Mt. Aburahiあぶらひだけ

1 yokai rooted in Mt. Aburahi. Explore the legends tied to this land.

Also known as: 油日神社 / 油日大明神
  • Aburahi-daimyojin

    Aburahi-daimyojin

    Divine

    あぶらひだいみょうじん

    The Tutelary Deity of Koka Descending with Fiery Light upon Mount Aburahi

    Divine Spirits / DeitiesMount Aburahi / Aburahi Shrine (Present-day Aburahi, Koka-cho, Koka City, Shiga Prefecture)

    Aburahi-daimyojin is a deity unique to Koka, intertwining nature spirits, Buddhism, and samurai worship. Its origins lie in ancient mountain worship directed at Mount Aburahi, a sacred peak whose summit shrine still venerates the water goddess Mitsuhanome-no-kami, preserving an older layer of belief. Overlaid onto this is the legend of the descent: "A god descended with a light like burning oil," which is told as the origin of the shrine's name. Furthermore, a Muromachi-period history connected the shrine's founding to Prince Shotoku (with Nyoirin Kannon as its original Buddhist manifestation, or *honji-butsu*), and in the Middle Ages, it evolved into the "Sosha of Koka," revered as a war god by the Koka samurai. Its mention in the oaths of the *Watanabe Family Documents* indicates that Aburahi-daimyojin was the deity before whom the shinobi of Koka swore their vows. Its multifaceted nature—encompassing fiery light, a sacred mountain, martial divinity, and the protection of fire and oil—mirrors the spiritual history of Koka, a land where espionage, fire arts, and Shugendo mountain asceticism intersected.