
ABSTRACT = EXPLORING THEIR ORIGINS & ROLES IN JAPANESE DEATH RITES & FUNERARY ARTThe Thirteen Buddhist Deities (JÅ«sanbutsu åä¸ä») are a purely Japanese convention. The standardized group of thirteen emerged in the mid-14th century, but in its formative years (12th & 13th centuries), the group's composition varied significantly and included only ten, eleven, or twelve members. The group is important to all schools of Japanese Buddhism. Even today, the thirteen are invoked at thirteen postmortem rites held by the living for the dead, and at thirteen premortem rites held by the living for the living. As shown herein, the thirteen are associated with the Seven Seventh-Day Rites ä¸ä¸æ, the Six Realms of Karmic Rebirth å é, the Buddhas of the Ten Days of Fasting åææ¥ä», the Ten Kings of Hell åç, the Secret Buddhas of the Thirty Days of the Month ä¸åæ¥ç§ä», and other groupings. The Thirteen provide early examples of Japan's medieval honji-suijaku æ¬å°å迹 paradigm, wherein local deities (suijaku) are recognized as avatars of the Buddhist deities (honji). This classroom guide is unique in three ways: (1) it presents over 70 annotated images, arranged chronologically and thematically, from the 12th to 20th century; (2) it offers four methods to easily identify the individual deities; and (3) it provides visual evidence that the thirteen are configured to mimic the layout of the central court of the Womb World Mandala ä¸å°å «èé¢. â KEYWORDS. åä¸ä» or åä¸ä½ã»åçã»ä¸ä¸æã»ä¸ä¸æ¥ã»ä¸æã»ä¸é°ã»å 齿¥ã»å é ã»åææ¥ä»ã»ä¸åæ¥ç§ä»ã»æ¬å°å迹 ã»å µç¯è¨ã»ä¸æè¨ã» é ä¿®åççä¸çµ ã»å°èµåççµ ã»ä½èª¬å°èè©è©ç¼å¿å ç¸åçç¶ã»å¼æ³å¤§å¸«éä¿®æ¥è¨äº ã»ä¸å¦é. â An Adobe PDF version (printable, searchable) is also available for download. |


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Slide 2. In a Nutshell. Any study of Japanâs Thirteen Buddhist Deities begins with a dilemma â there is scant textual evidence about the thirteen until the 15th century, making their study largely speculative. This guide therefore focuses on the âvisual record,â presenting the oldest known artwork of the group during its formative period in the 12th & 13th & 14th centuries. Any study of the thirteen also requires an upfront caveat, for the term åä¸ä», or åä¸ä½, is often mistakenly translated as âThirteen Buddhaâ â the group includes five Buddha ä», seven Bodhisattva è©è©, and one MyÅ-Å æç. Japanâs thirteen are a purely Japanese convention. They are not mentioned in the TaishÅ Buddhist Canon. Although the term åä¸ä½ (Thirteen Buddha) appears in 23 different texts of the canon, its usages show no known correlation with Japanâs thirteen. The latter preside over thirteen postmortem memorial rites that start on the 7th day after death and continue until the 33rd year after death (see Slide 3). The standard grouping appeared around the mid-14th C. after undergoing nearly two centuries of transition from 10 to 11 to 12 to 13 members. The group was popularized in the 15th C. and linked to both postmortem rites for the dead & premortem rites for the living. Despite the speculative nature of this topic, the groupâs raison dâêtre can be convincingly shown via extant art. Here is a case where art seems to predate texts. Above seeds adapted from Shingon.org. | |
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![Slide 3. Conclusions Up Front. Four don't conform to modern dates âââââââââââââ Download chart in Excel or in Adobe PDF
1
Japan's 13 Buddhist Deities are a clever way to appeal to the largest possible congregation. The group's deities include:
SPECULATION
a
Traditional triad featuring Shaka (Historical Buddha), a Pure Land Triad featuring Amida, and an Esoteric Triad featuring Dainichi.
The 13th-14th centuries ushered in Buddhism for the commoner (Pure Land, Zen, Nichiren). The older esoteric Tendai school, meanwhile, was nearing the peak of its power. Tendai's arch rival, the Shingon school, was hence under pressure to retain its followers, and so it concocted the group of 13 Buddhist Deities, largely to counteract the growing popularity of the Pure Land, Zen & Nichiren schools & the rising power of Tendai. Amida (Pure Land) faith was [perhaps] the driving force in the adoption of China's 10 Kings of Hell & their linkage with 10 Buddhist deities. The 10 rites for the dead, based on China's 10 Kings, became a standard part of funerary rites in Tendai, Shingon, Pure Land, Zen & Nichiren traditions. Shingon later added three more deities & kings & rites (extending until the 33rd year after death) to remain relevant. The number 33 is associated with Kannon, a member of the 13. The number 33 involves the forms Kannon takes to save believers, as described in the Lotus Sutra (login = guest) -- the most popular scripture in all Asia. Today there are many 33-site pilgrimages in Japan to Kannon. For more on Kannon's 33 forms, click here. As for Ancestor Worship in Japan, 33 years marks the point when, says Hutchins pp. 64-65: "the deceasedâs spirit passes from âdistantâ to âremoteâ & they become a full-fledged ancestor of the household." After 33 years, the dead are considered ancestral spirits. Buddhist rites are stopped. Today, death rites vary widely in Japan, but the 33rd year is still crucial.
b
A fourth triad is embedded as well -- the Buddhas of Three Ages ä¸ä¸ä½ -- featuring Amida (Past), Shaka (Present), Miroku (Future).
c
The three remaining deities (FudÅ, JizÅ, Yakushi) are among Japan's most beloved divinities.
d
JizÅ & Miroku are paired (JizÅ represents the Future Buddha Miroku); JizÅ is also a popular member of the Pure Land school.
e
JizŠ& KokūzŠare paired (JizŠas earth / matter and KokūzŠas space / void). This is unequivocally linked to China's five elements.
f
The JizŠand KokūzŠpairing is also unequivocally linked to Japan's five-tier memorial graveyard stones and wooden graveyard tablets.
g
FudÅ and Dainichi are paired. FudÅ is a manifestation of Dainichi. The two share the same holy day.
h
Yakushi and Ashuku are paired (perhaps); both are lords of the Eastern Paradise
2
The 13 Buddhist Deities were created by the Shingon school. There is no conclusive textual evidence, but all fingers point to Shingon.
a
The Dual World Mandala (composed of the Diamond World and Womb World mandalas) is especially important to the esoteric Shingon school.
b
The Womb World Mandala has "13 great courts" åä¸å¤§é¢. Mapping the 13 Deities into the central Womb Court yields a coherent group. See Slide 2.
c
Among the 13 Deities, the first (FudÅ) & last three (Ashuku, Dainichi, KokÅ«zÅ) are revered primarily by Shingon & play key roles in mandala cosmology.
d
The moon is another big indicator. The "moon meditation" (GACHIRINKAN æè¼ªè§) is perhaps the most critical meditation practice in esoteric Buddhism.
e
In the esoteric Diamond World Mandala éåçæ¼è¼ç¾
, the divinities are often shown seated in the circle of a full moon.
f
As argued herein, the 13 Buddhist Deities are also likely derived from the 13 cycles of the moon (the intercalary 13th month).
g
Other indicators (non-Shingon) are the 13 articles kept by monks, the 13 contemplations, the 13 life stages (birth / adulthood), etc.
3
Sources for the Topmost Chart
(1) Scripture on JizÅ and the 10 Kings (Bussetsu JizÅ Bosatsu Hosshin Innen JūŠKyÅ ä½èª¬å°èè©è©ç¼å¿å ç¸åçç¶), late 12th century, the earliest text that pairs the 10 Kings with Ten Buddhist deities; considered an apocryphal Japanese text; (2) KÅbÅ Daishi Gyakushu Nikkinokoto 弿³å¤§å¸«éä¿®æ¥è¨äº, early 15th century; Japanese text listing the 13 Buddhist deities, postmortem dates, & premortem dates; (3) KagakushÅ« ä¸å¦é of 1444, a Japanese dictionary listing the 13 postmortem & premortem dates; (4) JÅ«sanbutsu Honji-Suijaku Kenbetsu Shaku åä¸ä»æ¬å°å迹簡å¥é of early Edo (??); author & date unknown. (5) Hutchins has correlated the deity lists in most of these works in his Thirteen Buddhas: Tracing the Roots of the 13 Buddha Rites.
Related Groupings. (6) Ten Days of Fasting in 10th-C. (??) text Ten Purifying Days of JizÅ Bodhisattva; (7) Secret Buddhist Deities of the 30 Days of the Month, a 10th-C. grouping from China that began appearing in 14th-C. Japanese texts; (8) Japan's Eight Buddhist Protectors of the Zodiac; popularized in the Edo era (1603 - 1867). They appear in the 1783 ButsuzÅ-zu-i (p. 70 online) ä»åå³å½; (9) SÅ«tras & Texts on JizÅ.](/web/20210426125319im_/https://www.onmarkproductions.com/13-Butsu/index_files/vlb_thumbnails1/conclusionsupfrontslidethreefinal.jpg)
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![Slide 4. Seven Seventh-Day Rites & Ten Kings of the Underworld. The Shichi-shichi-nichi chÅ«in ä¸ä¸æ¥ä¸é° (seven X seven = 49 days between death & rebirth; login = guest) can be traced back to India. The term appears in the 4th-C. AD YogacÄra bhÅ«mi-ÅÄstra ç伽師å°è« (login = guest); T.1579.30.282b1. The concept played a pivotal role in the 8th-C. Tibetan Book of the Dead. The seven-sevens also appear in Sanskrit & Pali texts dated to the 3rd/4th C. AD, including the MahÄvastu, Nidanakatha, Lalitavistara, & Mahabodhi Vamsa (date?). The latter work says the Historical Buddha fasted for 7 weeks (49 days) after his enlightenment. JAPANESE PRECEDENTS. â 687 AD, 100th day memorial, Nihon Shoki æ¥æ¬æ¸ç´; held at five temples for Emperor Tenmu 天æ¦å¤©ç. â 735 AD, seven seventh-day rites ä¸ä¸æ
mentioned by Emperor ShÅmu 太ä¸å¤©ç in the imperially commissioned historical record Shoku Nihongi ç¶æ¥æ¬ç´ â 757 AD, 1st year memorial å¨å¿, Shoku Nihongi; held for Emperor ShÅmu 太ä¸å¤©ç at TÅdaiji. â 11th C. ShÅryÅshÅ« æ§éé (scroll 7), 3rd year rites for KÅ«kai; text also mentions 7th week & 1st year rites. By the end of the Heian era (794-1185 AD), there is textual evidence of memorial services connecting the 49 days with specific Buddhist deities, e.g., diary of Taira no Nobunori å¹³ä¿¡ç¯ (1112 - 1187) entitled HyÅhanki å
µç¯è¨.China's Ten Kings (JūŠåç) appear in the Scripture on the Ten Kings ä½èªªé ä¿®åççä¸ç¶, compiled sometime in the 9th or early 10th C. AD. The dead undergo trials by the ten, with the first seven kings covering the crucial seven-week (49 day) period, followed by three more trials on the 100th day, the 1st year, & the 3rd year after death. The 100th day, 1st year, & 3rd year rites are found in the Chinese Book of Rites, said to be the work of Confucius (551â479 BC). The ancient term for the 100th day rite was åå (scroll 21). The ancient terms for 1st year and 3rd year rites were å°ç¥¥ & 大祥 (scroll 37). Writes Hutchins (p.52 & p.115): "The Scripture on the Ten Kings says that release [for the dead] can be obtained if the grieving family sends offerings to each ot the Ten Kings at the appropriate time. Further, it was thought to be even more beneficial to send offerings to the Ten Kings on one's own behalf while still living. In China, such offerings were made as far back as the 9th C. in the form of ten fasting days. Thus, this scripture promoted both postmortem & premortem rituals.â Teiser (1994, p. 53) notes that Taoist texts show the ritual of ten fasting days may have existed as far back as the 6th C. Both China & Japan (seemingly in tandem) "paired" the Ten Kings with Buddhist Deities, but the pairings show no known correspondence. Likewise, China/Japan (seemingly in tandem) paired JizÅ å°èµ & Enma é»é (lord of hell).The Ten Kings arrived in Japan in the late Heian era (794-1185). Says Duncan R. Williams (p. 231): "The ten memorial rites for the dead, based on belief in the Ten Kings, were developed in Japanese apocryphal sÅ«tras (login = guest) & later became a standard part of funerary rites in Shingon, Tendai, Zen, JÅdÅ, & Nichiren traditions. Paintings depicting the Ten Kings judging the dead were used for ritual or didactic purposes at times when the ancestral spirits were thought to return to this world." Artwork of the 13 Buddhist Deities appeared in Japan in the late 12th C. But texts referring to the 13 Deities do not appear until the Muromachi era (1392-1573). According to Ueshima Motoyuki æ¤å³¶åºè¡ (1975), it is unclear when the 13 Deity Rites were first used. In the Muromachi era, however, Ueshima says offering tablets (kuyÅhi ä¾é¤ç¢) to the 13 Deities were built all around Japan. Ueshima believes these were built for the performance of Gyakushu KuyÅ éä¿®ä¾é¤ (reverse performance benefits; aka "premortem" rites) by ordinary folk. Gyakushu, aka yoshu é ä¿®, is performed while one is still alive to accrue benefits for oneself after death. In postmortem rites (Tsuizen KuyŠ追åä¾é¤) for the dead, the deceased only acquires 1/7th of the benefits, while the performer acquires 6/7th. In the Gyakushu, the performers acquire the full 7/7 benefits for themselves. For this reason the ritual is also called Shichibu Kentoku ä¸åå
¨å¾. For more details on rituals involving the 13 Deities, see Karen Mack's Notebook. Elsewhere, Watanabe ShÅgo æ¸¡è¾ºç« æ (1989, p. 210) estimates that, across Japan, there are more than four hundred medieval monuments (ihin éºå) dedicated to the 13 Deities. Many of these are catalogued online by Kawai Tetsuo æ²³åå²é. The 12th/13th C. Scripture on JizÅ & Ten Kings ä½èª¬å°èè©è©ç¼å¿å ç¸åçç¶ (see Tripitaka CBETA) is the oldest text that pairs the kings with ten Buddhist deities. It is considered a Japanese text but its precise origin is unknown. In medieval times, China too "paired" its ten kings with Buddhist deities (Slide Five), but the China / Japan pairings show no correspondence. The JizÅ = Enma link likely occurred in China before Japan. By the mid-14th C., Japan had added three more deities, three more kings, & three more memorial rites (i.e., 7th, 13th, 33rd years). These new deities & rites are found only in Japan. They probably originated with Japanâs Shingon school, but were widely appropriated by other schools.](/web/20210426125319im_/https://www.onmarkproductions.com/13-Butsu/index_files/vlb_thumbnails1/slidefourtenkingsb.jpg)
The Shichi-shichi-nichi chÅ«in ä¸ä¸æ¥ä¸é° (seven X seven = 49 days between death & rebirth; login = guest) can be traced back to India. The term appears in the 4th-C. AD Yogacāra bhūmi-śāstra ç伽師å°è« (login = guest); T.1579.30.282b1. The concept played a pivotal role in the 8th-C. Tibetan Book of the Dead. The seven-sevens also appear in Sanskrit & Pali texts dated to the 3rd/4th C. AD, including the Mahāvastu, Nidanakatha, Lalitavistara, & Mahabodhi Vamsa (date?). The latter work says the Historical Buddha fasted for 7 weeks (49 days) after his enlightenment. JAPANESE PRECEDENTS. â 687 AD, 100th day memorial, Nihon Shoki æ¥æ¬æ¸ç´; held at five temples for Emperor Tenmu 天æ¦å¤©ç. â 735 AD, seven seventh-day rites ä¸ä¸æ mentioned by Emperor ShÅmu 太ä¸å¤©ç in the imperially commissioned historical record Shoku Nihongi ç¶æ¥æ¬ç´ â 757 AD, 1st year memorial å¨å¿, Shoku Nihongi; held for Emperor Shōmu 太ä¸å¤©ç at Tōdaiji. â 11th C. Shōryōshū æ§éé (scroll 7), 3rd year rites for Kūkai; text also mentions 7th week & 1st year rites. By the end of the Heian era (794-1185 AD), there is textual evidence of memorial services connecting the 49 days with specific Buddhist deities, e.g., diary of Taira no Nobunori å¹³ä¿¡ç¯ (1112 - 1187) entitled HyÅhanki å µç¯è¨. FOR MORE: See Karen Gerhart, pp. 19-26. | China's Ten Kings (JūŠåç) appear in the Scripture on the Ten Kings ä½說é ä¿®åççä¸ç¶, compiled sometime in the 9th or early 10th C. AD. The dead undergo trials by the ten, with the first seven kings covering the crucial seven-week (49 day) period, followed by three more trials on the 100th day, the 1st year, & the 3rd year after death. The 100th day, 1st year, & 3rd year rites are found in the Chinese Book of Rites, said to be the work of Confucius (551â479 BC). The ancient term for the 100th day rite was åå (scroll 21). The ancient terms for 1st year and 3rd year rites were å°ç¥¥ & 大祥 (scroll 37). Writes Hutchins (p.52 & p.115): "The Scripture on the Ten Kings says that release [for the dead] can be obtained if the grieving family sends offerings to each ot the Ten Kings at the appropriate time. Further, it was thought to be even more beneficial to send offerings to the Ten Kings on one's own behalf while still living. In China, such offerings were made as far back as the 9th C. in the form of ten fasting days. Thus, this scripture promoted both postmortem & premortem rituals.” Teiser (1994, p. 53) notes that Taoist texts show the ritual of ten fasting days may have existed as far back as the 6th C. Both China & Japan (seemingly in tandem) "paired" the Ten Kings with Buddhist Deities, but the pairings show no known correspondence. Likewise, China/Japan (seemingly in tandem) paired Jizō å°èµ & Enma é»é (lord of hell). | The Ten Kings arrived in Japan in the late Heian era (794-1185). Says Duncan R. Williams (p. 231): "The ten memorial rites for the dead, based on belief in the Ten Kings, were developed in Japanese apocryphal sūtras (login = guest) & later became a standard part of funerary rites in Shingon, Tendai, Zen, Jōdō, & Nichiren traditions. Paintings depicting the Ten Kings judging the dead were used for ritual or didactic purposes at times when the ancestral spirits were thought to return to this world." Artwork of the 13 Buddhist Deities appeared in Japan in the late 12th C. But texts referring to the 13 Deities do not appear until the Muromachi era (1392-1573). According to Ueshima Motoyuki æ¤å³¶åºè¡ (1975), it is unclear when the 13 Deity Rites were first used. In the Muromachi era, however, Ueshima says offering tablets (kuyōhi ä¾é¤ç¢) to the 13 Deities were built all around Japan. Ueshima believes these were built for the performance of Gyakushu Kuyō éä¿®ä¾é¤ (reverse performance benefits; aka "premortem" rites) by ordinary folk. Gyakushu, aka yoshu é ä¿®, is performed while one is still alive to accrue benefits for oneself after death. In postmortem rites (Tsuizen Kuyō 追åä¾é¤) for the dead, the deceased only acquires 1/7th of the benefits, while the performer acquires 6/7th. In the Gyakushu, the performers acquire the full 7/7 benefits for themselves. For this reason the ritual is also called Shichibu Kentoku ä¸åå ¨å¾. For more details on rituals involving the 13 Deities, see Karen Mack's Notebook. Elsewhere, Watanabe Shōgo æ¸¡è¾ºç« æ (1989, p. 210) estimates that, across Japan, there are more than four hundred medieval monuments (ihin éºå) dedicated to the 13 Deities. Many of these are catalogued online by Kawai Tetsuo æ²³åå²é. The 12th/13th C. Scripture on Jizō & Ten Kings ä½èª¬å°èè©è©ç¼å¿å ç¸åçç¶ (see Tripitaka CBETA) is the oldest text that pairs the kings with ten Buddhist deities. It is considered a Japanese text but its precise origin is unknown. In medieval times, China too "paired" its ten kings with Buddhist deities (Slide Five), but the China / Japan pairings show no correspondence. The JizÅ = Enma link likely occurred in China before Japan. By the mid-14th C., Japan had added three more deities, three more kings, & three more memorial rites (i.e., 7th, 13th, 33rd years). These new deities & rites are found only in Japan. They probably originated with Japan’s Shingon school, but were widely appropriated by other schools. |

![Slide 6. Ten Kings & Ten Buddhist Counterparts åä»åçå³, 13th Century. Cartouche Style, Standard Grouping. PHOTO: Nara National Museum /// Identifications. Says Says Hirasawa (p. 26): "As correspondences of originals (honji æ¬å°) to manifestations (suijaku å迹) settled into standard formulae, the importance and size of the honji increased. This reached an extreme in a 14th-century painting of a colossal JizÅ appearing to stand directly on top of Enma's head [see Nihon no Bijutsu æ¥æ¬ã®ç¾è¡, No. 313, ShibundÅ, 1992]. In another, later medieval cult, three buddhas associated with esoteric Buddhism joined the ten honji of the kings. Eventually the suijaku completely fell away from the iconography, leaving only images of the thirteen buddhas for mortuary rites, without visual references to judgment in hell."](/web/20210426125319im_/https://www.onmarkproductions.com/13-Butsu/index_files/vlb_thumbnails1/tenkingstenbuddhistcounterparts13thcenturynaranationalmuseum2.jpg)


![Slide 9. Ten Judges of Underworld with JizÅ (in center). Late 12th Century. Stone statues at Usuki, Åita, Japan. PHOTO: JapanTravel. Says Hank Glassman, pp. 18-19: "The idea that JizÅ and Enma (lord of the world of the dead) are different manifestations of the same entity stems from the Japanese practice, well established by the time of the composition of The Scripture on JizÅ and the Ten Kings, of drawing equivalencies between Buddhist deities and local ones......The equivalence between JizÅ and Enma was one that was extremely well known and widely cited in premodern Japan in both text and image. In Chinese and Korean paintings of the ten kings, JizÅ was often accorded a central position. What is quite different in Japan is that JizÅ is represented at the court of Enma, the fifth and greatest king, where he pleads on behalf of the deceased.....The immense popularity of JizÅ in medieval and early modern Japan was fueled in large part by the belief that JizÅ was the best advocate for the sinner being judged before the magistrate Enma, since JizÅ was in fact the alter ego of this terrifying and intimidating judge. This relationship, described in the The Scripture on JizÅ and the Ten Kings, is made explicit in Japanese paintings of Enma or JizÅ. [Slides 10~11]](/web/20210426125319im_/https://www.onmarkproductions.com/13-Butsu/index_files/vlb_thumbnails1/jizotenkingsusukioita.jpg)

Slide 10. Says Hutchins (p. 55): “Although the Ten Kings were not originally conceived as Buddhist deities, Jizō was often a central figure in many of the pictures and artworks of the Ten Kings imported to Japan in the early Heian period. To be able to understand this, we need to take into consideration Jizō’s interpretation as an alter ego of King Yama é»é (Jp. = Enma), the lord of the world of the dead. In many of the paintings of the courts of the Ten Kings produced in medieval Japan, Jizō is often superimposed above the fifth court of hell to demonstrate his role as the twin of King Yama. Such an association suggested that other kings could also potentially be seen as manifestations of Buddhist deities, and this view was made explicit in The Scripture on Jizō and the Ten Kings. Like the earlier Scripture on the Ten Kings, it outlines the journey of the deceased’s spirit through ten courts of purgatory. The real importance of this text for our study is that it appears to be the earliest written record that pairs the Ten Kings with Buddhist deities. This is commonly referred to as an example of honji suijaku æ¬å°å迹 — a kind of assimilation process where the Ten Kings are seen as traces (suijaku), or alternative incarnations, of the original Buddhas (honji).”
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![Slide 26. 1359 CE. Non-standard grouping. Enmeiji å»¶å½å¯º, Sakatashi City é
ç°å¸, Yamagata Prefecture, Japan. Twelve Buddhist deities symbolized by their Sanskrit seed syllables. Says Steven Hutchins (Masters Degree, SOAS, 2013) in his book Thirteen Buddhas (pp. 78~80): "Another example that further illustrates this transitional period [editor: from 10, to 11, to 12, to 13 deities] is a stone memorial located in a Shingon temple in Yamagata prefecture called Enmeiji å»¶å½å¯º. The inclusion of twelve deities suggest a movement towards the Thirteen Buddhas, but the centrality of the Amida triad in this monument indicates that this could also be looked on as Ten Buddhas with Amida as the main honzon -- the Amida triad counting as one single Buddha. The appearance of KongÅ Satta provides another problem for researchers attempting to link this monument with the Thirteen Buddha Rites. Kawakatsu says that although the addition of Ashuku is consistent with a general transition towards the Thirteen Buddhas, he is at a loss to explain why KongÅ Satta should be included. One possibility is that the Sanskrit inscription for KongÅ Satta could have been mistakenly transmitted instead of Dainichiâs." Mark here. KongÅ Satta appears in a Dainichi Triad in the Diamond World Mandala, so KongÅ Sattaâs appearance can be justified. Inscription = Unable to find it on web. PHOTO: This J-site. Also see Kawakatsu SeitarÅ å·åæ¿å¤ªé. 1969. JÅ«sanbutsu shinkÅ no shiteki tenkai åä¸ä»ä¿¡ä»°ã®å²çå±é (Evolution of JÅ«sanbutsu Faith), Journal of Åtemae College 大æå女å大å¦è«é, no. 03, pp. 94-111.](/web/20210426125319im_/https://www.onmarkproductions.com/13-Butsu/index_files/vlb_thumbnails1/enmeijijunison1359.jpg)


















1. Åtsu-e, Edo era. Zigzag Pattern. Standard Grouping. PHOTO: Åtsu City Museum of History å¤§æ´¥å¸æ´å²åç©é¤¨. 2. Åtsu-e, Edo era. Zigzag Pattern. Standard Grouping. PHOTO: Machida City Museum, Tokyo çºç°å¸ç«åç©é¤¨èµ 3. Åtsu-e, Edo era. Zigzag Pattern. Standard Grouping. PHOTO: Momose Osamu ç¾ç¬æ²»æ° Collection, HiHuMi Art. 4. Learn more about Åtsu-e at JAANUS.






































- Evans-Wentz, W.Y. (translator). 1927. Tibetan Book of the Dead. Commonly dated to the 8th century CE.
- Gerhart, Karen. 2009. The Material Culture of Death in Medieval Japan. (pp. 19-26). Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press.
- Glassman, Hank. 2012. The Face of JizÅ: Image and Cult in Medieval Japanese Buddhism. Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press.
- Hiraswa, Caroline. 2008. The Inflatable, Collapsible Kingdom of Retribution. A Primer on Japanese Hell Imagery and Imagination. Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 63, No.ã¸ãã´ã 1 (Spring, 2008).
- Hutchins, Steven. 2015. The 13 Buddhas: Tracing the Roots of the Thirteen Buddha Rites.
- Kawai Tetsuo æ²³åå²é. He catalogs hundreds of memorial stones at 13 Buddhist Deities and at Stone Buddhist Statues.
- Kawakatsu SeitarÅ å·åæ¿å¤ªé. 1969. JÅ«sanbutsu shinkÅ no shiteki tenkai åä¸ä»ä¿¡ä»°ã®å²çå±é (Evolution of JÅ«sannbutsu Faith), Journal of Åtemae College 大æå女å大å¦è«é, no. 03, pp. 94-111.
- Mack, Karen. 2000. Notes on an article by Ueshima Motoyuki about the Thirteen Buddhist Deities.
- McCormick, Melissa. 2009. Tosa Mitsunobu and the Small Scroll in Medieval Japan. See chapter two for a discussion of how paintings of the thirteen were used in the early 16th century.
- Miyasaka YÅ«kÅ å®®å宥洪. 2011. JÅ«sanbutsu shinkÅ no igi åä¸ä»ä¿¡ä»°ã®æç¾© (Significance of JÅ«sanbutsu Faith). Gendai MikkyÅ, no 23 ç¾ä»£å¯æç¬¬23å·ç®æ¬¡.
- Ogurisu Kenji å°æ æ 奿²». 1991. JÅ«sanbutsu zu ni tsuite: jigoku e o egaku sakurei åä¸ä»å³ã«ã¤ãã¦ï¼å°ççµµãæãä½ä¾ (Concerning JÅ«sanbutsu Paintings: Examples of Hell Depictions) Shikai: HyÅgo kenritsu rekishi hakubutsukan kiyÅ, jinkai 3, pp. 29-47, March 1991.
- Payne, Richard. 1999. Shingon Services for the Dead in Religions of Japan in Practice, pp. 159-165.
- Phillips, Quitman. 2003. Narrating the Salvation of the Elite: The JÅfukuji Paintings of the Ten Kings. Ars Orientalis, Vol. 33, pp. 120-145.
- Picken, Stuart D.B. 2016. Parallel Worlds: Folk Religion, Life & Death in Japan. A serialised monograph on “Death in the Japanese Tradition: A Study in Cultural Evolution and Transformation.“
- Shimizu Kunihiko æ¸ æ°´é¦å½¦. 2002. JizÅ jÅ«ÅkyÅ kÅ å°èµåççµè (Reflections on the Scripture of JizÅ and the Ten Kings). Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies, 51 (1) pp. 189-194.
- Somegawa Eisuke æå·è±è¼. 1993. Mandara Zuten æ¼è¼ç¾ å³å ¸. Published by Daihorinkaku 大æ³è¼ªé£. (Illustrated Dictionary of Japan’s Dual World Mandala).
- Stone, Jacqueline and Walter, Mariko Namba, editors. 2008. Death and the Afterlife in Japanese Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
- Takeda Kazuaki æ¦ç°åæ. 1990. JÅ«sanbutsu zu no seiritsu ni tsuite: JÅ«ichison mandara zu kara no tenkai åä¸ä»å³ã® æç«ã«ã¤ãã¦ ï¼ åä¸å°æ¼è¼ç¾ å³ããã®å±é (Concerning the Origins of the Thirteen Buddhist Deities: Their Development from the Mandala of Eleven Honored Ones), pp. 22-24. MikkyÅ Bunka 169 (Feb. 1990).
- Takeda Kazuaki æ¦ç°åæ. 1994. JÅ«sanbutsu zu no seiritsu saikÅ: Okayama, Kiyamaji zÅ jūŠjÅ« honjibutsu zu o chÅ«shin to shite åä¸ä»å³ã®æç«åè: å²¡å±±ã»æ¨å±±å¯ºèµåç忬å°ä»å³ãä¸å¿ã¨ã㦠(Reconsideration on Genesis of JÅ«sanbutsu Art of Thirteen Buddhas). Published by MikkyÅ Bunka 坿æå 188, pp. 29-60.
- Takeda Kazuaki æ¦ç°åæ. 1997. YoshujūŠshÅshichikyÅ no zuzÅteki tenkai: Åsaka Hirokawadera zÅ JūŠkyÅ hensÅzu o chÅ«shin to shite é ä¿®åççä¸çµã®å³åçå±é: 大éªã»å¼å·å¯ºèµåççµå¤ç¸å³ãä¸å¿ã¨ã㦠(Iconographic Development of the Ten Kings’ SÅ«tra: Centering on the Illustrated Ten-Kings’ SÅ«tra Paintings of Hirokawa-dera in Osaka). Published by Museum 547, pp. 5-27.
- Teiser, Stephen. 1994. The Scripture on the Ten Kings and the Making of Purgatory in Medieval Chinese Buddhism. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
- Tibetan Book of the Dead. 8th century. See “Evans-Wentz” above.
- Ueshima Motoyuki æ¤å³¶åºè¡. 1971. JÅ«sanbutsu seiritsu e no tennkai åä¸ä»æç«ã¸ã®å±é (How the Thirteen Buddhas Came into Existence). Published by MikkyÅ Bunka 坿æå 94, pp. 14-18.
- Ueshima Motoyuki æ¤å³¶åºè¡. 1975. JÅ«sanbutsu ni tsuite åä¸ä»ã«ã¤ãã¦(ä¸) & åä¸ä»ã«ã¤ãã¦(ä¸), Concerning 13 Buddha. Kanazawa Bunko Research éæ¾¤æåº«ç ç©¶, No. 234 (Nov. 1975) and No. 235 (Dec. 1975). He gives 4 theories on group's origin that credit Tendai monk Ennin åä» (794-864), Shingon monk MyÅe ææ § (1173-1232), Zen monk Monkan æè¦³ (1278-1357), or Shingon monk Manbei æºç±³ (early Heian).
- Wakabayashi Haruko è¥ææ´å. 2009. Officials of the Afterworld: Ono no Takamura and the Ten Kings of Hell, Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 36/2: pp. 319-342.
- Watanabe ShÅgo æ¸¡è¾ºç« æ. 1989. Tsuizen kuyÅ no Hotokesama JÅ«sanbutsu ShinkŠ追åä¾é¤ã®ä»ãã¾åä¸ä»ä¿¡ä»° (The Buddhas of Memorial Services: JÅ«sanbutsu Faith). HokushindÅ.
- Watarai Zuiken 渡ä¼çé¡, editor. 2012. JÅ«sanbutsu no sekai tsuizenkuyÅ no rekishiã»shisÅã»bunka åä¸ä»ã®ä¸ç— 追åä¾é¤ã®æ´å²ã»ææ³ã»æå (Realm of 13 Buddhas: History, Thought, Culture). Nonburusha.
- Williams, Duncan RyÅ«ken. 2008. Funerary Zen: SÅtÅ Zen Death Management in Tokugawa Japan, in Stone and Walter 2008, pp. 207-246.
- Yajima Arata ç¢å³¶æ°. 1990. Gunma-ken ka no butsuga kara: Numatashi ShÅkakuzÅ JÅ«Åzu to JyÅ«sanbutsu Seiritsu no Mondai 群馬çä¸ã®ä»é¢ãã: æ²¼ç°å¸æ£è¦å¯ºèµåçå³ã¨åä¸ä»æç«ã®åé¡ (Ten Kings' Art and the Origins of the Thirteen Buddhist Deities: ShÅgaku-ji Temple, Numata City). Bulletin of Gunma Prefectural Women’s College 群馬çç«å¥³å大å¦ç´è¦, No. 10, pp.63-73.

Slide 83. MANTRAS FOR ALL THIRTEEN | Slide 83. MERITS OF WORSHIPPING THE THIRTEEN |
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---------------------------- END SLIDESHOW ----------------------------
ââ QUICK LINKS TO INDIVIDUAL DEITIES & IMPORTANT HELL TOPICS ââ
Thirteen Buddhist Deities (åä¸ä») Thirteen Buddhist Deities (JÅ«sanbutsu åä¸ä» or åä¸ä½) -- five Buddha ä», seven Bodhisattva è©è©, and one MyÅ-Å æç -- are important to all schools of Japanese Buddhism. They likely originated with Japan's Shingon school of Esoteric Buddhism. The Thirteen are invoked at 13 postmortem memorial services held over a 33-year period by the living for the dead. They are also invoked in premortem rites by the living for the living. The Thirteen are closely associated with China's 10 Kings of Hell. Japan's Grouping of 13 appeared around the 14th century, and is considered a purely Japanese convention. |
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Judgement |
Name of |
Kanji & |
Honjibutsu |
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1st week, 7th day |
ShinkÅ-Å |
秦åºç |
ä¸åæç |
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2nd week, 14th day |
ShokÅ-Å |
åæ±ç |
éè¿¦å¦æ¥ |
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3rd week, 21st day |
SÅtei-Å |
å®å¸ç |
ææ®è©è© |
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4th week, 28th day |
Gokan-Å |
äºå®ç |
æ®è³¢è©è© |
|
5th week, 35th day |
Enma-Å |
é»éç |
å°èµè©è© |
|
6th week, 42nd day |
HenjyÅ-Å |
夿ç |
å¼¥åè©è© |
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7th week, 49th day |
Taizan-Å |
æ³°å±±ç |
è¬å¸«å¦æ¥ |
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During the seven weeks following one’s death, tradition asserts that the soul wanders about in places where it used to live. On the 50th day, however, the wandering soul must go to the realm where it is sentenced (one of the six realms). The 49th day is thus the most important day, when the deceased receives his/her karmic judgment and, on the 50th day, enters the world of rebirth. A service is held to make the “passage” as favorable as possible. Prayers are thereafter offered at special intervals, and performed indefinitely starting in the 13th year. Source: Flammarion, p. 340. |
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100th day |
ByÅdÅ-Å |
å¹³çç |
観ä¸é³è©è© |
|
1st year |
Toshi-Å |
é½å¸ç |
å¢è³è©è© |
|
3rd year |
GotÅtenrin-Å |
äºé転輪ç |
é¿å¼¥é妿¥ |
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Three more hell kings, along with three more Buddhist deities, were added to the above ten. |
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7th Year |
RenjÅ-Å |
ããããããã |
é¿é¦å¦æ¥ |
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13th Year |
Bakku-Å |
ã°ã£ããã |
大æ¥å¦æ¥ |
|
33rd Year |
Jion-Å |
ããããã |
è空èµè©è© |
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NOTES
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OVERVIEW. DAY OF GREAT IMPORTANCE. On the 35th day following death, Enma-Å (Skt. = Yama, the 5th Hell King and Lord of the Underworld, often shown holding the Wheel-of-Life in Tibetan Tanka) makes his ruling after hearing the judgments passed down by the first four kings. Offerings by living relatives are especially important on the 35th day following death, as this is the day the defendant is sentenced by Enma to one of six realms of existence -- (1) Hell; (2) Hungry Ghosts; (3) Animals; (4) Asura; (5) Human Beings; (6) the heavenly Deva realm . All six realms are stages of suffering, even the heavenly realm of the Deva, who it is said suffer from pride. The sixth judge of hell, Henjo-o, decides your placement within the realm you are sentenced (reborn) into. For example, for those to be reborn into the human realm, Henjo-o may sentence you to be reborn as a wealthy or poor person, as a peaceful or violent person. The 7th judge, Taizan-o, dictates the conditions of rebirth, such as one’s life span and one’s sex, male or female. During the seven weeks following one’s death, tradition asserts that the soul wanders about in places where it used to live. On the 50th day, however, the wandering soul must go to the realm where it was sentenced (one of the six realms). Even so, for those sentenced to the lower realms, there is a way out. Among believers of the JÅdo Pure Land sect (Amida faith), those sentenced to the realm of hell, hungry ghosts, animals (beasts), or Asura (the realm of anger) may gain salvation, but only if their living relatives hold a memorial on the 100th day following their death, and another on the first year following their death, and yet another on the third year following their death. Enma is considered the most important of the ten judges, and in artwork Enma is thus frequently placed in the center. |
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At Ennoji Temple in Kamakura, one can view statues of the Excuse JizÅ and the 10 Judges of Hell. Most of these statues were made in the Edo Period (1603-1868 AD). Ennoji Temple is the 8th site on the Pilgrimage to 24 Kamakura Sites Sacred to Jizo. Statues of the Ten Kings can also be seen at Engakuji Temple. The Kamakura Museum (Kamakura Kokuhokan, inside Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine) also exhibits a number of hell-related statues from Ennoji Temple.
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For more on Japan's hell cosmology, deities & demons,
see SAI NO KAWARA (Riverbed of the Netherworld).
First published July 25, 2018. Copyright Mark Schumacher.