Difference between revisions of "Hashihaka kofun"
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Latest revision as of 03:22, 18 December 2014
- Date: c. 3rd-4th century CE
- Japanese: 箸墓古墳 (Hashihaka kofun)
Hashihaka kofun, a burial mound near Nara, dating to the 3rd or 4th century CE, is one of the largest of the earliest keyhold-shaped (zenpô kôen) kofun. The mound is about 280 meters long.
The site is said to be possibly the grave of Yamato Totohi Momoso-hime, a figure from the Nihon shoki. Other theories suggest that Hashihaka is the grave of Himiko, and/or that Himiko and Totohi Momoso-hime were the same person.
References
- Gallery labels, Model of Hashihaka Burial Mound, National Museum of Japanese History.