布都御魂剣
Futsunomitama-no-Tsurugi
Aussi connu sous le nom de: Futsunomitama; Divine Sword of Emperor Jinmu's Eastern Expedition
Description
Futsunomitama-no-Tsurugi (the Sword of Futsunomitama) is the divine sword enshrined as the primary sacred body (shintai) of Isonokami Jingū, one of the oldest shrines in Japan, located in Tenri, Nara. According to the Nihon Shoki, when Emperor Jinmu's army fell ill and incapacitated by poison miasma during the mythological Eastern Expedition to establish imperial rule over Yamato, the thunder-and-war deity Takemikazuchi-no-Kami appeared in the emperor's dream and sent down his divine sword with the message: 'Take this sword named Futsunomitama and you will defeat your enemies.' The sword arrived in the imperial camp, the army recovered, and the conquest of Yamato succeeded — establishing the Japanese imperial line. 'Futsu' means 'cutting sharply,' making Futsunomitama a deified abstraction of the sword's essential power: the ability to cut. The sword's custodians for centuries were the Mononobe clan, the ancient military aristocracy whose name literally means 'the people of things (weapons)' — their guardianship of this divine weapon was the religious foundation of their political claim to be Japan's legitimate military power. The Mononobe's destruction in 587 CE and the rise of Buddhist political authority under Prince Shōtoku marked the end of that era, yet Futsunomitama's shrine survived and is venerated to this day.
Légendes et récits
The legend of Futsunomitama-no-Tsurugi is the legend of Japan's founding. When Emperor Jinmu's army lay helpless from poison — unable to advance, unable to retreat, facing death in the wilderness of Kumano — the thunder deity Takemikazuchi appeared in the emperor's dream: 'I possess a sword named Futsunomitama. I will send it down to you. Take it, and your enemies will fall.' The sword appeared in the camp; the army rose; the conquest of Yamato was completed. Japan's first emperor took his throne. This story encodes a theology that runs through all of Japanese history: legitimate power comes from the gods, transmitted through sacred objects. The sword that the god sends down from heaven is not merely a weapon — it is authorization, the physical presence of divine sanction for human rule. The Mononobe clan, who guarded this sword for centuries as Japan's 'people of weapons,' built their entire claim to be the nation's legitimate military power on their role as its custodians. Their defeat by the Buddhist faction in 587 was not just a political battle but a theological revolution — a change in the source of divine authorization from ancient sword-gods to the Buddha. Yet the sword survived in its shrine through all political changes, honored by every subsequent regime, as the embodiment of the principle that legitimate rule in Japan rests ultimately not on human force but on divine permission. Stone-surrounded, forest-wrapped, never shown to ordinary eyes — Futsunomitama is the divine principle of the sword itself, not a blade but an idea made holy by two thousand years of veneration.