Mishaguji


Mishaguji, also known as Misakuji, Misaguchi or Mishakuji among other variants, is a collective term for deities or spirits venerated in the Suwa region of Nagano Prefecture, particularly associated with the ritual practices of the Upper Shrine of Suwa Taisha. These spirits once played a key role in the shrine’s winter and spring religious ceremonies and are also enshrined in numerous smaller shrines throughout the region. In these ceremonies, the Kan-no-Osa or Jinchō — also known as Jinchōkan — a high-ranking ritual priest from the Moriya clan, would summon the Mishaguji into vessels, such as individuals or objects, to be temporarily inhabited during the rite. Upon completion, the spirits were ritually dismissed.
Despite their longstanding presence in local tradition, the precise nature and original characteristics of the Mishaguji remain elusive, and no single definitive explanation has been established. Documents produced by the Moriya during the medieval period portray the Mishaguji as lesser deities who form the retinue of Suwa Myōjin, the deity of Suwa Shrine. By the early modern period, “Mishaguji” came to be interpreted in Suwa as an umbrella term for local kami who were revered as Suwa Myōjin's children.
[File:Jinchoukan-Moriya-shiryoukan Mishaguchi-jinja-2.jpg|thumb|left|270px|Ontō Mishaguji Sōsha (御頭御社宮司総社) in Chino, Nagano, considered to be the 'head' of Mishaguji shrines in the Suwa area]
In the early 20th century, folklorists such as Kunio Yanagita and Nogiku Imai observed similarities between Suwa's Mishaguji worship and ishigami / shakujin traditions found elsewhere in east and central Japan, as well as roadside deity cults such as Sai-no-Kami and Dōsojin, found in parts of the Kantō and Kinki regions. These scholars proposed that such beliefs formed part of a widespread, interconnected religious complex, leading to the adoption of the broad category "Mishaguji belief" to encompass these various traditions. While this classification was widely accepted through much of the 20th century, more recent scholarship has emphasized the need to distinguish Suwa’s Mishaguji from other, superficially similar local cults.
The postwar period brought increased scholarly interest in the Mishaguji, and numerous theories emerged regarding their origins and relationship to Suwa Shrine. Some proposed that Mishaguji were originally fertility or agricultural deities, while others viewed them as spirits inhabiting sacred natural objects, such as rocks or trees. Another theory held that “Mishaguji” denoted a more abstract, impersonal vital force, akin to the Austronesian concept of mana, a spiritual power present in people, objects, and landscapes.
Some theories posit that Mishaguji worship may trace its origins to the Jōmon period, given that the Suwa basin was a flourishing center of Jōmon culture and that many Mishaguji shrines incorporate Jōmon-era phallic stone rods and similar prehistoric artifacts as sacred objects. Additionally, the archaic nature of certain Suwa Shrine rituals hint at an ancient origin. Certain scholars have thus proposed that Mishaguji worship preserves remnants of an earlier animistic tradition predating the emergence of Takeminakata worship in the region, viewing the Mishaguji's presence at the Upper Shrine's rites as vestiges of original local beliefs. However, this interpretation has faced recent criticism, with some experts cautioning against overly speculative correlations between archaeological artifacts and later religious practices.

Names

Multiple variants of the name 'Mishaguji' exist such as 'Mishaguchi', 'Misaguchi', 'Misaguji', 'Mishakuji', 'Misakuji', or 'Omishaguji'. There are also various ways of rendering the name in kanji such as 御左口神, 御作神, 御社宮神, or 御社宮司, with 御左口神 being the commonly used form in medieval documents penned by the Suwa Shrine priesthood. Outside Suwa, deities thought to be related to the Mishaguji with names such as 'shaguji', 'shagoji', 'sangūji', 'Sagoji', 'Saguji', 'Shagottsan', 'Shagottan', 'Jogu-san', 'Osangū-san', 'Oshamotsu-sama', or 'Oshamoji-sama' - with different ways of writing them in kanji - are found.
The name's etymology is uncertain. During the early modern period when the Mishaguji were conflated with the divine children of Takeminakata, the god of the Upper Suwa Shrine, the name was explained as being derived from the term sakuchi, which in turn was connected with legends that credit Takeminakata's offspring with forming and developing the land of Shinano. The name has also been interpreted as deriving from shakujin / ishigami, a term used for sacred stones or rocks that were worshiped as repositories of kami, or shakujin, due to another association with bamboo poles and measuring ropes used in land surveying and boundary marking.
The term sakujin has also been suggested as a possible origin. Ōwa Iwao meanwhile theorized the name to be derived from sakuchi, a spirit that brings forth or opens up the latent life force present in the soil or the female womb.

Extent of cult

Research conducted by local amateur historian Nogiku Imai in the 1950s revealed a total of over 750 'saguji' shrines within Nagano Prefecture, 109 of which are in the Suwa area.
As noted above, worship of kami with names such as 'Saguji' or 'Sagoji' are also attested in neighboring areas, being notably widespread throughout the Kantō and Chūbu regions of Japan. Shrines enshrining these gods are found in places such as Shizuoka, Aichi, Yamanashi, Mie and Gifu. On the other hand, such shrines are conspicuously absent in the two prefectures of Niigata and Toyama, located to the north of Nagano.
Imai expanded upon the initial research carried out by folklorist Kunio Yanagita, who noted that the worship of 'Shaguji' is distinctive to eastern Japan. In his 1934 work "Place Names and History", Yanagita commented:
In the preface to the 1935 reprint of Ishigami Mondō, Yanagita wrote further:
Imai likewise worked on the assumption that these folk deities and shrines bearing similar names are ultimately derived from Suwa. She suggested the following possibility for the belief's dissemination:
Imai's view became influential, leading to the widespread classification of all 'Shaguji'/'Shagoji' deities and shrines under a single category known as 'Mishaguji belief'. However, more recent scholarship has challenged the notion that all "Mishaguji-like" deities and shrines across Japan stem from the Suwa region, arguing for a more nuanced categorization. Hotaka Ishino proposed that the Mishaguji featured in Suwa Shrine rituals, along with derivative or disconnected forms that may have roots in Suwa but have evolved independently, as well as local beliefs elsewhere that only superficially resemble Mishaguji worship, should all be distinguished and analyzed separately. He emphasizes that, in the original Suwa context, only certain individuals had the authority to perform Mishaguji-related rituals. Therefore, any evidence of ishigami worship in areas where these priests would unlikely have traveled is probably unrelated to Suwa's Mishaguji.

In Suwa Shrine's practice and belief

consists of four main shrines grouped into two sites: the Upper Shrine, located southwest of Lake Suwa, and the Lower Shrine, located on the northwesern side of the lake. Historically, the Upper and the Lower Shrines were two separate entities, each with its own priestly hierarchy and religious ceremonies. The two shrines were each formerly headed by a priest known as the Ōhōri ; the Upper Shrine's Ōhōri was unique in that he was regarded upon assuming office as a go-shintai, the physical embodiment of the shrine's deity, and was thus worshiped as a living god. Second to the Upper Shrine's Ōhōri was the Kan-no-Osa / Jinchō or Jinchōkan, the main priest responsible for overseeing and conducting the Upper Shrine's religious ceremonies, including the investiture ceremony of the Ōhōri. It was the Jinchō who had the sole prerogative of summoning and dismissing the Mishaguji in rites that call for their presence.
The relation between the Ōhōri and the Jinchō is explained in mythic terms by the story of Suwa Daimyōjin establishing his presence in Suwa by subjugating the local deity Moriya, who formerly controlled the region. After his defeat, Moriya became a subordinate to Suwa Daimyōjin. The Jinchō's clan, the Moriya, is said to be descendants of Moriya, while the Ōhōri's clan, the Suwa, is said to be descended from Suwa Daimyōjin.

Function

Mishaguji are believed to be spirits that dwell in rocks, trees, or bamboo leaves, as well as various man-made objects such as phallic stone rods, grinding slabs or mortars. In addition to the above, Mishaguji are also thought to descend upon straw effigies as well as possess human beings, especially during religious rituals.
This concept of Mishaguji as a possessing spirit are reflected in texts that describe Mishaguji being 'brought down' or 'lifted up' by the Moriya jinchōkan, the priest with the exclusive right to call upon Mishaguji in the religious rites of the Suwa Grand Shrine.
Folk beliefs considered Mishaguji to be associated with fertility and the harvest, as well as healers of diseases like the common cold or pertussis. Mishaguji have been worshipped as tutelary deities of whole villages as well as specific kinship groups. Further reflecting this relationship between Mishaguji and local communities is their being believed to preside over the act of founding villages as well as their being associated with the broadly similar concept of saikami.