Dōsojin (道祖神, literally, "road ancestor deity") is a generic name for a type ofShintokami popularly worshipped inKantō and neighboring areas in Japan where, astutelary deities of borders and paths, they are believed to protect travellers, pilgrims, villages, and individuals in "transitional stages" from epidemics and evil spirits.[1][2][3] Also calledSae no kami orSai no kami (障の神・塞の神),Dōrokujin (道陸神) orShakujin (石神, literally: "stone kami"). Dōsojin are often represented as a human couple, carved male or female genitals, large stones or statues, or even tall poles along a road.
Dōsojin are sometimes housed in small roadsideShinto shrines calledhokora.[4] In rural areasDōsojin can be found at village boundaries, in mountain passes, or along byways, and in urban areas they can be seen at street corners or near bridges.[3] When shaped like aphallus, they are associated with birth, procreation, and marital harmony.[5] When represented as a human couple,Dōsojin are revered as deities of boundaries, marriage, fertility and protection.[3]
The origin ofDōsojin stone markers is uncertain and has no exact date. It is known, however, that after Buddhism was introduced,Jizō became a tutelary god of travelers and pilgrims.[3]
Batō Kannon is the bodhisattva of compassion and keeps a watchful eye over the animal state of Karmic Rebirth. Atop Batō Kannon's head rests a horse's head.[6] Stone statues of this deity can be found beside perilous paths and byways, like Jizō statues, in northern Japan. However,Dosojin in Batō Kannon's form not only protect travelers, but their horses as well.[3]
Chimata-no-kami (岐の神,god of crossroads), according to theKojiki, was born whenkamiIzanagi threw away his trousers to wash himself after returning from Yomi, the land of the dead. TheNihongi andKogo Shūi tell the same myth, but call thekamiSarutahiko.[7] Chimata-no-kami symbols can be found at crossroads, perhaps because of the deity being associating with joining, and some famousonsens, to cure sexual or fertility issues.[8]
Jizō is the Japanese version ofBodhisattvaKsitigarbha, aBuddhist bodhisattva worshiped mainly inEast Asia.[9] His assimilation within a group ofkami is an example of the Japanesesyncretism of Buddhism and Shinto (shinbutsu shūgō). Originally from India, in Japan he was given new attributes and has become the guardian of children, expecting mothers, firemen, travelers, pilgrims, and unborn, aborted, or miscarried children. He is depicted as a plain monk, sometimes holding his shakujō (錫杖, six-ring staff) in one hand and the hōjunotama (宝珠の玉, wish-granting jewel) in the other.[10] Statues of Jizō can be found along mountain passes or harrowing roads in Japan, often dressed in red, sometimes white, caps and bibs by distressed parents.[10][8] Small stones are frequently piled in front of a Jizō statue, a tradition believed to relieve a child of their penance.
Jizō statues commonly appear in groupings of six, called Roku Jizō.[8] Six because of Jizō's vow to exist concurrently at all six states of Karmic Rebirth.[8][11] A Roku Jizō appears in theJapanese folktaleKasa Jizō.[12]
In modern times,Dōsojin have become fused in popular belief with a different deity having similar characteristics called "Sae no kami",[2] whose birth is described in theKojiki. When one of thekami,Izanagi-no-mikoto, sought to leave after going to the realm of the dead (Yomi no Kuni) to visit his spouseIzanami-no-mikoto, he was chased by the demoness Yomotsushikome (黄泉醜女,lit. Yomi ugly woman).[2] To stop her, he threw her a stick from which Sae no Kami was born. For this reason, he is thekami who prevents the passage of the spirits of the dead into the world of the living, and therefore a god who is a protector of boundaries. He is represented by large rocks set at the edges of villages. Because of the rocks' elongated shape, he came to be associated also with childbirth, children and matrimonial happiness.[2] As a consequence, he was in turn associated also withJizō, the bodhisattva who is the protector of children.[5]
Every January 15 in the village ofNozawaonsen, Nagano theDosojin Matsuri is held. TheDosojin Matsuri is a fire festival meant to celebrate the birth of a family's first child, exorciseyōkai, and ensure blissful marriages. The day prior to theDosojin Matsuri, a hundred or so residents of Nozawaonsen construct a shaden. Meanwhile, across the glade are two wooden poles that represent a human couple, the village's version ofDōsojin. On the day of the festival the shaden is burned in a scuffle between men ages twenty-five and forty-two—considered unlucky ages for men in Japan—and the rest of the villagers who bear reed torches. As the shaden burns, the village men of forty-two years sing to theDōsojin. The men ages twenty-five and forty-two play a key role in the festival to attain the protection of theDōsojin, so that the misfortune brought about by their ages will be nullified.[13]
In chapter 34 of the supernatural manga Hyakki Yakoushou by Ima Ichiko, the male protagonist Ritsu and his cousin Tsukasa are compared to aDōsojin