Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]
Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]

Tsuchikorobi - [Yokai]

Regular price
$8.00
Sale price
$8.00
Tax included.

Tsuchikorobi - 土転び(つちころび) aka "Tumbling earth, mallet” or "Landslide"

• About this yokai: a mallet or pestle-shaped, Dirt-Clod-dwelling Yokai reportedly met at night in forested mountain paths of the central, Chubu region, Tottori, & other mountainous regions across Japan. It has a fuzzy complection appearing similar to a tumbling Hay-Bail or a Marimo (Mossball) most often, it takes the form of a ball of upturned soil. It is commonly depicted with a single glowing red eye, a snake-like, arm or elephant trunk, which it uses to cling onto travellers. 
 Despite its somewhat frightening appearance, its said to actually be a gentle yokai it rolls over lost hikers, helping them find their way back to the path. - if you encounter it, and you stay still and let yourself be grabbed, it will roll past you & show you the way home. If you run away from it & panic, You will trip and soon find that you’ve become lost. - Perhaps most aptly put? - its a personification of landslides.

•History:  At its roots & in a nutshell: this yokai has a bit of a muddy history, it seems to be a regional variant or a relative to the Nozuchi; A thick, poisonous snake-like earth spirit that rolls down the hillsides to bite people. Because of this, tsuchikorobi is quite often depicted as a 'barrel bodied snake' , a literal mallet-turned-snake Tsukumogami, or as sturdier tsuchinoko.

[Yokotsuchi - Old straw/cloth mallets, supposedly the inspiration for these yokai.]

Hammers aside, it’s also worth note is that there are quite a few other yokai across Japan that do basically the same thing as tsuchikorobi does, a few similar 'rolling' yokai include but are not limited to: Tenkorobashi (a large bouncing-ball shaped yokai that bashes into people on the road on rainy nights) Yakan-Korogashi (the startling sound of an approaching, rolling tea kettle which surprises people in the forests.) Tsurube Otoshi (a man-eating head which falls out of trees, crushes or rolls after you.) there are also a few regional tanuki pranks that follow this pattern as well!

• Modern, Popculture: In the early 70's Tsuchikorobi became popularized by Shigeru Mizuki's works (such as Gegege No Kitaro & other adjacent projects.) - Mizuki was technically the first to illustrate this one. (Along with many others, to name a couple, Aburasumashi and Konakijiji) - like them, the creature itself is derived from the earlier folktales and various regional legends, particularly from tottori prefecture where it was described as a rolling mallet/snake.

[from Shigeru Mizukis Yokai Encyclopedia, 1991]

[Tsuchikorobi from the opening of Yokai 100 monsters [1968] – Shigeru Mizuki was also on staff as a consultant for the movie.]

...of course there have been dozens of other popculture appearances of this one since, notably it appears in the Persona/SMT series where they call it nozuchi instead (confusing.) - if you wanted one more pop culture factoid: I'll end this saying that "Tsuchikorobi-like" landslide legends likely inspired "Graveler" from the Pokemon series; considering that it likes to tumble over people like a boulder in the mountains...

Art sticker by samkalensky part of my yokai collection of stickers check my shop and support me for many more

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)