Hitobashira ( 人柱 , "human pillar") , also known as Da sheng zhuang ( simplified Chinese : 打生桩 ; traditional Chinese : 打生樁 ; pinyin : dǎshēngzhuāng ; Jyutping : daa2saang1zong1 ) in China, is a cultural practice of human sacrifice in East Asia of premature burial before the construction of buildings. Hitobashira was practiced formerly in Japan as a form of human sacrifice . A person was buried alive under or near large-scale buildings like dams, bridges and castles, as a prayer to Shinto gods . It was believed this would protect the building from being destroyed by natural disasters such as floods or by enemy attacks. Hitobashira can also refer to workers who were buried alive under inhumane conditions.
36-415: Legend has it that the practice of da sheng zhuang was first proposed by Lu Ban . It was believed that the moving of soil during large scale construction would destroy the feng shui of the land, and anger the ghosts of people who have died unjustly, causing accidents during construction. Da sheng zhuang was proposed to suppress such evils, and reduce the number of incidents during construction. However,
72-441: A "formal colony" or "junior ally" might also be regarded as a vassal state in terms of international relations, analogous to a domestic "fief-holder" or "trustee". The concept of a vassal state uses the concept of personal vassalry to theorize formally hegemonic relationships between states – even those using non-personal forms of rule. Imperial states to which this terminology has been applied include, for instance: Ancient Rome ,
108-475: A new victim was needed, and would be chosen from among them. It is said this event occurred in 1608. According to legend the Matsue Castle is also said to have been constructed on a human sacrifice that was buried under the castle's stone walls. Her name has never been recorded, and nothing concerning her is remembered except that she is thought to have been a beautiful young maiden who was fond of dancing and
144-410: A subordinate state (such as a dependency , residency , client state or protectorate ) has retained internal autonomy, but has lost independence in foreign policy, while also, in many instances, paying formal tribute , or providing troops when requested. This is a similar relationship to vassals, but vassals hold fiefdoms which are present in the actual territory of the monarch. In this framework,
180-500: A wooden horse carriage and coachman, a pedal-powered cycle, and other woodworking mentioned in various texts, which thereafter led Lu Ban to be acknowledged as a master craftsman: Lu Ban is revered as the god of carpentry and masonry in Chinese folk religion . His personality is assumed by the master carpenter involved in the construction of houses among the Dong . He is sometimes counted among
216-431: Is called a suzerain . The rights and obligations of a vassal are called vassalage , while the rights and obligations of a suzerain are called suzerainty . The obligations of a vassal often included military support by knights in exchange for certain privileges, usually including land held as a tenant or fief . The term is also applied to similar arrangements in other feudal societies. In contrast, fealty ( fidelitas )
252-498: Is named Gensuke in honour of the human sacrifice along with a memorial dedicated to the victims who died during the bridge's construction. When Horio Yoshiharu , the great general who became daimyō of Izumo in the Keichō era , first undertook to put a bridge over the mouth of this river, the builders laboured in vain; for there appeared to be no solid bottom for the pillars of the bridge to rest upon. Millions of great stones were cast into
288-450: Is referred to as simply the maiden of Matsue. After the castle was built, a law was passed forbidding any girl to dance in the streets of Matsue because the hill Oshiroyama would shudder and the castle would shake from "top to bottom". In Wanouchi, Gifu during the 1754 Horeki River Improvement Incident which involved the difficult and dangerous construction of river embankments, a local retainer voluntarily gave his life by remaining under
324-562: Is said that there was a live burial of an elderly beggar. The temple set up for him, Laogongci (老公祠), can still be visited today. There are rumours that daa saang zong was prevalent in pre-WWII Hong Kong. The phrase 'daa saang zong' was used by parents in Hong Kong during the 1930s to scare disobedient children. In 2006, discussion regarding daa saang zong was reignited when a large number of infant remains were discovered during water pipe laying at Princess Margaret Road , Ho Man Tin . However,
360-412: Is used in feng shui practices. The modern artist Shi Lu has claimed that Lu Ban was an alias of his contemporary Confucius , but this seems dubious. Vassal A vassal or liege subject is a person regarded as having a mutual obligation to a lord or monarch , in the context of the feudal system in medieval Europe . While the subordinate party is called a vassal, the dominant party
396-617: The Bell of King Seongdeok in Gyeongju is said to have involved this practice. Lu Ban Lu Ban ( c. 507 –444 BC) was a Chinese architect or master carpenter, structural engineer, and inventor, during the Zhou Dynasty. He is revered as the Chinese Deity (Patron) of builders and contractors. Lu Ban was born in the state of Lu ; a few sources claim he was born further to
SECTION 10
#1732875890879432-522: The Five Kings of the Water Immortals , Taoist water gods invoked by sailors for protection while carrying out journeys. He is referenced in a number of Chinese idioms . The Chinese equivalent of " teaching one's grandmother to suck eggs " is to "brandish one's axe at Lu Ban's door" (班门弄斧 ). His cultural companion is the stone worker Wang Er, who lived around the same time. The Lu Ban Ruler (魯班尺)
468-403: The square , the planer , the drill , the shovel , and an ink marking tool—to complete his many projects more quickly. His wife was also credited with inventing the umbrella in order to permit him to work in inclement weather. According to tradition, he was responsible for several inventions: Other inventions were also attributed to him, such as a lifting implement to assist with burial,
504-459: The Hitobashira. She resolved to become one on the condition that one of her children be made a samurai. She was buried under the central pillar of the castle keep. Soon after that the construction of the castle keep was successfully completed. But Katsutoyo was transferred to another province and her son was not made a samurai. Her spirit felt resentful and made the moat overflow with spring rain when
540-507: The area around Ho Man Tin used to house Chinese and Muslim cemeteries which were since moved, and it has been said that the infant remains were not from incidents of daa saang zong , but rather remains that were not relocated. Ex-head of Tin Tin Daily News , Wai Kee-shun , claimed that the construction of Haizhu Bridge , Guangzhou involved the practice of daa saang zong . Following the modernization of Asia, some areas started using
576-476: The building of complex, dangerous, often water-related projects, such as bridges. The stories of hitobashira were believed to inspire a spirit of self-sacrifice in people. Stories of hitobashira and other human sacrifices were common in Japan as late as the sixteenth century. Maruoka Castle is one of the oldest surviving castles in Japan and is rumored to have been constructed with a human pillar which can be found in
612-561: The earliest archeological evidence of da sheng zhuang is a case discovered in the Dongzhao excavation in Zhengzhou , Henan Province , where the remains of an infant used in the foundation of the Erlitou culture city were found. There is also a legend that the construction of bridges in the ancient era required the sacrifices of both a young girl and a boy. The boy would be buried within a pier at
648-457: The effect that there was a person named Kowakubi in the province of Musashi and a person called Koromono-ko in the province of Kawachi . If they should be sacrificed to deities of the two rivers respectively, then the construction of embankments would be easily achieved. Kowakubi was subsequently thrown into the torrent of the Kitakawa river, with a prayer offered. After the sacrifice the embankment
684-483: The exit hole of a dam during a flood, in the belief that this would stop the flood. The phrase sak¹ dau⁶ lung¹ is in common use in modern Cantonese, but is only used to refer to children. The ancient practice has been proposed to be the phrase's etymology. Another related practice relates to the production of bronzeware and pottery, where ritual sacrifices were referred to as toulushen 投爐神 (thrown to stove deity) or lushengu 爐神姑 (stove goddess) and venerated. The casting of
720-399: The first man who should cross the bridge wearing a hakama without a machi (a stiff piece of material to keep the folds of the garment perpendicular and neat-looking) should be put under the bridge. A man named Gensuke, who lived on Saikamachi street, passed over the bridge without a machi in his hakama and was taken to be sacrificed. Gensuke was buried alive in the river-bed below the place of
756-468: The front of the bridge, while the girl would be buried within the pier at the back of the bridge. During the reign of Chunghye of Goryeo , a rumour spread within the capital city of Kaesong that he had planned to sacrifice dozens of infants as a foundation for his new palace, causing chaos as the people of Kaesong fled en masse. During the construction of a levee at Dahu Park in Taiwan under Qing rule , it
SECTION 20
#1732875890879792-468: The greatest and most trusted vassals with lands. Even at the most extreme devolution of any remnants of central power, in 10th-century France, the majority of vassals still had no fixed estates. The stratification of a fighting band of vassals into distinct groups might roughly correlate with the new term " fief " that had started to supersede "benefice" in the 9th century. An "upper" group comprised great territorial magnates, who were strong enough to ensure
828-408: The inheritance of their benefice to the heirs of their family. A "lower" group consisted of landless knights attached to a count or duke . This social settling process also received impetus in fundamental changes in the conduct of warfare. As co-ordinated cavalry superseded disorganized infantry , armies became more expensive to maintain. A vassal needed economic resources to equip the cavalry he
864-455: The legend of "O-shizu, Hitobashira". When Shibata Katsutoyo , the nephew of Shibata Katsuie , was building a castle in Maruoka, the stone wall of the castle kept collapsing no matter how many times it was piled up. There was one vassal who suggested that they should make someone a human sacrifice (hitobashira). O-shizu, a one-eyed woman who had two children and lived a poor life, was selected as
900-490: The middle pillar, where the current is most treacherous, and thereafter the bridge remained immovable for three hundred years. The middle-most pillar of the bridge was for three hundred years called by his name: "Gensuke-bashira". Some believe the name Gensuke was not the name of a man but the name of an era, in the local dialect. The legend is so profoundly believed, that when the new bridge was built in 1891, many local rural residents were afraid to come to town due to rumors that
936-504: The relics of Saints Denis, Rusticus, Éleuthère , Martin , and Germain – apparently assembled at Compiegne for the event. Such refinements were not included from the outset when it was time of crisis, war, hunger, etc. Feudal society was increasingly based on the concept of "lordship" (French seigneur ), which was one of the distinguishing features of the Early Middle Ages and had evolved from times of Late Antiquity . In
972-416: The river to no purpose, for the work constructed by day was swept away or swallowed up by night. Nevertheless, at last the bridge was built, but the pillars began to sink soon after it was finished; then a flood carried half of it away and as often as it was repaired so often it was wrecked. It was then decided that a human sacrifice would be made to appease the vexed spirits of the flood. It was determined that
1008-399: The rushing water in order to keep a foundation pillar from moving until it could be secured from above. As well as aiding in the construction, this sacrifice was also treated as an offering to the gods ensuring the successful completion of the project (i.e., a hitobashira). One related practice is sak¹ dau⁶ lung¹ ( Chinese : 塞豆窿 ; Cantonese). This involves the forcing of a child into
1044-477: The sacrifice of chicken as an alternative to da sheng zhuang . Some of the earliest written records of hitobashira can be found in the Nihon Shoki (The Chronicles of Japan) . One story centered on Emperor Nintoku (323 A.D.) discusses the overflowing of the Kitakawa and Mamuta Rivers. Protection against the torrent was beyond the ability of the stricken populace. The Emperor had a divine revelation in his dream to
1080-450: The season of cutting algae came in April every year. People called it, "the rain caused by the tears of O-shizu's sorrow" and erected a small tomb to soothe her spirit. There was a poem handed down, "The rain which falls when the season of cutting algae comes Is the rain reminiscent of the tears of the poor O-shizu's sorrow". It has been commented that the instability of the walls of Maruoka Castle
1116-463: The time of Charlemagne (ruled 768–814), the connection slowly developed between vassalage and the grant of land, the main form of wealth at that time. Contemporaneous social developments included agricultural " manorialism " and the social and legal structures labelled — but only since the 18th century — " feudalism ". These developments proceeded at different rates in various regions. In Merovingian times (5th century to 752), monarchs would reward only
Hitobashira - Misplaced Pages Continue
1152-641: The west, in Dunhuang , to a family of carpenters or artisans during the Spring and Autumn period of the Zhou dynasty . His original name was Gongshu Yizhi . He was also referred to as Gongshu Ban or Pan . He was supposed to have been an indifferent pupil until his love of learning was kindled by the scholar Zi Xia . He later learned woodworking from Bao Laodong. The great demand for his work supposedly compelled him to invent or improve several carpenter's tools—the saw ,
1188-410: Was bound to contribute to his lord to fight his frequent wars. Such resources, in the absence of a money economy, came only from land and its associated assets, which included peasants as well as wood and water. Many empires have set up vassal states , based on tribes, kingdoms, or city-states, the subjects of which they wish to control without having to conquer or directly govern them. In these cases
1224-443: Was constructed, Koromono-ko however escaped being sacrificed. The Yasutomi-ki , a diary from the 15th century, documents the famous tradition of "Nagara-no Hitobashira". According to the tradition, a woman who was carrying a boy on her back was caught while she was passing along the river Nagara and was buried at the place where a large bridge was then to be built. Hitobashira traditions were almost always practiced in conjunction with
1260-491: Was likely caused by the design of the castle. Although built in the Momoyama period (1575-1600) the design is more indicative of earlier fortresses, the steep base features random-style stone piling which is suggested as the source of instability in the walls which may have led to the use of a human pillar during its construction. The Matsue Ohashi Bridge according to legend used a human sacrifice in its construction. The nearby park
1296-468: Was sworn, unconditional loyalty to a monarch. In fully developed vassalage, the lord and the vassal would take part in a commendation ceremony composed of two parts, the homage and the fealty , including the use of Christian sacraments to show its sacred importance. According to Eginhard 's brief description, the commendatio made to Pippin the Younger in 757 by Tassilo III, Duke of Bavaria , involved
#878121