no Miyakko, saying:—"Hearing that the Ministers have designs against me, I am keeping out of the way." Mŭmako no Oho-omi accordingly sent Hashi no Yajima no Muraji to the place where Ohotomo no Hirafu no Muraji was, and told him all that the Ohomuraji had said. Hirafu no Muraji, therefore, took in his hand his bow and arrows and his leathern shield and went to the house at Tsukikuma [the Oho-omi's house], where he remained guarding the Oho-omi, and did not leave him by night or by day.
The Emperor's sores became worse and worse, and when the end was approaching, Tasuna of the Kuratsukuri[1] Be [son of Shiba Tattō] came forward and addressed him, saying:—"Thy servant, on behalf of the Emperor, will renounce the world and exercise religion. Moreover, he will make an image of Buddha sixteen feet high, and a Temple." The Emperor was deeply moved. This is the 16-foot wooden image of Buddha which with its attendant Bosatsu[2] now stands in the Temple of Sakata at Minabuchi.
9th day. The Emperor died in the Great Hall.
Autumn, 7th month, 21st day. He was buried in the Misasagi above the pond of Ihare.[3]
- ↑ Saddle-makers.
- ↑ i.e. Boddhisattwa. The two Bosatsu here alluded to are probably Ji-zō Bosatsu (Kshidi-garbha) and Monju Bosatsu, the Sanskrit Mañdjus'rî. Vide Eitel, sub voce. Also vide "Satow's Handbook," 2nd ed. introduction, p. 87.
- ↑ Afterwards re-interred at Shinaga in Kahachi.
facts, in an essay on Lacquer in the "Catalogue of Japanese Lacquer and Metal Work in the Burlington Fine Arts Club, 1894."
The Urushibe (or Nuribe) no Muraji (a higher rank than Miyakko) were promoted to be Urushibe no Sukune in 685.
An ancient note to the "Kiujiki," III. 16, traces the descent of the Urushibe no Muraji from a deity.