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  2. Japanese dragon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_dragon

    Mizuchi (蛟 or 虯) was a river dragon and water deity. The Nihongi records legendary Emperor Nintoku offering human sacrifices to mizuchi angered by his river engineering projects. Raijū is Raijin's animal companion and messenger that commonly take form of a dragon, qilin or komainu. Kiyohime (清姫, lit.

  3. Mizuchi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mizuchi

    Agatamori battling mizuchi in the pool. From Zenken kojitsu (1878) The Mizuchi (大虬, 蛟龍, 蛟, 美都知) is a type of Japanese dragon or legendary serpent-like creature, either found in an aquatic habitat or otherwise connected to water. Some commentators perceived it to have been a water deity. It is described in the Nihon Shoki and one ...

  4. Ainu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ainu_people

    The Ainu are an Indigenous ethnic group who reside in northern Japan, including Hokkaido and the Tōhoku region of Honshu, as well as the land surrounding the Sea of Okhotsk, such as Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands, the Kamchatka Peninsula, and the Khabarovsk Krai; they have occupied these areas known to them as "Ainu Mosir" (Ainu: アイヌモシㇼ, lit.

  5. Ainu creation myth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ainu_creation_myth

    The Ainu creation myths are the traditional creation accounts of the Ainu peoples of Japan. These myths reflect the Ainu worldview that attributes subjectivity and agency to nonhuman entities, considering them as conscious beings with the ability to communicate and interact with humans. Although Ainu mythology has characteristics in common with ...

  6. Hoyau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoyau

    The Ainu dragon (wanjiku) is generally held to dwell in lakes and swamps and issue foul odor, and are known by such names as the hoyau (meaning "serpent" in Sakhalin dialect [1]), chatai or catay (borrowed from Japanese jatai (蛇体) lit. "serpent body"), and sak-somo-ayep (lit. "that which must not be mentioned in the summer.").

  7. Yamata no Orochi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamata_no_Orochi

    For instance, multi-headed dragons in Greek mythology include the 9-headed Lernaean Hydra and the 100-headed Ladon, both slain by Heracles. Two other Japanese examples derive from Buddhist importations of Indian dragon myths. Benzaiten, the Japanese form of Saraswati, supposedly killed a five-headed dragon at Enoshima in 552.

  8. Nāga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nāga

    Mahabharata, Puranas. In various Asian religious traditions, the Nagas (Sanskrit: नाग, romanized: Nāga) [1] are a divine, or semi-divine, race of half-human, half- serpent beings that reside in the netherworld (Patala), and can occasionally take human or part-human form, or are so depicted in art. A female naga is called a Nagi, or a Nagini.

  9. Ryūjin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryūjin

    Ryūjin (龍神, lit. "Dragon God"), which in some traditions is equivalent to Ōwatatsumi, was the tutelary deity of the sea in Japanese mythology. In many versions Ryūjin had the ability to transform into a human shape. Many believed the god had knowledge on medicine and many considered him as the bringer of rain and thunder, Ryūjin is also ...