Tag: burial mounds

Imperial graves (Ryoan-ji)

The burial mound of Emperor Ichijo on the hill above Ryoan-ji

Kyoto’s Ryoan-ji houses the most famous rock garden in the world. Sadly the World Heritage site is closed at present, because of the Coronavirus crisis. Not many people know, however, that on the hillside behind it called Shuyama are woods containing seven imperial burial mounds.

The present emperor’s father, who stepped down last year, is considered the 150th of his lineage. There is a grave at Kashihara Jingu for the first of the imperial line, but not for other early emperors who are generally considered to be fictitious. An official listing of emperors’ graves begins with no. 26 and includes the most famous of them all – the enormous World Heritage mound at Sakai in Osaka known as the Daisen Kofun and erroneously claimed as Emperor Nintoku’s burial place.

Unsurprisingly, a great many of the emperors’ graves are located in and around Kyoto, imperial capital for over 1000 years. The city’s first and last emperors, Kammu and Meiji (born and raised in Gosho), are buried not far from each other in the south-east of the city. And at nearby Sennyu-ji nearly all the emperors who died in the Edo Period are buried in the Tsukinowa Cemetery.

Two of a row of three emperors’ graves containing Go-Reizen, Go-Sanjo and Go-Shujaku

Aristocrats in Heian times were known as ‘cloud-dwellers’, since they were thought to be so august as to live on a higher plane, far above normal humans. A consequence of this was that like divine beings they were not referred to directly by name, but were often called after the place where they lived. Hence in The Tale of Genji one of the most famous females is known as Lady Roku-jo, named after the street where she lived.

Similarly the emperors buried on the Shuyama hill above Ryoan-ji have street names familiar to anyone who resides in Kyoto – Emperor Horikawa (1079-1107), Emperor Sanjo (976-1017), and Emperor Ichijo (980-1011).

One interesting oddity of the Ryoan-ji graves is that the mounds have torii in front of them except for one – that at the top. Moreover, it is not referred to as goryo (burial mound) but as a tsuka. It seems that in contrast to a burial mound, tsuka is not an emperor’s grave but contains remains that can’t be identified or an imperial family member of lesser status. In this case a notice board indicated that the site is where cremation of an emperor took place and his remains buried elsewhere.

The tsuka site of a cremation, hence no torii

Over the course of centuries there have been changes in the preference for burial or cremation. Early emperors from no. 26 to no. 40 were buried, with the first to be cremated being Empress Jito (d.703).

For a long period of time practice alternated between burial and cremation, with nos. 63 to 73 being cremated and nos.108 to 124 being buried. The sole exception was no. 81, death in water, grave unknown. This was the tragic child-emperor Antoku, who was drowned aged five at the end of the Genpei War (1180-1185) between the Heike and the Genji.

In the Edo Period the custom was for emperors to be buried at the Tsukinowa Cemetery in Kyoto, and this continued up to present times. However, Emperor Akihito, who resigned last year, has declared a wish to be cremated. This is in keeping with the general postwar tendency in Japan to change from burial to cremation. As a result, it’s said that today an astonishing 99.94% of Japanese are cremated.

Return to nature – ancestral spirits in an animist setting

Water basin at the entrance to Shuyama housing the imperial mounds. Simple. natural and aesthetically pleasing – very much in the Japanese tradition.

Imperial tombs

Ancient burial mounds are found all around Kansai, though like this one near Sakurai known as Hashihaka it’s often unclear as to who exactly is buried there.

The scholar Takagi Hiroshi writes that: “After the Meiji Restoration, an idea of the everlasting and unbroken single line of emperors was created, and at the same time, closely related to that idea, imperial mausoleums were invented anew. The latter functioned as a mythical device to enable the continuation of the modern imperial system, by visualizing the single line from the myth of Amaterasu’s grandson’s descending from heaven to earth, through all the emperors in history to the current one.” (Kindai tennō-sei to koto, p.177)

Kagura theatre featuring Ninigi no mikoto

Already before the Meiji Restoration, a grave for legendary Emperor Jimmu had been located in 1863, though historians doubt any such person existed. After the Restoration in 1874, even more astonishingly the burial sites of the three semi-divine generations prior to Jimmu were said to have been identified – that of Ninigi, who according to myth descended from heaven, together with his son and grandson.

Subsequently mounds were specified for many other emperors, such as the thirty-second emperor Sushun (in 1876), for the thirty-ninth emperor Kōbun (1877), the second emperor Suizei (1878), and the fiftieth emperor Kanmu  (1880). In 1878, the administration of the burial mounds was transferred from the Home Ministry to the Imperial Household Ministry.

When the latter issued the list of the imperial mausoleums in 1880, the list stated that tombs of thirteen emperors were not identified, but nine years later before the promulgation of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan in 1889 the whole long list of imperial ancestors had been identified except for one, that of the ninety-eighth emperor Chōkei. Because of the lack of historical sources, it was difficult to specify his tomb, though there were many candidates. Finally in 1944 during the midst of the war, it was decided to clear up the issue by settling on a site in Kyoto.

Kammu’s tomb was ‘discovered’ in 1880 and is now part of Kyoto’s kami presence

Post World War Two
After World War II, the Imperial Household Ministry was restructured as the Imperial Household Agency, which now has management and control of imperial mausoleums. On the basis of ‘preservation of sacred sites’, free scholarly investigation of burial mounds is banned, for as ancestral tombs they are held to be inviolable. Remarkably, the Agency has designated no fewer than 895 sites from Yamagata to Kagoshima  as imperial mausoleums and tombs, meaning that they are all off-limits to archaeologists. (188 burial mounds are designated as senior members of the Imperial family.) It has given rise to the often voiced suspicion that the authorities are frightened of finding the graves reveal Korean ties, which would confirm the provenance of the imperial family. (Scroll down to the bottom of this page for more about this.)

Recently a World Heritage nomination was made for the “Ancient Tumulus Cluster in Mozu-Furuichi”, which may shed an interesting light on the problem, for a number of imperial mausoleums are included in the application. Which side of the argument will Unesco favour?

Daisen mound, also known as Nintoku’s tomb, at Sakai near Osaka. It’s the largest burial mound in Japan, and the largest in terms of ground size in the world. (Photo courtesy Japan Times)

Previously the organisation has shown great sympathy with Shinto traditions in accepting the men-only rule for the Ōmine Shugendo site, allowing Shimogamo Shrine to cut down part of its ancient woodland, and agreeing to a ban on entry to the sacred island of Okinoshima (part of Munakata Taisha).

A major item in the World Heritage application is the so-called Nintoku’s tomb, one of the three largest in the world together with the Great Pyramid in Egypt and the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor in China (Nintoku’s is the largest if measured by surface area alone).

Nintoku was the 16th emperor in the official line of succession, thought to have died in the early fifth century. According to Wikipedia, “Built in the middle of the 5th century by an estimated 2,000 men working daily for almost 16 years, the Nintoku tumulus, at 486 meters long and with a mound 35 meters high, is twice as long as the base of the famous Great Pyramid of Pharaoh Khufu (Cheops) in Giza.”

Archaeologists however disagree with the attribution to Nintoku from the evidence that is available and refer to it instead as the Daisen Mound (c.400). In fact, the Boston Museum of Arts holds artifacts excavated from the site after a storm. It’s certainly one of the wonders of the world, and walking around its immense perimeter makes one aware of the size, though sadly part of the route is swallowed up by urban sprawl.

When imperial myth comes up against archaeological research, I wonder which side Unesco will choose. Will the Imperial Household Agency still be allowed to put up signs advertising the mound as Nintoku’s tomb? Or will it get the more correct and objective appellation of Daisen Mound?

It is difficult to know what pressure will be applied behind the scenes by Japan, whose financial contributions have been well rewarded in recent years by a steady stream of new World Heritage Sites. Like the issue of whaling, there is often more at stake than what is evident on the surface. At the core of both these contentious matters is a deep concern about Japan’s heritage and its sense of identity.

Entrance to the ‘Nintoku burial mound’ in Sakai, Osaka, considered the third biggest burial site in the world after the Great Pyramid in Egypt and the tomb of Emperor Qin in China.

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For the official World Heritage application, see here.

For an article about the possible controversy that may arise in the World Heritage application, see this piece by Eric Johnston in the Japan Times.

Thanks to Green Shinto reader John Hallam for pointing out this interesting comment from the Japanese Archaeology website, on the Kofun Culture page:

“There is a myth around that this refusal is because the Imperial Household Agency, and thus the emperor and his family, will discover that the Japanese imperial line is Korean in origin. But the fact that some of the Great Clans around the imperial line and providing wives and mothers for the emperors were descendents from Korean immigrants is clear in the Nihon Shoki and has never been censored from the history books. And there are a lot of people in Japan and in the world who would refuse to let archaeologists or anyone else dig up the graves of their ancestors, especially in a country where none of the archaeological organizations has a code of ethics.

However, the facts are much more complicated that this. The Imperial Household Agency has been doing some excavation work on the designated tombs, in conjunction with maintenance work, and recently they have let a select few archaeologists join in the work. And some tombs designated as imperial tombs have been excavated in the past. Nintoku’s tomb is one of these.

There also are major problems with the designation of kofun mound tombs as imperial tombs. During the period of mound tomb building, no one kept records of who was buried in which tombs. When the first histories of Japan were compiled in the early 8th century, the memory of these tombs was already lost and the writers had to guess. Then nothing more was done for over 1,000 years, until efforts were made in the late Edo and early Meiji periods to determine which mounds were imperial tombs. Some of these designations are now known to be wrong and a large portion of the others are suspect.

If archaeologists have not already accidently excavated an imperial tomb, sooner or later they will, unless all kofun mound tombs are investigated and far more reliable designations of the imperial tombs are made. In fact, only 2 of the mound tombs are generally agreed to be designated correctly, the tombs of Emperor Temmu and Tenji.”

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