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Difference between revisions of "List of Japanese demons"

(New page: ==A== *Abumi-guchi - a furry creature formed from the stirrup of a mounted military commander *Abura-akago - an infant ghost who licks the oil out of andon lamps *Abura-bō - a spook fire ...)
 
 
Line 351: Line 351:
*Zennyo Ryūō - a rain-making dragon
*Zennyo Ryūō - a rain-making dragon
*Zunbera-bō - another name for the noppera-bō
*Zunbera-bō - another name for the noppera-bō
[[Category: Japanese mythology]]
[[Category: Demons]]

Latest revision as of 12:52, 11 June 2008

A

  • Abumi-guchi - a furry creature formed from the stirrup of a mounted military commander
  • Abura-akago - an infant ghost who licks the oil out of andon lamps
  • Abura-bō - a spook fire from Shiga Prefecture, in which the shape of a monk can often be seen
  • Abura-sumashi - a spirit who lives on a mountain pass in Kumamoto Prefecture
  • Akabeko - a red cow involved in the construction of Enzō-ji in Yanaizu, Fukushima
  • Akamataa - a snake spirit from Okinawa
  • Akaname - the spirit who licks the bathroom
  • Akashita - a creature that looms in a black cloud over a floodgate
  • Akateko - a red hand dangling out of a tree
  • Akki - another name for a wicked oni
  • Akkorokamui - an Ainu monster resembling a fish or octopus
  • Akuma - an evil spirit
  • Akurojin-no-hi - a ghostly fire from Mie Prefecture
  • Amaburakosagi - ritual disciplinary demon from Shikoku
  • Amamehagi - ritual disciplinary demon from Hokuriku
  • Amanojaku - a small demon which instigates people into wickedness
  • Amanozako - a monstrous goddess mentioned in the Kujiki
  • Amazake-babaa - an old woman who asks for sweet sake and brings disease
  • Amefurikozō - a little boy spirit who plays in the rain
  • Amemasu - an Ainu creature resembling a fish or whale
  • Ameonna - a female rain spirit
  • Amikiri - the net-cutting spirit
  • Amorōnagu - a tennyo from the island of Amami Ōshima
  • Anmo - ritual disciplinary demon from Iwate Prefecture
  • Aoandon - the spirit of the blue paper lantern
  • Aobōzu - the blue monk who kidnaps children
  • Aonyōbō - a female ghost who lurks in an abandoned imperial palace
  • Aosaginohi - a luminescent heron
  • Asobibi - a spook fire from Kōchi Prefecture
  • Arikura-no-baba - an old woman with magical powers
  • Ashiaraiyashiki(足洗邸) - the story of a huge demon which demands that its leg be washed
  • Ashimagari - a spook which entangles the legs of travelers
  • Ashinagatenaga - a pair of characters, one with long legs and the other with long arms
  • Ato-oi-kozō - an invisible spirit that follows people
  • Ayakashi - another name for the ikuchi
  • Ayakashi-no-ayashibi - a spook fire from Ishikawa Prefecture
  • Azukiarai - a spirit which makes the sound of azuki beans being washed
  • Azukibabaa - azukiarai's more vicious cousin, a bean-grinding hag who devours people
  • Azukitogi - another name for azukiarai

B

  • Betobeto-san - an invisible spirit which follows people at night, making the sound of footsteps
  • Bake-kujira - a ghost whale
  • Bakeneko - a shapeshifting cat
  • Bakezōri - a sandal spirit
  • Baku - an auspicious beast who can devour nightmares
  • Basan - a large fire-breathing chicken monster
  • Binbōgami - the spirit of poverty
  • Biwa-bokuboku - the spirit of a biwa lute
  • Bunbuku Chagama - a famous story about a tanuki in the form of a teakettle
  • Buruburu - a spirit which causes the shivers
  • Byakko - the white tiger of the west

C

  • Chōchinobake - a haunted paper lantern
  • Cho Hakkai - Zhu Bajie, the pig spirit from Journey to the West

D

  • Daidarabotchi - a giant responsible for creating many geographical features in Japan
  • Daitengu - the most powerful tengu, each of whom lives on a separate mountain
  • Datsue-ba - an old woman who steals clothes from the souls of the dead
  • Dodomeki - the ghost of a pickpocket, her arms covered in eyes
  • Dorotabō - the ghost of an old man whose rice fields were neglected and sold

E

  • Enenra - a monster made of smoke
  • Enkō - the kappa of Shikoku and western Honshū
  • Eritate-goromo - the tengu Sōjōbō's enchanted clothes

F

  • Fūjin - the god of wind
  • Funayūrei - ghosts of people dead at sea
  • Futakuchi-onna - the two-mouthed woman

G

  • Gagoze - a demon who attacked young priests at Gangō-ji temple
  • Gaki - the hungry ghosts of Buddhism
  • Gangi-kozō - a fish-eating water-monster
  • Garappa - a kind of kappa from Kyūshū
  • Gashadokuro - a giant skeleton, the spirit of the unburied dead
  • Genbu - the black tortoise of the north
  • Goryō - vengeful spirits of the dead
  • Guhin - another name for the tengu
  • Gyūki - another name for the ushi-oni, the ox demon

H

  • Hakutaku - the wise Bai Ze beast of China, who reported on the attributes of demons
  • Hakuzōsu - a fox who disguised himself as a trapper's uncle
  • Hannya - a noh mask representing a jealous female demon
  • Harionago - a female monster with deadly barbed hair
  • Hayatarō - the dog that killed the sarugami
  • Heikegani - crabs with human-faced shells, the spirits of the warriors killed in the Battle of Dan-no-ura
  • Hibagon - the Japanese Bigfoot
  • Hiderigami - the god of drought
  • Hihi - a baboon monster
  • Hitodama - a fireball-ghost that appears when someone dies
  • Hitotsume-kozō - a one-eyed boy
  • Hoji - the wicked spirit of Tamamo-no-Mae
  • Hōkō - a dog-like tree spirit from China
  • Hone-onna - a skeleton woman
  • Hō-ō - the mythical Fenghuang bird of China
  • Hotoke - a deceased person
  • Hyakki Yakō - the demons' night parade
  • Hyakume - a creature with a hundred eyes
  • Hyōsube - a kind of hair-covered kappa
  • Hyōtan-kozō - a gourd spirit

I

  • Ibaraki-dōji - the oni of the Rashomon gate, Shuten-dōji's accomplice
  • Ichimoku-nyūdō - a one-eyed kappa from Sado Island
  • Ikazuchi-no-Kami - a thunder god
  • Ikiryō - a living ghost
  • Ikuchi - a sea-serpent that travels over boats in an arc while dripping oil
  • Inugami - a dog-spirit created, worshipped and employed by a family via sorcery
  • Ippon-datara - a one-legged spirit of the mountains
  • Isonade - a fish-like sea monster with a barb-covered tail
  • Itsumaden - a monstrous bird that appeared over the capital in the Taiheiki
  • Ittan-momen - a cloth-like monster which attempts to smother people by wrapping itself around their faces
  • Iwana-bōzu - a char which appeared as a Buddhist monk

J

  • Jakotsu-babaa - an old woman who guards a snake mound
  • Jatai - an obi which has transformed into a snake
  • Jibakurei 地縛霊, 自縛霊 - a ghost that is bound to a certain place
  • Jikininki - ghosts that eat human corpses
  • Jinmenju - a tree with human-faced flowers
  • Jinmenken - a human-faced dog appearing in recent urban legends
  • Jishin-namazu - the giant catfish that causes earthquakes
  • Jorōgumo - a spider woman
  • Jubokko - a vampire tree

K

  • Kage-onna - the shadow of a woman cast on the paper doors of a haunted house
  • Kahaku 河伯 - another name for a kappa
  • Kamaitachi - the slashing sickle-weasel that haunts the mountains
  • Kamikiri - the hair-cutting spirit
  • Kameosa - a bottle that never runs dry
  • Kanbari-nyūdō - a bathroom spirit
  • Kanedama - the spirit of money
  • Kappa - a famous water monster with a water-filled head and a love of cucumbers
  • Karasu-tengu - a tengu with a bird's bill
  • Kasa-obake - a paper umbrella monster
  • Kasha - a cat-like demon which descends from the sky and carries away corpses
  • Kashanbo - kappa who climb into the mountains for the winter
  • Katawa-guruma - a woman riding on a flaming wheel
  • Katsura-otoko - a handsome man from the moon
  • Kawa-akago - an infant monster that lurks near rivers and drowns people
  • Kawa-uso - a supernatural river otter
  • Kawa-zaru - a smelly, cowardly kappa-like creature
  • Kerakera-onna - a giant cackling woman who appears in the sky
  • Kesaran-pasaran - a mysterious white fluffy creature
  • Keukegen - a creature made of hair
  • Kijimunaa - a tree sprite from Okinawa
  • Kijo - a witch or ogress
  • Kirin - the Qilin of China, part dragon and part hoofed mammal, sometimes called the "Chinese unicorn"
  • Kitsune - a supernatural fox
  • Kitsune-Tsuki - fox possession
  • Kiyohime - a woman who transformed into a serpent-demon out of the rage of unrequited love
  • Kodama - a spirit that lives in a tree
  • Kokakuchō - the ubume bird
  • Koma-inu - another name for the shishi, the pair of lion-dogs that guard the entrances of temples
  • Konaki-Jijii - an infant spirit that cries until it is picked up, then increases its weight and crushes its victim
  • Konoha-tengu - a bird-like tengu
  • Koropokkuru - a little person from Ainu folklore
  • Kosode-no-te - a short-sleeved kimono with its own hands
  • Kuchisake-onna - the slit-mouthed woman
  • Kuda-gitsune - a small fox-like animal used in sorcery
  • Kudan - a human-faced calf which predicts a calamity and then dies
  • Kurabokko - the guardian spirit of a warehouse
  • Kurage-no-hinotama - a jellyfish which floats through the air as a fireball
  • Kyōkotsu - the ghost of a corpse discarded in a well
  • Kyūbi-no-kitsune - a fox with nine tails
  • Kyūketsuki - a Japanese vampire

L

N/A

M

  • Maikubi - the quarreling heads of three dead miscreants
  • Makura-gaeshi - the pillow-moving spirit
  • Mekurabe - the multiplying skulls that menaced Taira no Kiyomori in his courtyard
  • Miage-nyūdō - a spirit which grows as fast as you can look up at it
  • Mikoshi-nyūdō - another name for miage-nyūdō
  • Mizuchi - a dangerous water-dragon
  • Mokumokuren - a swarm of eyes that appear on a paper sliding door in an old building
  • Momonjii - an old-man who is waiting for you at every fork in the road
  • Morinji-no-kama - another name for Bunbuku Chagama, the tanuki teakettle
  • Mōryō - a long-eared, corpse-eating spirit
  • Mujina - a shapeshifting badger
  • Myōbu - a title sometimes given to a fox

N

  • Namahage - ritual disciplinary demon from the Oga Peninsula
  • Namazu - a giant catfish that causes earthquakes
  • Nando-baba - an old-woman spirit who hides under the floor in abandoned storerooms
  • Narikama - a kettle spirit whose ringing sound is a good omen
  • Nebutori - a spook-disease which causes a woman to grow immensely fat and lethargic
  • Nekomata - a bakeneko with a split tail
  • Nekomusume - a cat in the form of a girl
  • Nikusui - a monster which appears as a young woman and sucks all of the flesh off of its victim's body
  • Ningyo - a fish person or "mermaid"
  • Nobusuma - a supernatural wall, or a monstrous flying squirrel
  • Noppera-bō - a faceless ghost
  • Nozuchi - Another name for the tsuchinoko serpent
  • Nue - a monkey-headed, tiger-bodied, snake-tailed monster which plagued the emperor with nightmares in the Heike *Monogatari
  • Nukekubi - a vicious human-like monster whose head detaches from its body, often confused with the rokurokubi
  • Nuppefuhofu - an animated lump of decaying human flesh
  • Nure-onna - a female monster who appears on the beach
  • Nuribotoke - an animated corpse with blackened flesh and dangling eyeballs
  • Nurikabe - a ghostly wall that traps a traveler at night
  • Nurarihyon - a strange character who sneaks into houses on busy evenings
  • Nyūbachibō - a mortar spirit

O

  • Obariyon - a spook which rides piggyback on a human victim and becomes unbearably heavy.
  • Oboro-guruma - a ghostly oxcart with the face of its driver
  • Ohaguro-bettari - a female spook lacking all facial features save for a large, black-toothed smile
  • Oiwa - the ghost of a woman with a distorted face who was murdered by her husband

O*kiku - the plate-counting ghost of a servant girl

  • Ōkamuro - a giant face which appears at the door
  • Ōkubi - the face of a huge woman which appears in the sky
  • Okuri-inu - a dog or wolf that follows travelers at night, similar to the Black dog or Barghest of Anglo-Saxon myth.
  • Ōmukade - a giant human eating centipede that lives in the mountains
  • Oni - the classic Japanese demon, an ogre-like creature which often has horns
  • Onibi - a spook fire
  • Onikuma - a monster bear
  • Onmoraki - a bird-demon created from the spirits of freshly-dead corpses
  • Onryō - a vengeful ghost
  • Otoroshi - a hairy creature that perches on the gates to shrines and temples

P

N/A

Q

N/A

R

  • Raijin - the god of thunder
  • Raijū - a beast which falls to earth in a lightning bolt
  • Rokurokubi - a person, usually female, whose neck can stretch indefinitely
  • Ryū - the Japanese dragon

S

  • Sakabashira - a haunted pillar, installed upside-down
  • Sagari - a horse's head that dangles from trees on Kyūshū
  • Sa Gojō - the water-monster Sha Wujing from Journey to the West, often interpeted in Japan as a kappa
  • Samebito - a shark-man from the undersea Dragon Palace
  • Sarugami - a wicked monkey spirit which was defeated by a dog
  • Satori - an ape-like creature that can read minds
  • Sazae-oni - a turban snail which turns into a woman
  • Seiryū - the azure dragon of the east
  • Seko - a kind of kappa, which can be heard making merry at night
  • Senpoku-Kanpoku - a human-faced frog which guides the souls of the newly deceased to the graveyard
  • Sesshō-seki - the poisonous "killing stones" which Tamamo-no-Mae transformed into
  • Setotaishō - a warrior composed of discarded earthenware
  • Shachihoko - a tiger-headed fish whose image is often used in architecture
  • Shibaten - a kind of kappa from Shikoku.
  • Shikigami - a spirit summoned to do the bidding of an Onmyōji
  • Shiki-ōji - another name for a shikigami
  • Shikome - wild women sent by Izanami to harm Izanagi
  • Shiro-bōzu - a white, faceless spirit
  • Shin 蜃 - a giant clam which creates mirages
  • Shinigami - the "god of death", the Japanese name for the Western Grim Reaper
  • Shiro-uneri - an old, rotten dishcloth appearing in the form of a dragon
  • Shiryō - the spirit of a dead person
  • Shisa - the Okinawan version of the shishi
  • Shishi - the paired lion-dogs that guard the entrances of temples
  • Shōjō - red-haired sea-sprites who love alcohol
  • Shōkera - a creature that peers in through skylights
  • Shōki - the fabled demon-queller Zhong Kui
  • Shunoban - a red-faced ghoul that surprises people
  • Shuten-dōji - an infamous princess-kidnapping, bloodthirsty oni
  • Sodehiki-kozō - an invisible spirit which pulls on sleeves
  • Sōjōbō - the famous daitengu of Mount Kurama
  • Sōgenbi - the fiery ghost of an oil-stealing monk
  • Son Gokū - the monkey king Sun Wukong from Journey to the West
  • Soragami - a ritual disciplinary demon in the form of a tengu
  • Soraki-gaeshi - the sound of trees being cut down, when later none seem to have been cut
  • Sorobanbōzu - a ghost with an abacus
  • Sōtangitsune - a famous fox from Kyoto
  • Sunakake-baba - the sand-throwing hag
  • Sunekosuri - a small dog- or cat-like creature that rubs against a person's legs at night
  • Suppon-no-yūrei - a ghost with a face like a soft-shelled turtle
  • Suzaku - the vermilion bird of the south

T

  • Taimatsumaru - a tengu surrounded in demon fire
  • Taka-onna - a female spirit which can stretch itself to peer into the second story of a building
  • Tamamo-no-Mae - a wicked nine-tailed fox who appeared as a courtesan
  • Tankororin - an unharvested persimmon which becomes a monster
  • Tanuki - a shapeshifting raccoon dog
  • Tatami-tataki - a poltergeist that hits the tatami mats at night
  • Tengu - the infamous bird-man demon of the mountains
  • Tenjōname - the ceiling-licking spirit
  • Tennin - a heavenly being
  • Te-no-me - the ghost of a blind man, with his eyes on his hands
  • Tesso - the ghost of the priest Raigō, who transformed into a swarm of rats
  • Tōfu-kozō - a spirit child carrying a block of tofu
  • Toire-no-Hanakosan - a ghost who lurks in grade school restroom stalls
  • Tōtetsu - the Taotie monster of China
  • Tsurara-onna - an icicle woman
  • Tsuchigumo - a giant spider which was defeated by Minamoto no Raikō
  • Tsuchikorobi - a tumbling monster which rolls over travelers
  • Tsuchinoko - a legendary serpentine monster, now a cryptid resembling a fat snake
  • Tsukumogami - inanimate objects that come to life after a hundred years
  • Tsurube-otoshi - a monster that drops out of the tops of trees

U

  • Ubume - the spirit of a woman who died in childbirth
  • Uma-no-ashi - a horse's leg which dangles from a tree and kicks passerbies
  • Umibōzu - a giant monster appearing on the surface of the sea
  • Umi-nyōbō - a female sea monster who steals fish
  • Ungaikyō - a mirror monster which can display assorted wonders in its surface
  • Ushi-oni - a name given to an assortment of ox-headed monsters
  • Uwan - a spirit named for the sound it shouts when surprising people

V

N/A

W

  • Wanyūdō - a flaming wheel with a man's head in the center, which sucks out the soul of anyone who sees it.

X

N/A

Y

  • Yagyō-san - a demon who rides through the night on a headless horse
  • Yakubyō-gami - spirits who bring plagues and other unfortunate events
  • Yadōkai - monks who have turned to mischief
  • Yama-biko - a creature that creates echos
  • Yama-bito - the wild people who live in the mountains
  • Yama-chichi - a mountain spirit resembling a monkey
  • Yama-inu - the fearsome mountain dog
  • Yama-otoko - the giant mountain man
  • Yama-oroshi - a radish-grater spirit, a pun on a word for "mountain storm"
  • Yamata-no-Orochi - the eight-headed serpent slain by the god Susanoo
  • Yama-uba - the mountain hag
  • Yama-waro - a hairy, one-eyed spirit, sometimes considered a kappa who has gone into the mountains for the winter.
  • Yanari - poltergeists which cause strange noises
  • Yatagarasu - the three-legged crow of Amaterasu
  • Yato-no-kami - deadly snake-gods which infested a field
  • Yomotsu-shikome - the hags of the underworld
  • Yōsei - the Japanese word for "fairy"
  • Yosuzume - a mysterious bird that sings at night, sometimes indicating that the okuri-inu is near
  • Yukinko - a child-like snow-spirit
  • Yuki-onna - the snow woman

Z

  • Zashiki-warashi - a protective child-like house spirit.
  • Zennyo Ryūō - a rain-making dragon
  • Zunbera-bō - another name for the noppera-bō