Daidarabotchi
Daidarabotchi
The Terrain-Shaping Giant Who Trampled the Lands of Musashi
Daidarabotchi is not so much a terrifying monster as a giant whose existence serves to explain the origins of the land. He has been debated both as a degraded folk version of the nation-building deities from the *Kojiki* and *Nihon Shoki* myths, and as a product of ancient peoples' imagination trying to explain Jomon period shell mounds or natural terrain features. Musashi Province is one of the areas where these legends are particularly strong, dotted with origin stories of place names—such as "Ootakubo" in Saitama City—where his footprints turned into depressions, marshes, and wells. Even massive geographical features like Mount Fuji, Lake Biwa, and Lake Haruna are attributed to this giant's deeds, operating on a scale far exceeding a single prefecture. Ever since Kunio Yanagita compiled the footprint legends from across the country, Daidarabotchi has become a "giant bearing the memory of place names and terrain," blending seamlessly into the very landscape of Japan.