Himiko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Himiko (卑弥呼 c.175?–248?), also read as Pimiku, was a female ruler of Yamataikoku, an ancient state-like formation thought to have been located either in the Yamato region or in northern Kyūshū of present-day Japan. Few records are available and little is known about her, and the location of Yamataikoku is the subject of a great, often emotionally charged debate that has been raging since the late Edo period[citation needed].

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According to an ancient Chinese text, Records of Three Kingdoms, (297 AD) Himiko was a shaman who controlled people through her paranormal abilities. This Chinese chronicle refers to the inhabitants of the Japanese islands simply as the Wa, literally, "The Little People." Furthermore, it describes a fragmented political structure of more than a hundred or more separate tribes, nominally ruled by a female shaman, Queen Himiko.

The Nihonshoki, an old Japanese history book, notes that Himiko was actually Empress Jingū Kogo, the mother of Emperor Ōjin, but historians disagree. Some speculate that she is conflated with Amaterasu, the Japanese sun goddess, as "hi" means "sun" and miko means priestess.

According to an ancient Korean history book, Samguk Sagi, Himiko, as queen of Japan, sent an emissary to King Adalla of Silla in May 172.

Excerpt from Waijinden, a Chinese historical account of circa 280–297:

…the people agreed upon a woman for their ruler. Her name was Pimiko. She occupied herself with magic and sorcery, bewitching the people. Though mature in age, she remained unmarried. She had a younger brother who assisted her in ruling the country. After she became ruler, there were few who saw her. She had one thousand women as attendants, but only one man. He served her food and drink and acted as a medium of communication. She resided in a palace surrounded by towers and stockades, with armed guards in a state of constant vigilance.

Also from the Waijinden account (Response to gift of tribute by Himiko to the Emperor of China):

Herein we address Pimiko, Queen of Wa, whom we now officially call a friend of Wei...[Your ambassadors] have arrived here with your tribute, consisting of four male slaves and six female slaves, together with two pieces of cloth with designs, each twenty feet in length. You live very far away across the sea; yet you have sent an embassy with tribute. Your loyalty and filial piety we appreciate exceedingly. We confer upon you, therefore, the title "Queen of Wa Friendly to Wei,"...we expect you, O Queen, to rule your people in peace and to endeavor to be devoted and obedient.

Some have intuitively proposed that Himiko would have been a ruler during the Jomon period, an archaeological age characterized by a goddess religion, as indicated by figurine evidence, and a population of today's Ainu people. However, that timing is patently incorrect, as the latest discoveries of Jomon remnants date from ca. 300 BC, five centuries earlier than Himiko's lifetime according to the Chinese records. Moreover, much of the other evidence, including her name, links Himiko to proto-Yamato people who had just migrated to Japan in the late Jomon era and in the early Yayoi period, and into which Himiko and her people are tentatively classified. Traditions of Jomon culture, such as reverence to female godheads and a priestess-led society, as well as very large villages with small, tribal groups functioning as units of political power in a proto-agricultural economic setting, may have influenced the societies of Yayoi settlers and the cultural structure of Himiko's society.

Some sources[1] also link Himiko to Yamatohime-no-mikoto, the legendary daughter of Emperor Suinin and founder of Ise Shrine.

Himiko never married, and it is recorded that her younger brother assisted her as a political advisor. She is said to have had one thousand female servants and to have never appeared in public.

In ca. 188 AD, Himiko ascended to paramountcy, and in 248 AD she died.

There are indications that a tribal king, posthumously now known as Emperor Shujin, raised a military host against Queen Himiko or her successor (reportedly another shaman, her niece, or another relative), ultimately doing away with her position and establishing male rule with headquarters in central Japan.

The precise pronunciation of her name is unknown. The Himiko reading derives from her name as represented in kanji, which was written 卑彌呼 prior to mid-20th century kanji reforms. Himiko may have been a Chinese corruption of himemiko, princess-priestess, or lady shaman. The name literally means "Sun Child." There are assessments that she is the real person upon whom the myth of the sun goddess Amaterasu is built.

  • In the video game Ōkami, Queen Himiko appears as an NPC, and is not conflated with Amaterasu, who is the main character.
  • Himiko also appears as ruler of Jipang in the 1991 release of the video game Dragon Warrior III.
  • She is also mentioned in Nº 2 of the manga "Shaman King".

  1. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica: Himiko article

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