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Kawachi Provinceかわち

1 yokai rooted in Kawachi Province. Explore the legends tied to this land.

  • Battlefield Will-o'-Wisp

    Battlefield Will-o'-Wisp

    Uncommon

    koh-SEN-joh-bee

    Battlefield Will-o’-the-Wisp (Classical Form)

    Demons & GiantsOld battlefields across Japan (e.g., Wakae in Kawachi Province)

    A standardized image of the battlefield will-o’-the-wisp as seen in Edo-period picture scrolls and ghost tales. Most appear as multiple pale fireballs at midnight, drifting low as if against the wind. They are thought to rise as spirit-fire from the defilement of blood and corpses saturating the ground, each flame regarded as a fragment of the aura of soldiers and horses. Accounts describe repetitive behavior—circling fixed spots, appearing and vanishing, crossing rice-field ridges—rather than chasing people. Witnesses would recite prayers to withdraw, and villages calmed them with memorial services. Sekien used the term “Kosenjō-bi” to group uncanny fires at battle sites, framing many postwar fire tales found in works like Yadonokigusa. Malice is rarely attributed; they were respected as signs of unsettled souls.