田心姫神
たごりひめのかみ
沖ノ島に鎮まる海北道中の女神・田心姫神
The key to understanding Tagorihime lies in the fact that Okinoshima is a "distant island." The three shrines of Munakata Taisha are arranged such that one ventures deeper into the sacred realm the further one crosses the sea: Hetsumiya on the Kyushu mainland, Nakatsumiya on Oshima, and Okitsumiya on Okinoshima in the Genkai Sea. The fact that the deity of Okitsumiya, placed furthest offshore, is Tagorihime clearly illustrates her character. She is not a guardian nestling close to human settlements, but a divine presence that arises when navigators spot the island's silhouette, read the tides, and stand in awe of unseen dangers. In the classic texts, she is born from a sword. The ukehi (oath) section of the Kojiki records that Amaterasu Omikami took Susanoo-no-Mikoto's ten-span sword, rinsed it in the Ame-no-Manai well, chewed it to pieces, and from the narrow mist of her breath blown away, Takiribime-no-Mikoto was formed. The sword is an object of military might and oaths, the well water is a medium of purification, and breath and mist are boundaries without form. Because Tagorihime is born at the intersection of these three, she can be understood not merely as a sea deity, but as the goddess of the very moment when martial force is transformed into prayer. The variations in her divine name indicate that she is a deity who cannot be confined to a single reading. Called Takiribime-no-Mikoto or Okitsushima-hime-no-Mikoto in the Kojiki, she is spoken of as Tagorihime or Tagirihime in the Nihon Shoki lineage. Depending on whether "Takiri" is read as the "surging (tagiru)" of the tides or "Tagiri" as the mist upon the sea, the expression she shows changes slightly. In either case, however, at her core lies the power to alter visibility right in the middle of the water's surface. To navigators, fog was both a danger and a sign signaling the realm of the gods. In the Munakata faith, this mythology is tied to actual sea routes. Okinoshima is a maritime transport hub connecting the Japanese archipelago and the Korean Peninsula, and official World Heritage documents explain that rituals praying for navigational safety and successful exchange were held from the late 4th century to the late 9th century. The evolution of offerings shows a transition of ritual sites from atop giant boulders, to rock shelters, half-rock-shelter half-open-air, and finally open-air locations, narrating how the ancient rituals of Okinoshima are essential in considering the formation of indigenous Japanese faith moving from nature worship to shrine rituals. The taboos surrounding the island reinforce Tagorihime's "invisibility." Official World Heritage documents convey customs such as not speaking of what one sees or hears on Okinoshima, not taking a single tree, blade of grass, or stone, and requiring even Shinto priests to undergo purification in the sea before entering. These are not so much a matter of secrecy as they are a decorum meant to prevent the consumption of the sacred realm. Tagorihime is not a deity who discloses everything within statues or narratives. Through what is not spoken, what is not taken away, and what is left behind on the island, she exists all the more profoundly. On the other hand, she is not confined solely to Okinoshima. The history of Munakata Taisha regards the three goddesses as the three daughters of Amaterasu Omikami, telling how the land of Munakata, which fulfilled the functions of overseas diplomacy, trade, and national defense, became deeply tied to state rituals. The description of "state rituals" seen in the history of Munakata Taisha prevents Tagorihime from remaining merely a deity of maritime safety. In the ancient state, crossing the sea meant trade, diplomacy, warfare, and prayer. Precisely because of this complexity, her stillness resonates not as weakness, but as the posture that both the state and humanity ought to uphold when facing the ocean. Furthermore, in the genealogy of the Kojiki, Takiribime-no-Mikoto bears Ajisukitakahikone-no-Kami and Takahime-no-Mikoto with Okuninushi-no-Kami. This means that the maritime goddess of Munakata also holds a place within the Izumo lineage. Situated in the genealogy of Okuninushi-no-Kami, Tagorihime is a guardian of the northern sea routes, while simultaneously a mother goddess expanding the bloodline of Izumo mythology. The goddess retreating far offshore paradoxically links the myths of the land. This duality is the quiet strength of Tagorihime. The deeper she withdraws into the island, the more she expands as the knot binding the entire mythology together.