Changes

291 bytes added ,  07:49, 13 January 2020
no edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:  
Aoriyae was a local deity of the northern [[Ryukyu Islands]] associated with wind, rain, water, and military force. The term also came to refer to priestesses dedicated to this deity; based at [[Nakijin]] on [[Okinawa Island]], the Aoriyae priestess may have been the most powerful woman in the islands prior to the rise in stature and influence of the [[Kikoe-ogimi|Kikôe-ôgimi]] in the 16th century.
 
Aoriyae was a local deity of the northern [[Ryukyu Islands]] associated with wind, rain, water, and military force. The term also came to refer to priestesses dedicated to this deity; based at [[Nakijin]] on [[Okinawa Island]], the Aoriyae priestess may have been the most powerful woman in the islands prior to the rise in stature and influence of the [[Kikoe-ogimi|Kikôe-ôgimi]] in the 16th century.
   −
Possibly originated as a well-water deity on [[Kumejima]], Aoriyae later came to be associated with the war god [[Hachiman]], and is described in the ''[[Omoro soshi|Omoro sôshi]]'' as an "island-smashing priestess," the word ''shima'' ("island") in [[Okinawan language|Okinawan]] referring not only to physical islands but also to any well-defined settlement or community.
+
Aoriyae may have originated as a well-water deity on [[Kumejima]], or may have its origins in a deity known as [[Sashikasa]] in the [[Tokara Islands]], which according to some scholars spread southward and came to be known as Aoriyae in northern Okinawa ([[Hedo no misaki|Hedo]] and [[Nakijin]]) and Kumejima and as Sasukasa in southern Okinawa.
   −
Aoriyae is often described in the ''Omoro'' as acting within, or otherwise being associated with, a sacred space called ''shike''. Some have suggested a connection between this ''shike'' and sacred spaces on [[Tsushima]] and elsewhere known as ''shigechi''.
+
Aoriyae later came to be associated with the war god [[Hachiman]], and is described in the ''[[Omoro soshi|Omoro sôshi]]'' as an "island-smashing priestess," the word ''shima'' ("island") in [[Okinawan language|Okinawan]] referring not only to physical islands but also to any well-defined settlement or community. Aoriyae is often described in the ''Omoro'' as acting within, or otherwise being associated with, a sacred space called ''shike''. Some have suggested a connection between this ''shike'' and sacred spaces on [[Tsushima]] and elsewhere known as ''shigechi''.
    
{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}
    
==References==
 
==References==
*Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii Press (2019), 32-33.
+
*Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii Press (2019), 32-33, 98.
    
[[Category:Deities]]
 
[[Category:Deities]]
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
contributor
27,126

edits