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- Hotsuma_Tsutae abstract "The Hotsuma Tsutae (also Hotuma Tsutaye, Japanese 秀真伝) is an elaborate epic poem of Japanese legendary history which differs substantially from the mainstream version as recorded in the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki. Its antiquity is undetermined.Although many proponents allege that the Hotsuma predates the mainstream mythology, the first known manuscript was dedicated to a shrine by Waniko Yasutoshi (also known as Yunoshin Ibo) in 1775. Some excerpts were published and translated into modern Japanese in 1884, a printing which was noted by Hirata Atsutane in his work on jindai moji, a Japanese writing system developed prior to the use of Chinese characters, but which otherwise ignored the work. Atsutane's Kokugaku was principally concerned with the Kojiki and the Hotsuma Tsutae would have only muddled his theories. Yasutoshi's manuscript was almost lost, but was discovered and rescued in 1993 following the publication of some popular books on the subject in the mid-20th century by Yoshinosuke Matsumoto.The Hotsuma Tsutae is known for its text and rhythm. It was written in yamato-kotoba, which only uses a Japanese vocabulary which predates contact with China. Some of the yamato-kotoba used in Hotsuma Tsutae are unattested elsewhere in the Old Japanese corpus but have parallels to old words, meaning that if it is a late medieval hoax it is extremely elaborate. Among other things in its primarily historical and non-mythological record, the text discusses the births, lives, and deaths of kami from Japanese folk shrines and history; in this case, the word kami being used to mean something like royalty and not "gods". In the poem, Amaterasu, the sun kami of Shinto, is male, and not female as is written in the official records. Matsumoto theorizes that Amaterasu was feminized in the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki to provide a justification for the reign of Empress Suiko who reigned just before those documents were written.Although for the most part Japanese academics remain uninterested in this text, some scholars are of the opinion that it may have been written in the Edo period. This is due to claims that the text was written in an original Japanese alphabet - in academic circles, the existence of writing in Japan before the use of Chinese characters is denied. The general opinion is that it is a false document. However, no definitive conclusion has yet been reached.".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae thumbnail HotsumaTutaye_waniko600dpi.svg?width=300.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageExternalLink 4931326013.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageExternalLink woshite.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageExternalLink awanouta-e.html.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageExternalLink futomani-e.html.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageExternalLink index-e.html.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageID "433497".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageLength "4321".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageRevisionID "542512972".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Amaterasu.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Category:Edo-period_works.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_mythology.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Edo_period.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Empress_Suiko.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Epic_poem.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Epic_poetry.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink False_document.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Hirata_Atsutane.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_mythology.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Jindai_moji.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Kami.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Kojiki.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Kokugaku.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Mainichi_Shimbun.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Nihon_Shoki.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Yamato-kotoba.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink Yamato_kotoba.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink File:Awauta.svg.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink File:HotsumaTutaye_waniko600dpi.svg.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLink File:Motoake.svg.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hotsuma Tsutae".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae hasPhotoCollection Hotsuma_Tsutae.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Inline_citations.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Jmyth_navbox_long.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae subject Category:Edo-period_works.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae subject Category:Japanese_mythology.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae hypernym Poem.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae type Article.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae type Poem.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae type Work.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae type Article.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae type Element.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae type Work.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae comment "The Hotsuma Tsutae (also Hotuma Tsutaye, Japanese 秀真伝) is an elaborate epic poem of Japanese legendary history which differs substantially from the mainstream version as recorded in the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki. Its antiquity is undetermined.Although many proponents allege that the Hotsuma predates the mainstream mythology, the first known manuscript was dedicated to a shrine by Waniko Yasutoshi (also known as Yunoshin Ibo) in 1775.".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae label "Hotsuma Tsutae".
- Hotsuma_Tsutae sameAs ホツマツタヱ.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae sameAs m.027z5x.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae sameAs Хоцума_Цутаэ.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae sameAs Хоцума_Цутае.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae sameAs Q2083538.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae sameAs Q2083538.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae wasDerivedFrom Hotsuma_Tsutae?oldid=542512972.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae depiction HotsumaTutaye_waniko600dpi.svg.
- Hotsuma_Tsutae isPrimaryTopicOf Hotsuma_Tsutae.