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  2. Oni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oni

    The hungry ghosts called gaki (餓鬼) have also been sometimes considered a type of oni (the Kanji for "ki" 鬼 is also read "oni"). Accordingly, a wicked soul beyond rehabilitation transforms into an oni after death. Only the very worst people turn into oni while alive, and these are the oni causing troubles among humans as presented in folk ...

  3. Shita-kiri Suzume - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shita-kiri_Suzume

    Shita-kiri Suzume (舌切り雀, shita-kiri suzume), translated literally into "Tongue-Cut Sparrow", is a traditional Japanese fable telling of a kind old man, his avaricious wife and an injured sparrow.

  4. Mononoke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mononoke

    "Mononoke Kikyo no Koto" (物怪帰去の事) from the "Totei Bukkairoku" (稲亭物怪録) The first appearance of the term in Japanese literature is seen to be in the Nihon Kōki, and according to a quotation of this book from the Nihon Kiryaku of the same time period, in the article of Uruu 12th month of the year Tenchō 7 (830), there is the statement: "Five monks were invited to recite ...

  5. Shuten-dōji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuten-dōji

    The page later became Shuten-dōji, and it has been said that the place where he was abandoned was thus called chigo-saka (page-hill). [ 63 ] According to another theory, he was a child of the chief priest of Byakugō-ji, but as he matured, he grew fangs and a horn, and later became a child as rough as a beast.

  6. Kobutori Jiisan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobutori_Jiisan

    Old man with lump sees the oni marching. ―Cover of the 1886 translation. " Kobutori Jiisan " ( こぶとりじいさん , Kobutori jīsan ) translated directly as "Lump-Taken Old Man" is a Japanese Folktale about an old man who had his lump (or parotid gland tumor) taken or removed by demons after joining a party of demons ( oni ) celebrating ...

  7. Ushi-oni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ushi-oni

    The ushi-oni (牛鬼, ox oni; ox demon), or gyūki, is a yōkai from the folklore of western Japan. [1] The folklore describes more than one kind of ushi-oni, but the depiction of a bovine-headed monster occurs in most. Ushi-oni generally appear on beaches and attack people who walk there.

  8. Onryō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onryō

    In this tale from the medieval collection Konjaku Monogatarishū, an abandoned wife is found dead with a full head of hair intact and her bones still attached. The husband, fearing retribution from her spirit, asks a diviner for aid. The husband must endure while grabbing her hair and riding astride her corpse.

  9. Hashihime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hashihime

    Hashihime as appearing in the Kyōka Hyaku-Monogatari from 1853. Hashihime (橋姫) ("the maiden of the bridge" [1]) is a character that first appeared in Japanese Heian-period literature, represented as a woman who spends lonely nights waiting for her lover to visit, and later as a fierce “oni” or demon fueled by jealousy.