Tsurube-otoshi

Lesserwell-documentedJapanese folkloreEdo-period kaidan compilationsregional oral legendKansai (Kyoto, Shiga, Wakayama)Tōkai (Gifu, Aichi)regional oral traditions across central Japan

A Japanese tree-associated yōkai reported especially in Kansai and Tōkai regional traditions and in Edo-period kaidan collections. It is described variably as a bucket-like object, a severed head, or a ball of fire that drops from large, old trees to menace, abduct, or devour passers-by; some classical sources frame it as a fire-phase manifestation of an aged tree.

Origin

Classical textual tradition (notably the Kokon Hyakumonogatari Hyōban) presents tsurube-otoshi as arising from large, old trees that, through transformations of ki in a five-phase framework, develop a yin 'fire' phase manifesting as downward-raining flame. Regional oral tales do not give a single origin narrative but consistently locate the phenomenon in venerable trees and treat it as a spirit/atmospheric manifestation associated with arboreal life.

Appearance

Accounts vary by locality and source: some describe a bucket-like object dropping from tree branches; others report a severed head (notably in some Kyoto-area tales); classical and pictorial sources (e.g., Toriyama Sekien) link the phenomenon to a ball of fire or hanging ghost-light (tsurubebi). Local anecdotes include motifs such as ivy-wrapped trees and a shining koban-like lure at the tree base.

Abilities

Reported behaviors include dropping from trees onto passers-by (reports say it 'would catch the eye of passers-by and drop buckets'), seizing or abducting victims into the dropped object, lifting them above the tree where they are menaced and sometimes devoured, and disappearing for intervals (e.g., 'two to three days' in some local tales). Some tales emphasize luring behavior (a shining object like a koban that tempts a reach). Classical commentary treats the phenomenon alternatively as an atmospheric fire/ghost-light raining from trees rather than a consistently corporeal creature.

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Sources
  1. [1]
    Tsurube-otoshi. Wikipedia: 'Tsurube-otoshi' entry (summary of regional tales, Kokon Hyakumonogatari Hyōban connection, and Toriyama Sekien/tsurubebi relation).wiki
  2. [2]
    Tsurubebi. Wikipedia: 'Tsurubebi' entry (discussion of Toriyama Sekien's image and relation to tsurube-otoshi).wiki
  3. [3]
    The Night Parade Of One Hundred Demons: A Field Guide To Japanese Yokai. Field-guide compendium that lists tsurube-otoshi among arboreal/atmospheric yōkai and summarizes regional appearances.literary
  4. [4]
    Kokon Hyakumonogatari Hyōban (as summarized in secondary sources). Summary of Kokon Hyakumonogatari Hyōban's framing of tsurube-otoshi as a spirit of a large tree manifesting as flames raining down (cited within modern summaries).literary
  5. [5]
    Pantheon / Encyclopedia Mythica entries on Tsurube-otoshi. Encyclopedic summaries that condense regional tales to descriptions of a yōkai that lurks in tree tops and drops down on travelers; used as secondary corroboration of core features.other
  6. [6]
    Regional oral-tradition notes (Wikipedia summary of local anecdotes). Summarized oral quotes and localized anecdotes (e.g., the Kuchitanba sniggering quote; Genroku-period Kainan koban-lure tale; reports of Kyoto, Shiga, Gifu, Aichi, Wakayama localities).folk
well-documented