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Kojiki facts for kids

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Kojiki Shinpukuji
Shinpukuji manuscript

Kojiki or Furukotofumi, also called in English the Records of Ancient Matters, is the oldest book known in Japan. It was written 712 CE, and dedicated to Empress Gemmei. The Kojiki is a book filled with Japanese mythology and religion, Shinto. The book mixes the legends of the first emperor of Japan and several others with stories about the gods. Therefore, it is difficult to know which parts of the Kojiki are real and which parts are legend. In the legend, all the emperors of the Japan are descended from Amaterasu, the sun goddess.

The Kojiki is written in Chinese, but the way the Japeneses wrote their Kojiki is by using the pronounciation of the Chinese symbol and not the signification of the symbol. In other word, a person who can read Chinese will not be able to read the Kojiki except if they also know how to speak Japenese. It includes many Japanese names and some phrases.

Sections

The Kojiki is divided into three parts: the Kamitsumaki (上巻, "first volume"), the Nakatsumaki (中巻, "middle volume") and the Shimotsumaki (下巻, "lower volume").

  • The Kamitsumaki, also known as the "Volume of the Age of the Gods", includes the preface of the Kojiki. It is about the first gods in the mythology of Japan, Izanagi and Izanami. These are the gods who created the world. This volume also tells of the births of various gods of the kamiyo period, or Age of the Gods.

The Kamitsumaki also describes the legends about the creation of Japan. It describes how Ninigi-no-Mikoto, grandson of Amaterasu, came down from heaven to Kyūshū and became the ancestor of the Japanese royal line. According to this legend, he is considered the great-grandfather of Emperor Jimmu.

  • The Nakatsumaki begins with the story of Jimmu, the first Emperor, and how he conquered Japan. The volume ends with the 15th Emperor, Ōjin. Not much is written about the reigns of the second through ninth emperors; only their names and the names of their various descendants are mentioned, as well as a few other details. There is no mention of their achievements. Many of the stories in this volume are mythological, and there is no evidence to suggest that they are historically accurate. Recent studies support the opinion that these emperors were invented to push Jimmu's reign further back to the year 660 BC.
  • The Shimotsumaki describes the 16th to 33rd emperors. Unlike the other two volumes, this one does not contain many references to the gods. Interactions between the human world and the gods are very prominent in the first and second volumes, but not in this volume. Information about the 24th to the 33rd emperors are largely missing, as well.

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See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Kojiki para niños

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