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[[Image:SekienWanyudo.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Artist's depiction of Wanyudo, circa 1779]]
[[Image:SekienWanyudo.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Artist's depiction of Wanyudo, circa 1779]]
'''Wanyūdō' is a yokai h'' ({{lang-ja|輪入道|links=no} in World Mytho2016|isbn = 978-1-4766-6355-5|location = Jefferson, North Carolina|pages = 121–2}}</ref> is a figure in [[Japanese mythology]], a relatively well-known [[yōkai]] in the folklore of Japan; earliest reports of Wanyūdō date back to the [[Heian period]].
'''Wanyūdō' is a dude yokai' ({{lang-ja|輪入道|links=no} in World Mytho2016|isbn = 978-1-4766-6355-5|location = Jefferson, North Carolina|pages = 121–2}} a relatively well-known [[yōkai]] in the folklore of Japan; earliest reports of Wanyūdō date back to the [[Heian period]].


==Description==
==Description==

Revision as of 18:17, 4 September 2022

Artist's depiction of Wanyudo, circa 1779

Wanyūdō' is a dude yokai' (Japanese: 輪入道 a relatively well-known yōkai in the folklore of Japan; earliest reports of Wanyūdō date back to the Heian period.

Description

Wanyūdō takes the form of a burning oxcart wheel bearing the tormented face of a man. Various folklore purports him as the condemned soul of a tyrannical daimyō who, in life, was known for having his victims drawn on the back of an oxcart. He is said to guard the gates of Hell, and to wander back and forth along the road between this world and the underworld, scaring townsfolk as he passes and stealing the souls of anyone who gets too close in order to bring them to Hell with him.

Legends

One of the most famous legends comes from Kyoto, Japan. As Wanyudo rolled through the town, a woman peeked out her window at him. Wanyudo told her "Instead of looking at me, have a look at your own child!"

She looked down at her baby to find him lying on the floor in a pool of blood with his legs missing.

When she looked back outside at the demon, she saw her baby's legs in his mouth as he ate them.[1]

Modern appearances

Video games

Television and film

See also

References

  1. ^ "Wa nyūdō". Yokai.

External links