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It was a popular theme in Japanese visual art. An early example is the famous 16-century [[Emakimono|handscroll]] ''Hyakki Yakō Zu'' (百鬼夜行図, with ''zu'' meaning "picture"), attributed to [[Tosa Mitsunobu]], in the Shinju-an of [[Daitoku-ji]], [[Kyoto]]. Notable works of this motif include those by [[Toriyama Sekien]] and [[Utagawa Yoshiiku]]. These works are more often humourous than frightening.
It was a popular theme in Japanese visual art. An early example is the famous 16-century [[Emakimono|handscroll]] ''Hyakki Yakō Zu'' (百鬼夜行図, with ''zu'' meaning "picture"), attributed to [[Tosa Mitsunobu]], in the Shinju-an of [[Daitoku-ji]], [[Kyoto]]. Notable works of this motif include those by [[Toriyama Sekien]] and [[Utagawa Yoshiiku]]. These works are more often humourous than frightening.

==See also==
*[[Toriyama Sekien]]


{{Japan-myth-stub}}
{{Japan-myth-stub}}

Revision as of 07:16, 12 October 2006

"Hyakki Yakō" by Kawanabe Kyōsai, collected in British Museum

Hyakki Yakō (百鬼夜行; lit. "Night Parade of One Hundred Demons") was a Japanese folk belief. The belief holds that every year yōkai, the Japanese supernatural beings, will take to the streets during summer nights. Anyone who comes across the procession will die, unless protected by some Buddhist sutra. The game Hyaku Monogatari was based on the folklore.

It was a popular theme in Japanese visual art. An early example is the famous 16-century handscroll Hyakki Yakō Zu (百鬼夜行図, with zu meaning "picture"), attributed to Tosa Mitsunobu, in the Shinju-an of Daitoku-ji, Kyoto. Notable works of this motif include those by Toriyama Sekien and Utagawa Yoshiiku. These works are more often humourous than frightening.