Kuebiko


Kuebiko is the Shinto kami of folk wisdom, knowledge and agriculture, and is represented in Japanese mythology as a scarecrow who cannot walk but has comprehensive awareness.

Names

Kuebiko is the main name for this kami. There is also an alternate name of Yamada no sohodo, mentioned in the Kojiki.Kuebiko comes from, an archaic verb meaning "to break down; to become shabby and disordered", plus, an old epithet for "boy, young man", in turn from, literally "sun child". The meaning could be translated as something like "shabby young man".Yamada no sohodo is formed like an old-fashioned formal name, from surname or literal noun, genitive or possessive particle, and, in turn from soho + -do, a contraction from -bito, the compounding form of . The meaning of this name could be construed as "soaked person of the mountain paddies", a euphemism for "scarecrow".

Mythology

The Kojiki has the earliest reference to Kuebiko in the myth of Ōkuninushi. When Ōkuninushi was at Cape Miho in Izumo, a small kami arrived in a boat. Nobody knew his name, but a toad suggested asking Kuebiko, who revealed the god was a scion of the goddess Kami-musubi named Sukuna-bikona. In Basil Hall Chamberlain's translation,
Then the toad spoke, saying: "As for this, the Crumbling Prince will surely know it." Thereupon summoned and asked the Crumbling-Prince, who replied, saying: "This is the Little-Prince-the-Renowned-Deity, the august child of the Deity-Producing-Wondrous-Deity."... So called the Crumbling Prince, who revealed the Little-Prince-the-Renowned-Deity, is what is now the scarecrow in the mountain fields. This Deity, though his legs do not walk, is a Deity who knows everything in the Empire.

Modern worship

In the present day, Kuebiko is worshipped as the god of agriculture or scholarship and wisdom. The Kuebiko Shrine, which is a subordinate shrine of Ōmiwa Shrine in Sakurai, Nara, is dedicated to this deity.