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Tamayorihime no Mikoto
Tamayorihime no Mikoto
Goddess who nursed the imperial ancestor; wife of Ugayafukiaezu and mother of Emperor Jimmu
เกี่ยวกับ
Tamayorihime plays a quiet but genealogically crucial role in the imperial myth. She is the younger sister of Toyotamahime who was sent to the surface world to nurse the child Ugayafukiaezu after Toyotamahime returned to the sea in shame. Tamayorihime raised the boy, eventually married him, and bore Emperor Jimmu.
Her name means 'the princess upon whom the spirit settles' (tama-yori), suggesting a shamanistic quality—a woman who serves as a vessel for divine spirits. This interpretation aligns with the broader role of women as spirit-mediums (miko) in ancient Japanese religion.
Note that the Kamo tradition features a distinct Tamayorihime who found the red arrow and bore Wake-ikazuchi. Whether these are the same figure or separate deities with the same name is debated. The shared name may reflect a common archetype of the woman who receives divine spirit and produces a sacred child.
ตำนาน
Family Relationships
ศาลเจ้าที่บูชาเทพเจ้าองค์นี้
| Shrine | Prefecture | Network Role |
|---|---|---|
| Tamasaki Shrine Tamasaki Shrine | Chiba | head |
| Shimogamo Shrine Shimogamo Shrine | Kyoto | Lower Kamo Shrine |
| Kamado Shrine (Homangu) Kamado Shrine (Homangu) | Fukuoka | |
| Hakozaki Shrine Hakozaki Shrine | Fukuoka | notable_branch |
คำถามที่พบบ่อย
ข้อมูลจัดทำโดยทีม Jinja DB
Who is Tamayorihime no Mikoto in Japanese mythology?
Tamayorihime no Mikoto (玉依姫命) is Goddess who nursed the imperial ancestor; wife of Ugayafukiaezu and mother of Emperor Jimmu. This deity appears in Kojiki & Nihon Shoki and is enshrined at 4 shrines across Japan.
What shrines are dedicated to Tamayorihime no Mikoto?
There are 4 shrines in our database dedicated to Tamayorihime no Mikoto, including Tamasaki Shrine, Shimogamo Shrine, Kamado Shrine (Homangu) and more.
What myths involve Tamayorihime no Mikoto?
Tamayorihime no Mikoto appears in 2 myths including The Tale of the Sea Prince and the Mountain Prince (Umisachi-Yamasachi), The Eastern Expedition of Emperor Jimmu (Jimmu Tosei). These stories come from Kojiki & Nihon Shoki.