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29 BC / Japan

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The courtiers represented to the emperor as follows: “In the village of Taima there is a valiant man called Kuyehaya of Taima. He is of great bodily strength, so that he can break horns and straighten out hooks. He is always saying to the people, ‘You may search the four quarters, but where is there one to compare with me in strength? Oh, that I could meet with a man with whom to have a trial of strength, regardless of life or death.’”

The emperor hearing this, proclaimed to his ministers, saying, “We hear that Kuyehaya of Taima is the champion of the empire. Might there be anyone to compare with him?”

One of the ministers came forward and said, “Thy servant hears that in the land of Idzumo there is a man named Nomi no Sukune. It is desirable that you send for him, by way of trial, and match him with Kuyehaya.”

That same day the emperor sent Nagaochi to summon Nomi no Sukune. Thereupon Nomi no Sukune came from Idzumo, and straightaway he and Taima no Kuyehaya were made to wrestle together. The two men stood opposite to one another. Each raised his foot and kicked at the other, when Nomi no Sukune broke with a kick the ribs of Kuyehaya and also kicked and broke his loins and thus killed him. Therefore the land of Taima no Kuyehaya was seized, and was all given to Nomi no Sukune. This was the cause why there is in that village a place called Koshi-ore-da, i.e., the field of the broken loins.

Image: Sumo wrestling, c. 1900. NYPL Digital Collection.

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Sports & Games
About the Text

From the Nihongi. Sometimes translated as The Chronicles of Japan, the work is the second-oldest book of classical Japanese literature, describing the country’s history from its mythic beginnings to around the year 720. This passage speaks to the origins of Sumo wrestling.

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