku/)

Almost immediately, the animal began inducing as much panic in death as it had in life. Yorimasa pulled his blood-stained arrow from the body, and fearing it somehow tainted or poisoned, rushed to wash it in a nearby pond. The remaining presence of the creature's dead body continued to induce dread, and it was deemed that such an impure thing could not remain in the capital. As for the area where the nue fell, it too became polluted and cursed, a place where people would fear to tread. It's now a park and children's playground.
 Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus

Nijo Park in central Kyoto contains some historical remnants marking the spot where the nue was thought to have fallen. Just north of the northwest corner of Nijo Castle, the park once stood as part of the original Heian Palace, over which the nue appeared.

It would seem that Nijo Park has had a long association with the nue legend. One (admittedly less sexy) account has the nue appearing not from within a dark cloud, but up in a tree. This would have Yorimasa not closing his eyes Jedi-style and praying for victory while shooting his arrow into oblivion, but simply shooting the nue out of some branches. Cloud or tree, the nue fell near a pond: the Pond of the Nue or nueike (鵺池), the same pond that Yorimasa used to wash his arrow. The boulders around the pond became known as "nue stones," or nueishi (鵺石). These stones are thought to be some of the same ones used as part of the current pond enclosure.
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus

Which is interesting, because the "nue stones" are said to be seriously cursed if touched. One snippet I read claimed that even Toyotomi Hideyoshi "did not dare" grant the area as a fief to anyone. While it's not the case that the land went straight from unused parcel of cursed real estate to children's playground, this does somewhat explain the presence of the Nue-daimyojin (鵺大明神, lit. "[shrine of] the nue demigod") or Nue Shrine. Though how its construction came about is unclear, Shinto has long offered a solution to a malignant entity via the process of deifying it. By enshrining the nue, the idea is that it will turn its malignancy into protective energy (providing that it's properly worshipped).
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus

When you stand in the spot where the nue was said to have fallen, you are indeed standing on an albeit small part of the former Heian Palace. That's where the romance ends though, because the park is thought to have been mostly part of a lane-way inside the greater palace, with a section of the Daijokan (太政官) or Council of State running along the park's western edge, and the Kunaisho (宮内省), or Imperial Household Ministry running along the park's eastern edge. Though within the border of the Heian Palace, this site is not particularly close to the Seiryo-den of the inner palace (the building over which the clouds appeared). Neither the Daijokan nor the Kunaisho enclosures appear to be particularly good candidates for sites containing trees or ponds either. Reality is a dish best served never.

As for the site being perpetually cursed and off limits, in 1700 a mansion of a Matsudaira retainer, who at the time was a military governor of Kyoto (in charge of maintaining security in the capital), was built on the site. The pond was extant at that time within the grounds of the mansion, and was apparently associated with the legend of the nue then too. The nue wasn't enshrined, however, until fairly recently in 1934. It was at this time the park was developed.

Fun fact: The nue's "death scream" could be heard as far as yokai hotspot Miidera temple!

Comments: And oh yeah the park is right next to Nijo Castle, a site both popular and centrally located. For that reason it is very easy to recommend. The only slight inconvenience is that the park, while indeed across the road from the castle, is about as far away as it could be from the castle's entrance. Boo hoo, people, those legs were made for walkin'!
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus

Getting There

The starting point on the Midosuji subway line is Umeda Stn. Our destination is (Kyoto) subway Nijojo-mae Stn. (The second "jo" in "Nijojo" is the Japanese suffix for "castle." "Mae" in this case means "in front of.")

The first part of the journey requires that you travel from (JR) Osaka Stn. (which is next to subway Umeda Stn.) to (JR) Kyoto Stn. I have been including (i.e. copying and pasting) details on how to make this simple trip for several Kyoto posts, so this time I will just say take the shinkaisoku (special rapid service train) or kaisoku (rapid service train) to Kyoto from Osaka.

At Kyoto Station you need to change to the subway. The subway is a different train company, so you need to go through the ticket gates and move to a different part of the station complex rather than just changing platforms.

At subway Kyoto Station, find Nijojo-mae Station on the transit map and purchase a ticket for the amount shown (260 yen as of January 2016). Take the Karasuma Line three stops in the direction of Kokusaikaikan to Karasuma Oike Station, then transit from within Karasuma Oike Station to the Tozai Line, going one stop in the direction of Uzumasa Tenjingawa to Nijojo-mae Station.
  
Getting Your Bearings at Nijojo-mae Station

At Nijojo-mae Station you're looking for the side with the whopping big castle, so you won't get lost easily. Go out Exit 1 and take the crosswalk just off to your right. After crossing the street, keep going straight and the main entrance to Nijo Castle will be on your left.
Map courtesy of Google Maps

If you have been to Nijo Castle or don't have the time for both and are nue mad, keep going straight. You need to walk about half the perimeter of the castle grounds before you come to Nijo Park.
Map courtesy of Google Maps

The Nue Shrine is at the north end of the park. This route has you walking along the edge of Nijo Park, but of course you can just walk straight through it if you prefer. Here's a photographic image of the layout.
Map/image courtesy of Google Maps

The Pond of the Nue is just south of the Nue Shrine. It's the horseshoe-shaped body of water in the map below.
Map courtesy of Google Maps

Be mindful that the pond was landscaped from the original body of water. It is more a remnant of the original but it still bears its name.

Next to Nue Shrine is another hokora, or wayside shrine. The Nue Shrine is the one with the red torii archway and partially covered by greenery.
Photo Credit: Gragma's Yokai Tourbus

Information on Nijo Castle

Admission into Nijo Castle is possible between the hours of 8:45 and 16:00, with the grounds closing at 17:00. Tuesdays during the months of January, July, August and December are closed, as is December 26 to January 4. When a national holiday falls on a Tuesday during January, July, August or December, the castle will close on the following day instead.

I haven't delved too deeply into the history of Nijo Castle to see if it might deserve its own entry. However, at a glance it would seem that some of the remains of Fushimi Castle in southern Kyoto were used to help complete it. Fushimi Castle has its own back story as the site of a famous siege in 1600 where 2,000 troops loyal to Tokugawa Ieyasu kept 40,000 combatants occupied for 11 days. Torii Mototada led the force defending the castle, and as it dwindled, those remaining within the castle committed ritual suicide. The unburned section of the castle in which these acts took place was dismantled in 1623, and the lumber was used to renovate at least five Kyoto temples. The stained timbers were incorporated into the ceilings of these temples, and these are known as Chi-tenjo, or Bloody Ceilings. Nijo Castle, while not having any bloody ceilings, also used materials from the Fushimi Castle ruins. It was completed in 1626.


Driver Gragma (yokaitourbus "at" mail "dot" com)
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/yokaitourbus/

The Master List (Kyoto)
http://yokaitourbus.blogspot.jp/2015/08/6-c-master-list-kyoto.html

(yokai) Nue (鵺)
Site: The Pond of the Nue (鵺池) and the Nue Shrine (鵺大明神)
Nearest Station: Subway Nijojo-mae Stn. (二条城前駅); JR/subway Nijo Stn. (二条駅) is about the same distance to the site, but further away from the entrance to Nijo Castle.
Google Map Search: "鵺大明神" will take you right to the shrine; "二条公園" will bring up the park.

Friday, January 8, 2016

xii. INTERMISSION: Hommachi Bend (本町のまがり)

Location: Chuo Ward (near subway Sakaisuji-Hommachi Stn.), Osaka City; about 5 min. off the Midosuji Line + 3 min. walking time

Associated with: Kappa! 

There are almost no kappa stories from Osaka that specify the location of where the creatures were actually seen, but one spot, known as "Hommachi Bend," is an exception. The Hommachi Bend, which refers to a bend in the Higashi-Yokobori River, is in the same place it was during the Edo Period. A temple once marked its location but it has since relocated following the construction of the Hanshin Expressway that now runs over and along a good stretch of the river.

The temple that used to be there, if I have the reading right, was known as Jokokuji. Left behind though was a small remnant: a statue of Jizo. This marker is known as the Magarifuchi-Jizo (曲渕地蔵尊), and it can still be found tucked away at the river's bend.
Unknown, c 1880-90 (Source: artelino, https://www.artelino.com/ via http://ukiyo-e.org)

Comments: This is a dinky little site to be sure. It's not particularly scenic, nor is it really on the way to something (though it is pretty much smack bang in the middle of the city). It is kind of on the way to the Osaka Museum of History and Osaka Castle, but it's along a stretch of roadway with few inviting landmarks. Kappa is as kappa does though, so if you are keen to visit a site where they were once said to dwell, don't let urban planning put you off!

Getting There

The starting point on the Midosuji subway line is Hommachi Stn. Our destination is subway Sakaisuji-Hommachi Stn. 

Subway Hommachi Stn. is two stops south of Umeda and is where the Midosuji and Chuo ("Central") subway lines intersect. From Hommachi, change to the green Chuo Line and go one stop to Sakaisuji-Hommachi. It's also possible to walk from Hommachi Stn. to the site along Chuo-Odori, adding another 10 minutes or so to your trip, but only do that if you like a good urban setting (hey, some people do).

Getting Your Bearings at Sakaisuji-Hommachi Station

At Sakaisuji-Hommachi, come out at Exit 1. This will have you facing east and the direction you need to go. Follow the map below, and in a few minutes you'll come to a bridge spanning the river with the expressway more or less running over the top of it. This is Hommachi Bend, with the Higashi-Yokobori River curving away on your left (to the north).
Map courtesy of Google Maps

The Magarifuchi-Jizo is tucked under the expressway on the west bank of the river, so take the left just before crossing the bridge. This little cranny of a road is dark and seldom used, and here in the middle of the city it feels rather foreboding. I've walked along it several times and it has been perfectly safe, but it always gives me the creeps.
Image courtesy of Google Maps

Image courtesy of Google Maps

A more practical issue I had was preparing the map above. The site sits perfectly under the expressway so when I first tried to extract a route it kept giving me the wrong directions. As you can see, I got a bit carried away trying to pin down the location!

If you keep walking in the same direction along Chuo-Odori you'll first come to subway Tanimachi-Yonchome Stn. If you like, you can take that north to Tenjinbashisuji-Rokuchome Stn. and visit Nagarabashi Bridge, which was featured here:
http://yokaitourbus.blogspot.jp/2015/09/iv-nagarabashi-bridge-and-daigan-ji_17.html

Or you can follow Chuo-Odori along until you reach the intersection on the map below. Branching off to your left is the Osaka Museum of History and Osaka Castle, and off to your right to the south is another large but bare-bones park. This is actually Naniwanomiyaato Park (of course it is!), the site of the old Naniwa Nagara-Toyosaki Palace, marking Emperor Kotoku's Naniwa Capital (r. 645-654) for a brief time during the Asuka Period, an era when the capital was located almost always within present-day Nara Prefecture.

Map courtesy of Google Maps
 

Driver Gragma (yokaitourbus "at" mail "dot" com)
Site: Hommachi Bend, or Hommachi no Magari (本町のまがり)
Nearest Station: (Subway) Sakaisuji-Hommachi Stn. (堺筋本町駅)
Google Map Search: NA