Amabie is attested in mid-19th-century kawaraban and hand‑copied leaflets; a woodblock print dated 1846 records a sea‑dwelling creature that identified itself as an 'amabie' and delivered prophecy and a remedial instruction. Scholarly notes in the sources treat 'amabie' as a manifestation within a broader cluster of prophetic beings (amabiko / amahiko), and the name may be a variant or misspelling of those related forms rather than the origin of a discrete long tradition.
In the canonical 1846 woodblock it is depicted as a mermaid‑type being with long hair, scales from the neck down, a beak‑like mouth, and three legs (or three tail‑fins). Other amabiko/amabie corpus examples vary widely: some are three‑legged or have odd numbers of legs, some are quadruped or daruma/ape‑like, and at least one hand‑painted 1844 pamphlet shows an ape‑like, three‑legged, short‑haired bald form with human‑like eyes and ears. Iconographic elements noted across sources include luminous appearance at night in some accounts and occasional ape‑like vocal qualities.
Sources record prophetic speech (forecasting good harvests and warning of disease) and a remedial instruction: if disease spreads, people should draw a picture of the creature and show it to those who fall ill. Some variants are reported to cry with ape‑like voices at night and to glow in darkness. The beings appear in coastal or wet‑field contexts and function in the pamphlet record as portent‑bearers and distributors of an image‑based remedy.
Weaknesses
None recorded.
Wards
- symbolDrawn image of the Amabie
- ritualDistribution/circulation of the Amabie image via kawaraban, surimono, or hand‑copied pamphlets

Yuki-onna
The Snow Woman of Japanese folklore — a spirit born of blizzards who appears to travelers lost in snowstorms. Beautiful and lethal, she can show mercy or bring death depending on her mood.

Will-o'-the-Wisp
A wandering light seen over marshy ground at night, leading travellers astray into bogs and fens. Possibly a spirit, possibly the soul of the unbaptised dead, possibly the devil himself.

Naga
Divine serpent beings of Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain cosmology — powerful guardians of water, earth, and underground treasures. Revered as deities in South and Southeast Asia.

Apsara
Celestial dancers and water nymphs of Hindu cosmology — beautiful semi-divine beings who dance at the court of Indra and, by his command, descend to earth to distract sages from excessive asceticism.
Community Record
- [1]Amabie. Wikipedia: 'Amabie' article (summary of kawaraban and related pamphlet attestations, 1846 woodblock description)wiki
- [2]Amabie (Wikidata). Wikidata entry for Amabie (identifier and linked attestations)other
- [3]Drawing The Amabie (NWAC archive item). Archive item: contemporary drawing resources referencing the amabie image tradition (illustrates modern transmission of the image)other
- [4]Gegege no Kitaro (2007) Main Character Settei Sheets (archive). Archive item including modern media references to amabie imagery (contextual material in the provided corpus)other
- [5]DRAWING A THREE-LEGGED FISH!? | ZenPop! Stationery Unboxing (archive). Archive item showing contemporary popular engagement with the three‑legged fish imagery associated with amabie/amabiko corpusother
