Koji Kashin
Kashin Koji (果心居士), also called Shippo Gyoja (七宝行者, Pilgrim of the Seven Treasures), is a Japanese folkloric/legendary character of a late
Life
According to the "
), due to his prowess in non-Buddhist magic, he was exiled.One of his famous magical arts was throwing away bamboo leaves on the water surface (Sarusawa Pond in Nara Park), where the leaves would turn into fish and swim.[3] When a man did not believe this magic, he used a toothpick to stroke the man's tooth, which dangled as if it would fall out.[4]
Koji was especially close with
In 1574[2] Koji attracted the attention of Nobunaga Oda with a lifelike kakemono. Oda wanted to buy it, while Kashin refused, naming the painting "priceless". After long negotiations Kashin sold the scroll for 100 ryō, and to the disappointment of Oda the painting disappeared off the scroll, because according to Kashin it was "no longer priceless".[2][6]
A Japanese Miscellany by Lafcadio Hearn contains "The Story of Kashin Koji", in which some time after tricking Oda with the kakemono, Koji is invited to a party by Mitsuhide Akechi, drinks ten bowls of sake, summons a ship to come out of a drawing, and he boards the ship and disappears into the drawing.[6]
In another version of Koji Kashin's disappearance, in June of 1584 he was called upon by
According to "Old Man's Tea Talk" (古老茶話), an essay by Ei Kashiwazaki (柏崎永以), during the
According to the modern stage magician and wazuma practitioner Shintaro Fujiyama , the stories of Koji's tricks can be explained by the principles of modern stage illusion.[1]
In popular culture
Despite the historicity of Koji being questioned, he often appears in modern fantasy stories, as a hermit who waded through the troubled times of the Sengoku period, or a mysterious person like ninja. Some of the examples include:
- Blade of the Immortal manga.
- 1982 action film Ninja Wars, with Mikio Narita as Koji.
- An Assassin-class Servant in Fate/Grand Order.
- A homonymous character in Boruto: Naruto Next Generations, a clone of (also homonymous with a folkloric figure) Jiraiya.
- The main antagonist in the 2020 video game Nioh 2.
References
- ^ OCLC 435377209.
- ^ OCLC 867135547.
- ISBN 978-4-00-240203-1.
- ^ Nakayama, Tadayoshi (1670). Daigo zuihitsu 醍醐随筆 (in Japanese).
- ^ 恕翁 (1749). 虚実雑談集 (in Japanese).
- ^ a b Hearn, Lafcadio (1901). A Japanese miscellany. pp. 37–51 – via digital.cincinnatilibrary.org.