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My Lord Bag of RiceFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dragon Princess and Fujiwara no Hidesato, Utagawa Kuniyoshi 1845.
Fujiwara no Hidesato shooting the giant centipede, Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 1890.
My Lord Bag of Rice or Japanese Tawara Tōda 俵藤太 "Rice-bag Tōda" is a fairy tale about a hero who kills the giant centipede Seta to help a Japanese dragon princess, and is rewarded in her underwater Ryūgū-jō 龍宮城 "dragon palace castle". The 1711 Honchō kwaidan koji 本朝怪談故事 contains the best-known version of this Japanese myth about the warrior Fujiwara no Hidesato. There is a Shinto shrine near the Seta Bridge at Lake Biwa where people worship Tawara Tōda 俵藤太 "Rice-bag Tōda" (a pun between tawara "straw rice-bag; straw barrel" and the Japanese name Tawara 田原).
Hidesato subsequently donated this bell to Mii-dera temple at Mount Hiei but it was stolen by a priest from rival Enryaku-ji temple. He threw it into a valley after it spoke to him, and when the cracked bell was returned to Mii-dera, a small snake (the dragon) used its tail to repair the damage. The 14th-century Taiheiki records an earlier version of this legend about Hidesato, set during the Genpei War, but instead of the dragon turning into a beautiful woman, it transforms into a "strange small man" – the Dragon King himself. This Lord Bag of Rice fable is included in Japanese Fairy Tales by Yei Theodora Ozaki[2] and A Book of Dragons by Ruth Manning-Sanders. References
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