The extra1=lit., "pipe fox", also pronounced kanko, is a type of spirit possession in legends around various parts of Japan. It may be known otherwise as osaki especially in the Kantō region, and also considered equivalent to the izuna.
It was believed to assume the guise of a small mammal and able to fit inside a pipe or bamboo tube, but normally only its keeper or user ( kitsune-tsukai) was able to see it. The user, through the power of the kuda, was believed capable of divulging a person's past or foretelling his future; this soothsayer was also capable of performing curses, bringing calamity upon targets. In regions where the superstition was held, a prospering household could be accused of achieving its prosperity because it was a house possessed by the spirit ( kuda-tsuki). The fox (and its analogues by other names) was said to multiply in number each time a marriage took place, following the bride to her place of marriage, thus disseminating into more households.
The osaki fox is also identified as an equivalent spirit employed by the "fox-user" ( kitsune tsukai).
According to one summarization, the term クダ狐 is prevalent in the Central region (Chūbu region), whereas the appellation izuna tends to be used in north-central Nagano and the northeast (Tōhoku), and osaki in the northern Kantō region.
The kuda-gitsune also occurred in the folk-belief of more southerly portions of the Central Region known as the Tōkai subregion, namely Mikawa Province (in present-day Aichi Prefecture) and Tōtomi Provinces (present-day Shizuoka Prefecture). It also forms part of the folklore in the southern Kantō region, Tōhoku region, and elsewhere. There are no legends of kuda-gitsune in Kantō besides the Chiba Prefecture and Kanagawa Prefecture, and this is said to be because Kantō is the domain of the osaki fox tradition.
Despite the localizations above, the ability of using the kanko/ kudagitsune is purportedly obtained by trained yamabushi (the ascetics of shugendō) at their holiest sites, either Mount Kinpu or Mount Ōmine (in present-day Nara Prefecture), according to who wrote the essay Zen'an zuihitsu.
As for its size, the Edo Period essay collection (1841) by Matsura Seizan has an entry on the kuda-gitsune, including an illustration (above) of the fox said to have been brought from a bucolic area in Osaka and exhibited in Edo in the year Bunsei 5 (1822), reporting the full length of the specimen (excluding the tail) at . Yanagita Kunio was of the opinion however that this size represented the largest of this kind, as smaller ones were about the size of a polecat ( itachi, <30 cm?).
Other sources have described the smallness of the kuda-gitsune by comparing it to the size of a house mouse, or the size of a matchbox.
The 想山著聞奇集 (1850) also provided visual illustration of a specific anecdotal example, which reportedly had a catlike face, otter-like body, gray-colored fur, and was about the size of a squirrel, with a thick tail.
And according to 's essay collection 善庵随筆 (pub. 1850), the kanko/ kuda-gitsune is about the size of a weasel ( itachi) with vertical eyes, but otherwise the same as a feral rat (or perhaps rather the yako), except its thick fur is not all matted/dissheveled.
The izuna is considered by some believers to be a servant of the deity called the or Īzuna gongen, typically represented as a tengu standing on a white fox. Therefore, the sorcerer ( izuna-tsukai) sometimes may be a worshipper of this particular gongen deity, however, that is not always the case.
Such a family, though they main amass wealth is seen to have achieved it by striking fear among others by its fox-using, and marriage with a fox-user household was shunned by the rest. The kuda-gitsune were allegedly commanded by its master to raid other families' homes and steal their possessions, and in this way the master's family grows wealthy―or at least in the beginning. Since the kuda-gitsune multiplies until their number grows to 75, the large pack of foxes eat away at the family's wealth, bringing about their downfall.
As for the foxes quickly multiplying to 75, it is also said that every time a bride from a kuda or osaki-haunted household goes off to be married, she is said to bring 75 of the kuda minions along with her into the new household. This piece of folklore was perhaps invented as a convenient explanation as to why so many families came to be accused of being fox-owners, as time went by.
The kuda-tsuki is spiritual possession much like the hebi-tsuki (serpent-possession), inugami-tsuki (hound deity), or even tanuki-tsuki (racoon dog) of other communities, and ultimately derive from Snake worship, according to geography and history scholar Shōjirō Kobayashi.
Izuna
Kitsune-tsuki
Explanatory notes
External links
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