Inugami Gyōbu

Inugami Gyōbu

Greaterfolk-consensusJapanese folkloreEdo-period kōdan storytellingIyo Province (modern Ehime Prefecture)MatsuyamaKumayama (Kutaninagumi, Matsuyama city)
Origin

The tale of Inugami Gyōbu is embedded in localized retellings of the historical Iyo Nagusa account of an O-Ie Sōdō (domain family disturbance) around the time of the Great Gyōhō Famine (1805). Kōdan storytellers and oral/performative variants transformed the historical disturbance into supernaturalized narratives in which a powerful bake-danuki leader of the “808 tanuki” of Matsuyama influences human factional struggles. The element 刑部 (Gyōbu) functions in the tradition as an honorific/title associated in the tale with an ancestral connection to the castle lords; this usage is reported in the sources as part of the folkloric framing rather than an independently documented historical grant.

Appearance

Sources do not provide a consistent, detailed bodily description of Inugami Gyōbu beyond identifying him as a bake-danuki and the named leader of a large tanuki household who lived in an old cave in Kumayama. No specific size, coloration, or fixed anthropomorphic form is recorded in the cited summaries; his physicality is presented primarily through his social role and residence rather than precise morphological detail.

Abilities

Within the kōdan and local traditions, Inugami Gyōbu is said to possess exceptional supernatural power—accounts describe him as having “the greatest divine power in Shikoku” (as reported in secondary summaries). He commands and directs many follower tanuki to produce strange occurrences and to support particular human factions during the O-Ie Sōdō. He also functions in many variants as a guardian-type figure associated with Matsuyama Castle and received faith from castle vassals; variants differ on whether he aids the rebel side, the righteous side, or is otherwise entangled in human politics. Narrative accounts also describe his subjugation or sealing by a human ritual-agent (Inō Budayū) using a divinely or supernaturally empowered implement.

Weaknesses & Wards

Weaknesses

  • ritual
    Divine rod of Usa Hachiman Dai-bosatsu
  • ritual
    Wooden mallet received from the head yōkai Sanmoto Gorōzaemon
  • other
    Sealing in Kumayama cave (narrative outcome)

Wards

  • ritual
    Subjugation by a ritual-empowered human (Inō Budayū) using a sacred implement
  • condition
    Veneration/faith by castle vassals (reported in tradition as a social-religious bond)

Community Record

Sources
  1. [1]
    Inugami Gyōbu (Wikipedia). Wikipedia article 'Inugami Gyōbu'wiki
  2. [2]
    Inugami Gyōbu (Wikidata). Wikidata entry Q11659068wiki
  3. [3]
    Inugami Gyoubu/Nexon Game - Japari Library (Kemono Friends Wiki). Kemono Friends / Japari Library entry referencing modern appearancesother
  4. [4]
    Pom Poko (credits) - GhibliWiki. GhibliWiki credits listing (modern media mention)other
folk-consensus