The hannya is a mask used in a traditional Japanese Noh theater, representing a jealous female demon. It is characterized by two sharp bull-like horns, metallic eyes, and a leering mouth. In Noh plays, the type of mask changes according to the degree of jealousy, resentment, and anger of the female characters. The is a mask that represents a female even more resentful, jealous, and angry than the namanari, a woman on the verge of becoming a demoness.
The is also called chūnari. The shinjya, also called honnari, is a mask that represents the appearance of a female that is even more intense than the . These masks, which represent the jealousy, resentment, and anger of female demons, are classified as masks.
It is said that there are now more than 250 types of Noh masks, but the oldest historical record of Noh masks, , mentions only about 14 types of masks, and the name is not found among them. However, the records a performance of the Noh play , and it is possible that snake-like demoness masks such as were used.
The differentiation of mask types seems to have progressed in the 16th century, and the name appears in the works of Shimoma Nakataka, a monk, samurai and Noh actor active from the 1580s to the 1610s.
Etymology
The word hannya is a Japanese phonetic transcription of the
Sanskrit word (प्रज्ञा), meaning 'wisdom'.
There are several hypotheses as to why the mask used in Noh, which represents a vengeful spirit expressing female jealousy and resentment, was named .
According to the first hypothesis, the mask was named because it is said to have been perfected by 般若坊, a Japanese monk of the
Bunmei (1469–1487).
The second hypothesis is that it was named after the line in the Noh play .
The in this line refers to the voice reciting the Heart Sutra, which repels evil spirits.
An alternative explanation is that the artist would need a great deal of wisdom () in order to create this mask.
Characteristics
The mask is used in many Noh and plays, as well as in
Shinto ritual dances.
The mask portrays the souls of women who have become demons due to obsession or jealousy, similar to the Buddhist concept of a
hungry ghost. Plays in which a person may wear the mask include and ; its use in these two plays, two of the most famous of the Noh repertoire, and its distinctive and frightening appearance make it one of the most recognizable Noh masks.
The mask is said to be demonic and dangerous but also sorrowful and tormented, displaying the complexity of human emotions. When the actor looks straight ahead, the mask appears frightening and angry; when tilted slightly down, the face of the demon appears to be sorrowful, as though crying. The ability to change the expression of the mask through use of perspective is a feature commonly seen in Noh theatre. (1983). 083481529X, John Weatherhill. 083481529X
masks appear in various skin tones: a white mask indicates a woman with a refined character (such as the aristocratic Lady Rokujō in ), a red mask depicts a less refined character (like the spirit of peasant girl seen in ), and the darkest red depicts true demons (revealed after appearing as women, as in and ).
Plays associated with
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– worn by the Lady Rokujō in her second-half appearance as a demon.
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– can be worn by the dancing woman in her second-half appearance as a snake, though the shinjya mask is also used.
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– The story is about a woman who appears to Nichiren and reveals her true identity as a giant snake, but is transformed into a heavenly maiden by the Nichiren's recitation of sutras. In the scene where the serpent transforms into a heavenly maiden, appears wearing a woman's () mask overlaid with mask, and removes the mask in the middle of the scene.
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– the story of a woman who is divorced from her husband and becomes a demon, cursing him and his future wife, but is repelled by the prayers of Abe no Seimei.
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(known in the Kanze school as ) – worn by the spinning woman of Adachigahara after she is revealed to be a demon.
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– can be worn by the noblewoman after she is revealed to be a demon.
File:Scene uit het Noh theaterstuk Aoinoue Aoinoue (titel op object) Honderd Noh spelen (serietitel) Nogaku hyakuban (serietitel op object), RP-P-2003-279.jpg|. Ukiyo-e print by Kōgyo Tsukioka.
File:Dojoji道成寺.jpg|. Painted by Kōgyo Tsukioka.
File:Matsuke Heikichi - Nogaku zue - Walters 95252.jpg|. Scene of confrontation between a demoness and two monks. Ukiyo-e print by Kōgyo Tsukioka.
Masks similar to
In Noh plays, the type of mask changes according to the degree of jealousy, resentment, and anger of the female characters.
The deigan and hashihime masks described below are each classified as a separate mask type, while the namanari, hannya, jya, and shinjya masks are classified as masks. The adachi onna mask type is a type of mask and is used exclusively in the Adachigahara performance.
The deigan mask is a mask that represents the first stage of a woman's transformation into a demoness as her emotions begin to rise. The gold-painted eyes and tooth tips on the masks indicate that the women have already begun the transformation from human to or . It is used in the Noh plays and . The mask is also used as a mask that is not associated with a woman's resentment, jealousy, or anger, but simply represents that she has gone from human to supernatural beings. For example, in the Ama and Taema performances, the mask is used to represent a woman who has become a dragoness or a bodhisattva.
The hashihime mask is painted red from the eyes down, and has more disheveled hair and more prominent golden eyes than the mask. These features of the mask indicate that the woman has a strong desire for revenge. It is used in the Noh plays and .
The namanari mask represents a woman in the process of becoming a demoness, with short horns sprouting from both sides of her forehead. Compared to the , the mask represents the psychological state of a woman who is still emotionally attached to her husband. is used exclusively as a mask for the Noh play .
The mask that represents a woman who has become a demoness is , and is also called or nakanari in contrast to .
The mask that represents a demoness who becomes even more furious and looks like a snake is a jya, meaning 'snake', and the one that is even more furious is shinjya, meaning 'true snake'. These masks are sometimes called honnari in contrast to and . The masks of and have tongues peeking out of their mouths, and some masks have no ears, making them look more like snakes than humans. In Buddhism, a person who hindered enlightenment was sometimes likened to a poisonous snake. While women, unlike men, were regarded as beings incapable of attaining enlightenment, they were often likened to demoness or poisonous or evil snakes, and when their desires were not satisfied, they were believed to kill people in order to take revenge. In some schools, or is used as an alternative mask to in .
File:Deigan-.jpg| mask at the Tokyo National Museum. Edo period, 1600s. Important Cultural Property.
File:Hashihime type noh mask, Edo period, 1600s AD, wood, polychromy - Tokyo National Museum - Ueno Park, Tokyo, Japan - DSC08979.jpg| mask at the Tokyo National Museum. Edo period, 1600s.
File:Namanari type noh mask, Edo period, 1700s-1800s AD, wood, polychromy - Tokyo National Museum - Ueno Park, Tokyo, Japan - DSC08971.jpg| mask at the Tokyo National Museum. Edo period, 1700s or 1800s.
File:Han'nya type noh mask, with inscription Omi utsu, Edo period, 1600s-1700s AD, wood, polychromy - Tokyo National Museum - Ueno Park, Tokyo, Japan - DSC08983.jpg| () mask at the Tokyo National Museum. Edo period, 1600s or 1700s.
File:Shinjya-1j.jpg| mask. ()
in
also appears in , a puppet theater that began in the [[Edo period]]. The Japan Arts Council ([[:ja:日本芸術文化振興会|ja]]) lists 129 types of puppet heads, and is one of them. A puppet head of the type can also represent . The is equipped with a device that allows the puppet to change its facial expression instantly by pulling a string. In this way, a single head can represent the transformation of a beautiful woman into . When the puppeteer pulls the string attached to the , the puppet with the face of a beautiful woman is transformed into a terrifying with golden horns, large golden eyes, a mouth that reaches to the ears, and fangs.
In popular culture
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In the mobile game , the character Hannya is a who has a mask on his forehead and another on his back.
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In the manga and anime Rurouni Kenshin, a character named Hannya wears one of these masks and it is his namesake.
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In the Yakuza video game series, the character Goro Majima has a large tattoo of a on his back. He also has an alter-ego, Hannya-Man, in , that wears a mask.
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In a Detective Conan anime-only case, a woman who killed the people who drove her sister to suicide used the as a murder motif. The legend also influences a local tradition that follows the story of two envious girls who set up another named Ohana to be executed so they can steal her various kimono, but end up murdered by Ohana's vengeful soul, reborn as an immortal demon.
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In the 1998 survival horror video game , a character named George Maxwell wears a mask while wielding a large hatchet, implying when he was infected with a parasitic bacteria and became insane, he concealed his face with the mask.
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In the 2001 horror video game Fatal Frame, the Himuro family master wears a hannya mask. The game also features puzzles involving other Noh masks.
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In the 2014 video game The Battle Cats there is a boss that wears a Hannya mask, and is called "Hannya"
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In the 2019 action adventure video game , one of the bosses named the Corrupted Monk wears a mask to conceal her true face. She is based on the story of Yao Bikuni and the Ningyo and bears a likeness to her story, being an immortal monk who gained immortality due to eating a type of meat.
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In the 2022 action-adventure video game , the main antagonists conceals their identities with masks.
See also
External links