Apologies if my audio was a bit rubbish in this episode folks, turns out the pre-amp for my microphone was slowly dying and I didn't realise.
@ajithsidhu718310 ай бұрын
Please do history of martial arts
@jeffreycase949710 ай бұрын
phenomenal job chaps , carry on
@elizabethmender10 ай бұрын
I just thought my hearing was starting to go! 😂
@mulder9388 ай бұрын
@@ajithsidhu7183yes please do, @TheHistocrat that would be great.
@DeadSkinSuit2 күн бұрын
It be like that sometimes
@DadNoStop10 ай бұрын
Hello from your insomniac friends in the US
@TheMialek36010 ай бұрын
maybe stop staring at a screen and u will sleep better ?
@mmblue398610 ай бұрын
Hi from your insomniac friend in Canada. 🥶💙
@Adam-vl7ur10 ай бұрын
Woke up at 6:00 am to eat three pickled eggs and go back to sleep lmao this is my lullaby
@amystubby10 ай бұрын
Literally dozens of us.
@kapi_yakumo10 ай бұрын
Bro needs his 6 hours of sleep 😴
@シロダサンダー10 ай бұрын
I like how the ad breaks are actually placed correctly rather than have the video be broken randomly by them.
@PuresG1ft10 ай бұрын
Not me being a KZbin Premium user wondering where the annoying NordVPN Ad was...
@binx551210 ай бұрын
SO EXCITED!!!! I'm packing up to move today AND I have physical therapy and I was scrolling aimlessly debating what to listen to and what a good start for me!! Cheers friends!! ❤
@letusplay229610 ай бұрын
The reason why it says "pime" instead of "hime" in the romanisation in the translation you're using is because that would have been the contemporary pronunciation when the Kojiki was written. There are other things i noticed like "sima" instead of "shima", "ti" instead of "chi", "susanowo" instead of "susanoo" or "susanō". These are just romanisations of th Old Japanese pronunciations of these sounds
@tatikagila505710 ай бұрын
Speaking of puns, "kami" translates to "us" in Tagalog. The whole time you guys have been talking about your own godhood. Salute. ❤
@dreamingwolf838210 ай бұрын
You two are definitely some of my favorite nerds. Never stop making these videos.
@Know_Your_Enemy6 ай бұрын
*Skip All The Unimportant Back And Forth…* *STORY STARTS @* *12:57*
@tristanc387310 ай бұрын
The story of Ōkuninushi always fascinated me, because overall he's probably the most likeable single 'character' in the extended Japanese creation myth. His origin as the one kind brother, other stories I'm sure you saw like him escaping those same brothers trying to kill him, stories of him fighting with and the earning the approval of Susano'o, then later growing to tame Japan and become a God great enough that even Heavenly Gods join his side. He reads like the protagonist of his own story. It makes the transition to the Heavenly Gods taking over via force, almost a Bad End. Unlike the Greek Gods overthrowing the Titans, or the Mesopotamian latter generations overthrowing the tyrannical earlier ones. Here, there isn't that morality or practical justification given. It's almost a might makes right scenario. So it was said in Heaven, so it shall Be, type deal. Fairly unique from my knowledge of world religion.
@k-matsu10 ай бұрын
By the time we get to Okuninushi, the Japanese creation myth has clearly reached the saga-history level of storytelling - that is to say, it is a highly symbolic and heavily "mystified" account of actual competition between the early tribes or civilisations that populated Japan in the period roughly corresponding to the first millenium BC. Okuninushi literally means "the owner of the country" and it is pretty clear that he represents either some individual(s) or a "leader tribe" that unified or at least pacified the western parts of Japan prior to invasion by more ethnically "Korean" tribes in the Yayoi period. I suspect that the legends of the "native population" were incorporated as a prelude to the clearly Yayoi-inspired stories about Amaterasu, Susanaowo, Yamato Takeru and so on, because a substantial part of the population was still "native" and their legendrium had to be incorporated -- much in the way Roman myth absorbed that of Greece.
@kuroyurishinobi63679 ай бұрын
With Ō-Kuni-Nushi the issue is complicated because he occupies a much more active role in the Fudoki, in which he is called "The Great kami who creates everything under heaven" He seems to have a role almost more as a creation deity than a deity as far as Izumo lore is concerned
@Orogenesis10 ай бұрын
Love your content guys, you unironically help me sleep. I've been listening to every video on the channel for years. Please keep it going! Sweet historical dreams to all from the US ❤
@sakurajimapoohmi202010 ай бұрын
It’s always a sunny day, when Amaterasu comes out of the cave to play. ☀️🌸☺️
@thoughtsofelizabeth10 ай бұрын
Oh a 2.5 hour long Mythillogical? Hot damn! My mending and I are here for it!
@pr0se_10 ай бұрын
Thanks for managing to put these out despite all the moves!
@abbyfran8216 ай бұрын
everyone complaining about the intro can choke ❤ for every complaint i hope you make your next intro one minute longer. i like hearing about the hosts lore between each other and how it might relate to the topic at hand and it was especially relevant today! glad to hear you guys are moving up into the works of sponsorships! such a fantastic topic I've never heard anything about before today!
@robertc.46098 ай бұрын
As a follower of a years now I'm going to say I love your videos/podcasts and rewatching this I wanted to just thank you for your content that you and Crofty(I'm unsure of spelling to this day, sorry). I hope to hear more soon, I actually really just love hearing stuff from you Charles.
@erikgilson168710 ай бұрын
Listened to this like 10 times already on podcast, look forward to watching the video
@Davlavi10 ай бұрын
Love when you guys are able to post.
@siobhanomalley196810 ай бұрын
Omg, I'm so excited, I LOVE Shinto mythology 😱 and yayyy, Crofty's back! Tbh don't blame you, if I could move to Japan I absolutely would too 😂
@SophyaAgain10 ай бұрын
Okinawans still call Japanese as "the folk from Yamato". I lived there for four years. One day I saw a lady that looked like an Okinawan. So I asked her if she or her parents were Okinawans. She said: Oh, actually I'm mixed race. My mother is Okinawan and my father Japanese "🙂 Here in Brazil it's not offensive to call someone a "mixed race". I live in Brazil now. Okinawa is a very interesting place. Charles & Crofty, I really enjoy your channel. Cheers
@pettermhlum79349 ай бұрын
Happy and surprised to see that someone could use my master's thesis! I think this must be the only reference to it that I know of 😅 Just a small note: You cite it as "Old Japanese Names", but there should be a "plant" in there: "Old Japanese Plant Names". While there are some commonalities between general naming conventions and the naming of plants, they are a bit different and I cannot say I know much about the naming of people and places. Citation aside, I enjoyed the episode! Working with the material, I didn't really pay much attention to the stories and the mythology of Japan; the work was more linguistic in nature.🌳
@_Molecule10 ай бұрын
big fan of the podcast, i dont mind the wait as its always worth it :)
@ninjabunny952610 ай бұрын
I only very recently learned that Chibiterasu was made up for Okami's sequel and not actually from Japanese mythology and honestly I'm deeply embarrassed for myself that I couldn't pick up on the fact that Amaterasu's child just being named CHIBIterasu was almost definitely something that wouldn't be a part of actual Japanese mythology 😅
@chronicmb8210 ай бұрын
I got pretty worried after 4 months! Great job as always
@Grrrr3FKAGrrrrGrrrrGrrrr10 ай бұрын
Great topic! I've always been curious about this
@meowtheap24838 ай бұрын
aww love that yall are recording in person!
@zrath6710 ай бұрын
"My sword has become maidens, I have obviously won this child making session."
@hahafunnyhaha42166 ай бұрын
Your videos are the only thing that get me through the tedium of my day-job.
@elKinesis10 ай бұрын
Ooo, I love me some Japanese mythology! This is a lovely surprise. Thank you.
@SarahTheRebelOfficial10 ай бұрын
Also now I get why Ammy’s weapons are mirrors, prayer beads & swords
@colinjohngilbert39949 ай бұрын
Ohhh the boys iv mist yez 😊 hope you two are well ❤🇮🇪 welcome home croftey hope you had an amazing time in Japan 🇯🇵 2:15
@alfredeneuman68969 ай бұрын
Love the channel and all the work that goes into making interesting and informative videos! I'm not sure if you're open to taking suggestions for future topics, but if so there's a mythical figure dating back to pre-hispanic times in Mexico called "la llorona" or "the weeping woman" who might be worth a deep dive. It could be a pretty dark topic but I'd love to hear what you're able to dig up. Anyway, keep up the great work!
@meowtheap24838 ай бұрын
how did i miss this!?! yayyyyy! love yall from north carolina in the usa :)
@Ktotwf10 ай бұрын
Oh my Amaterasu. Was listening to the podcast ep when this notification popped up, wondering why it wasn't on KZbin 😂
@Runeinc10 ай бұрын
I was just thinking when was this going to hit KZbin yesterday and here it is.
@TempleofBrendaSong9 ай бұрын
Amaterasu Has Risen!
@fulviopontarollo29526 ай бұрын
I remember reading some years ago that in the beef between Susanoo and Amaterasu there could be memories of a fertility ritual, but undone/done in reverse (for example the skinned horse was described in text as having been flayed “in reverse”, so presumably in the opposite sense to the usual practice). The author then argued that in more shamanic societies a ritual could be done in reverse to obtain the opposite effect to what was the original intent. Thus Amaterasu hiding in the cave (along with the accidental stabbing in the genitalia) would have actually meant that Susanoo managed to reverse the fertility rites to obtain the death of the Kami that was meant to be honored
@SarahTheRebelOfficial10 ай бұрын
I loved you cracking yourself up so hard with a math pun 😂
@AmogusCumslum10 ай бұрын
YESSSS ITS FINALLY OUT. LETTSSSS GOOOOOOOOOO
@nyeallison375810 ай бұрын
Two vids in one week. Let’s goooo
@k-matsu10 ай бұрын
@TheHistocrat Your discussion of "kami" is skewed by the improper association of the word with the English word "God". A much better translation of "kami" would be "spirit" (in the sense of of the Hebrew "Ruach"). When you walk in the mountains or enter a shrine, you can often sense the "kami" (atmosphere). A great work or art or an ancient building has "kami" (excellence?) A great sports player can possess such natural skill that they person themself is referred to as "kami" (for example, Zico is often referred to as "football no kami-sama"), but "kami" in that case is referring to the inner talent that inhabits the individual ... not the individuals themselves. In the Shinto legendarium, gods are the ultimate metaphysical manifestation of kami, but if you try to take the word "kami" to mean something like "God" or "deity", then youve missed the entire foundation of the Shinto religion. There's a reason why the most important shrines in Japan get torn down and rebuilt every decade or so The "kami" is not the impermanent object; it is the essence. This is why most Japanese historians either reject - or at least put an asterisk next to - the claim that Emperors were ever viewed as "living gods". No -- they were believed to PERSONIFY the national kami, but only really superstitious people thought the emperor was actually a "God" in the sense that Christians, Muslims or Jews mean the word. On the contrary we have numerous historical references to people who mocked the idea that the emperor was a deity (one even made a pun on the term for "retired emperor" and "dog"). Even at the height of the Meiji-Taisho-Showa cult era, the emperor was the REPRESENTATION of Nippon no kami ... not as "Kami" in the deity sense. I also think that viewers would benefit from knowing the literal meanings of the "names of kami", because they contain clues to the underlying metaphysical basis of Shinto. For example, "Amenominakanushi" means "The lord (or owner) of all under heaven", "Takamimusubi" means "that which binds to all that is above" and "Kamumimusubi" means "that which binds to all that is below". Metaphysically speaking, thats not too different from the Christian trinity. Also, if you ever edit your video make sure you fix the error at 49:25. The third god in the pre-Izanami/Izanagi trinity is "Ka-MU-mi-mu-su-bi" NOT "Ka-mi-mu-su-bi". Theres a HUGE difference.
@kuroyurishinobi63679 ай бұрын
I extremely agree regarding the concept of kami, in fact I often struggle to explain what this term means.Regarding Kami-Musubi-no-Kami or Kamu-Musubi-no-Kami I think both are correct, or rather I have heard many Japanese professors pronounce it both ways.
@k-matsu9 ай бұрын
@@kuroyurishinobi6367 It can be hard to nail down ancient word meanings because in the earliest records they are only phonetic, not "meaningful" kanji. Therefore homophones are not distinguishable However in terms of "kami musubi", that would mean either "binding to the kami" or "binding to the above" which doesnt really fit with the meanings of the other two gods in the trinity. You already have Takami musubi (binding to above) so why do you need Kami musubi (binding to above)??? On the other hand, in ancient Japanese "kamumi" (below) is the opposite of "takami" (above) so it seems almost certain (at least in my mind) that the two gods who are partners with "the lord of everything" should be "Takamimusubi" and "Kamumimusubi"
@kuroyurishinobi63679 ай бұрын
@@k-matsu There are different interpretations, I personally found both readings, even on the same Kokkugakuin site, but Motoori Norinaga also does not seem to suggest a single reading, there is a similar case with the name of 神直毘神 where the word "kami" is read "kamu" ,as for Kamu-Musubi-no-Kami it is really more complicated, because the Japanese themselves transliterate it and read it in both forms, there is often a huge problem with the names.
@k-matsu9 ай бұрын
@@kuroyurishinobi6367 Read the original again. It is Ka-Mu-Mi (three phonetic characters) .... not Ka-Mu or Ka-mi (two phonetic characters)
@kuroyurishinobi63679 ай бұрын
@@k-matsu Do you have any sources on studying pronunciation? I'm interested in learning more.
@danik424410 ай бұрын
Holy this is amazing thank you
@dinklydorf921510 ай бұрын
Would you guys ever do the geological history of mankind, I know the younger dryas period and its massive melt water pulses have been correlated with plausibly being the real geology behind the great fires & floods myths we have seen so commonly. I think it'd be interesting to try and break down real geology to try and find geomythology embedded in the stories and traditions.
@strigoi_guhlqueen835510 ай бұрын
A very Interesting episode.
@toska352810 ай бұрын
I have a question that I've asked people in Japan, but I've never gotten an answer; If the gods made Japanese people, who made the non-Japanese people? Who are their gods according to Japanese mythology?
@brograb89810 ай бұрын
Don’t mind ad breaks when they’re sensibly placed and the audio levels don’t give me a heart attack
@Grrrr3FKAGrrrrGrrrrGrrrr10 ай бұрын
'myriad' was originally a specific number, 10,000
@LoudWaffle10 ай бұрын
While technically true, the point of the number in most contexts was essentially to say "uncountably large." Sort like how we'll see a large crowd and say "wow there's like a million people out there!" without actually meaning there are exactly 1,000,000 people, or even necessarily close to that number.
@ravinakuwar140710 ай бұрын
Waiting for it since the time of amaterasu😂
@tgillies1013 ай бұрын
I wonder if there is any connection to Sussanoo and Sun Wukong the Monkey King from Chinese mythology? or is the text gaps to wide to correlate?
@williamfrederick967010 ай бұрын
Probably never gonna happen but I'd love a Mythillogical on The Book of Genesis
@mattrecommends836010 ай бұрын
It’s a normal day. Nothing major going on… holy fucking shit new Histocrat dropped!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Japanese Creation myth?! Fuck me I never knew I wanted to know so much about something I know nothing about! It’s an in person episode! Jesus Christ. Get a fucking mop. Up all night with this one. Thank god for mythological 😊😊😊
@Sparkling346 ай бұрын
"here's some ads" "if you have been feeling distant from the lord you probably haven't been reading bible"
@welcometonebalia10 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@dheerdaksh9 ай бұрын
1:17:43 bookmark
@williamfrederick967010 ай бұрын
Great, now I gotta watch this video instead of studying
@TevorTheThird8 ай бұрын
It's mentioned how naming all the maggots was an author "going overboard" a point I absolutely do not dispute. But it made me think. There's a bunch of examples of people just doing exactly that in old texts, going overboard that is, that have paid off in the long run. How many demons are named in the Ars Goetia? And for no other reason then to name a bunch of demons. And how many Angels have names from other similar books, going way beyond anything biblical. But there's countless examples of comparatively modern writers who went back and mined those names as some evocative short hand. Did the maggots need names? No. But in 2024 I now know there's a trove of such names I can steal from to give a fictional character some sense unearned weight 😅 I do mean that complimentary too. Sure it's kinda lazy to name a demon Lilith... But that doesn't mean you can't also pay it off in a big way if you do it well. So thank you old timey writers for dedicating space to meandering lists of names that have no barring on the story you're telling. It is adaptational gold.
@TomiTapio9 ай бұрын
It's all very "Then halkoliiteripallojuma attacked koripallosuutarihiisi and Silvennoinenkeikari gave birth to ulkohuussikohtalo and aidanseiväsmallipala."
@DavidLightbringer9 ай бұрын
guys i love mythology and i tried to listen to this but twelve minutes in and you haven't started yet. you just can't do that to people man. I wanted to get into this. but you haven't said a single thing yet.
@DavidLightbringer9 ай бұрын
you just said, "if anybody is familiar with the use of cuneiform" and you haven't even talked about Amaterasu yet... please review your process. it's fine to do in-depth videos on subjects like this, but bloody hell, you got to get started when the video starts!
@JustinDown8 ай бұрын
@@DavidLightbringerNo
@shaneyrockfest10 ай бұрын
1:07am .... hello from.Canada 🇨🇦
@haunt736410 ай бұрын
1 minute ago I looked at the best time
@LycaonsMemories8 ай бұрын
we need an episode with your faces, i want to see if my head cannon on you two is remotely close
@youngimperialistmkii10 ай бұрын
I get why the guys here don't want to go into it. But ReligionforBreakfast has a good vid on State Shintoisim from WWII.
@706easy10 ай бұрын
13 minutes in and the story still hasn’t started
@DariusM10 ай бұрын
Gotta get thru citing those 2 sources!
@OLExGREG10 ай бұрын
Welcome to histocrat lmao
@Stogdad1710 ай бұрын
Who’s here to find more insight into Sun God Nika? 🏴☠️
@adaa12345SixSevenEightNine10 ай бұрын
Once again, it has been awhile 😂
@farkasmactavish10 ай бұрын
1:26:07 SUKUNA?!
@LoudWaffle10 ай бұрын
Nope not the same one haha. They're talking about Sukunabikona, kami of hot springs. The Ryomen-Sukuna which the JJK character is based on does appear in the Nihon-Shoki, but isn't discussed in this video 😅
@marandamurphy8 ай бұрын
Does anyone else feel like the audio is sped up?
@isprobablyjobhunting10 ай бұрын
Hoorayyyyy
@Joshua_Nguyen063010 ай бұрын
History of the African Chinese Before waves of Han migrations around 1000 B.C., the original inhabitants of China were black skinned people who dominated the region until a few thousand years ago. They were followed by the ethnic groups, who are part of the Austronesian people who have come from the Malay Archipelago 6,000 years ago. Pejoratively called Moor Negritos, or Little Black People, by the Spanish invaders who observed them in Southeast Asia, these black folk were still living in China during the Qing dynasty (1644 to 1911). At about 35,000 B.C. a group of black Chinese, who became known as the Jomon entered Japan, they became the first humans to inhabit the Japanese Islands. Later, another group; now known as the Ainu, followed. Genetically they’re more similar to dark-skinned groups found in Southeast Asia than the Chinese, Japanese or Koreans. Today, their genes can still be found in 40% of modern Japanese, as well as Mongolians and Tibetans, (Past and Present) Kings and Queens. Reference: AtlanticBlackStar
@livamyyo6 ай бұрын
sounds like globohomo propaganda lmao
@ChipmunkDesu6 ай бұрын
the original inhabitants of sub saharan africa were also black but the “historians” try to hide this from us. speak truth to power brotha ✊🏿
@tylergrey14686 ай бұрын
It actually starts @3:15, they ramble a bit bout nothing.
@WMFranksworth10 ай бұрын
For the Emperor!
@vandereer10 ай бұрын
hell yeah
@JerryCrow9 ай бұрын
What is "mythic ancient logics"? Imagine if there is no writing, what would be "knowledge" or "logic" then..? Probably speech with like weird modifiers, so the finno-uralic languages. Then you start looking at the haplogroups and look at parallels from tocharian ABC, where one had cases that only still exist in this language family. Like the indo aryan wtf ever, then imagine if there was still a group of people self seggregating, them having distinct "pagan" religions, and the other correlation and cognates to ahura mazda.... Like a cult of a bull skull type of, anyway after that they housed attila, and ghengis... Later adopting the name of "muhammed" or "moxommod" the southern one without the cases, and the above one kinda staying "aryan pure", being them finnic populus...(untill today) Buddhism with its symbols being first on birch bark "parchment"... The f'd thing is is that, all this is oral tradition, that is next to extinction. The finnish language is neutered proto finnic, which was 'the shite' But yea Saami noeda, and other "Jotun", like Väinämöinen. "mytologica fennica" in swedish the oldest book, like translate it to english its great, you'll love it.
@cptnjcuncia22138 ай бұрын
It was a creation myth aimed at a sector of domain, on demand¡‽!&@£
@youngimperialistmkii10 ай бұрын
Ohh Japanese mythology!
@90070494910 ай бұрын
Get sum!!!!!!
@cold189510 ай бұрын
The way you two talk about capitalism is sus
@shroommcfanta202010 ай бұрын
The butchering of the names is simply too much. Why don,t you put a minimum of effort into this.
@yurkdawg7 ай бұрын
Sheesh you guys don't even start talking about the subject until 7 after 7 minutes in - and even then you don't even really talk about the subject. Sorry to be impatient; I guess your format isn't for me
@Someone-by6jm10 ай бұрын
You should focus more on the historic stuff,myths suck ass
@Poisonfrogg6 ай бұрын
Super odd suggestion; if you are looking to fill an episode while your cohost is unavailable, and you are willing to jump back into fey folklore, which in my opinion are always the best episodes, I would love to here a discussion with someone like Feywild Fiend (@feywildfiend) on any fey antics.