Heaven-Descending Maiden
AH-moh-roh-nah-goo
Lore-Faithful Version
Amakudari-Onna is recorded in Amami Ōshima as a variant of celestial maiden tales, emphasizing the visiting woman who steals human souls. She may appear even under clear skies with a light drizzle, marked by unusual attire carrying a white furoshiki. Her targets are mainly young men; she approaches with smiles and sensual allure, and if they comply, she takes their life or soul. A ladle of water serves as the medium, with taboos warning that drinking it lets her carry victims to the heavens. Folk defenses include staring her down and observing proper drinking etiquette, tying the tale not only to the uncanny but also to admonitions against nighttime wandering, illicit affairs, and improper hosting. Names vary—Amagari-onna, Amore-onna, Hagoromo beauty—reflecting regional shifts, yet the core remains consistent: a woman descending from heaven, fine rain, seduction, soul theft. Though mingled with later hagoromo legends, it strongly retains the imprint of Amami’s visiting-deity beliefs.