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九鬼神傳天地言文七期宇宙論 Kuki Shinden Tenchi Genmon Shichiki Uchū-ron

九鬼神傳天地言文七期宇宙論 Kuki Shinden Tenchi Genmon Shichiki Uchū-ron (Kuki Tradition: Words of Heaven and Earth – Seven-Era Cosmology Treatise) I asked Grok to summarise the Kuki Documents seven eras.

Kuki Divine Transmission: Words of Heaven and Earth – Kuki Documents seven eras

The Kuki Documents (九鬼文書 Kuki Bunsho) present one of the most expansive and intriguing visions in Japanese esoteric tradition: a seven-era cosmic history that stretches from pre-creation preparation to modern and future fulfillment. Preserved through the alleged secret transmissions of the 九鬼 Kuki family—descendants of the ancient 中臣 Nakatomi (Nakatomi clan)—these documents claim to reveal a divine chronology far older and more detailed than the official accounts found in the 古事記 Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters, 712 CE) and 日本書紀 Nihon Shoki (Chronicles of Japan, 720 CE).

While mainstream Japanese mythology begins with the emergence of heaven and earth and quickly progresses to the creation of the islands by 伊弉諾 Izanagi (Male Who Invites) and 伊弉冉 Izanami (Female Who Invites), the Kuki framework uses vast symbolic timescales built around 世 yo/se (reign/era) and 代 dai (generation). Large numbers incorporating 万 yorozu (myriad) express immense antiquity rather than precise chronology, creating a profound sense of cosmic depth. The narrative centers 出雲 Izumo (Izumo) as the primordial power, reinterprets major deities as successive emperors, and envisions a global divine kingship.

This article outlines the seven broad eras as described in 三浦一郎 Miura Ichirō’s 九鬼文書の研究 Kuki Bunsho no Kenkyū (Research on the Kuki Documents), drawing from core texts such as 神史略 Shinshi Ryaku (Outline of Divine History), 神代系譜 Jindai Keifu (Genealogy of the Age of the Gods), and 天地言文 Tenchi Genmon (Words of Heaven and Earth).

1. Era of Creation Preparation (造化準備時代 – Zōka Junbi Jidai)

The absolute beginning unfolds before any manifest universe. Dominated by the root deity 母止津和太良世乃大神 Mototsu Watarase no Ōkami (Primordial Crossing-Well-World Great Deity), this phase assembles the foundational principles of existence: the seeds of yin-yang duality, potential forms, and the blueprint for all reality.

It spans 23 世 (23 reigns/eras), each containing multiple generations (代) passed through name-inheritance (襲名 shūmei), over a symbolic period of approximately 23,000 years. The Kuki Documents detail this as an extended lineage starting with 母止津和太良世乃大神 Mototsu Watarase no Ōkami (Primordial Crossing-Well-World Great Deity) and progressing through successive divine entities that lay the invisible groundwork. No galaxies, stars, or earth yet exist; everything remains in latent potential. This preparatory stage establishes the cosmic framework, with exhaustive genealogies tracing the unfolding of primordial order.

Readers familiar with modern cosmology may find an intriguing parallel here to the Big Bang theory, which describes the universe emerging from an infinitely dense, hot singularity around 13.8 billion years ago. In the Kuki tradition, this era evokes a similar “pre-manifest” state—pure potential before expansion and structure—though on a vastly different symbolic scale. The ~23,000-year figure (likely not literal but derived from myriad-based symbolism) also echoes ancient astronomical concepts like Earth’s axial precession cycle (~25,772 years in modern measurements), a “wobble” that ancient observers noted as a fundamental cosmic rhythm.

2. Era of Creation / Formation (造化時代 – Zōka Jidai)

The universe takes shape. Primordial light deities such as 天津日身光 Amatsu Mihikari (Heavenly Sun Body Light) emerge, followed by the classic creator triad—天津御中主神 Amenominakanushi (Heavenly Sovereign of the Central Heaven), 高御産巣日神 Takamimusubi (High Producing Wondrous Deity), and 神産巣日神 Kamimusubi (Divine Producing Wondrous Deity)—and the establishment of yin-yang harmony.

This era encompasses 13 世 (13 reigns/eras), with each reign often containing multiple generations (up to 24 代 in some lineages), totaling around 312 generations over a symbolic duration of roughly 50,000 years. The focus lies on cosmic architecture: the formation of galaxies, the ignition of stars, the separation of heaven and earth, and the unfolding of the heavenly generations 天神七代 Tenshin Nanayo (Seven Generations of the Heavenly Gods). Creation here is portrayed as a prolonged, multi-layered process rather than a single swift act.

The Kuki Documents expand this phase far beyond the compact sequence found in the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, where the heavenly generations appear as only seven brief divine pairs before 伊弉諾 Izanagi (Male Who Invites) and 伊弉冉 Izanami (Female Who Invites). By embedding 天神七代 Tenshin Nanayo (Seven Generations of the Heavenly Gods) within a vastly longer generational lineage, the tradition emphasizes a gradual, deliberate unfolding of cosmic order across immense symbolic time.

3. Era of Divine Emperors Repairing and Solidifying Creation (修理固成の神皇時代 – Shūri Kosei no Shin’ō Jidai)

With the cosmos now formed, divine rulers turn to the task of repairing and stabilizing it. This era begins with 天津御中主神 Amenominakanushi (Heavenly Sovereign of the Central Heaven) as the first heavenly emperor and continues through 伊弉諾 Izanagi (Male Who Invites).

It comprises 12 世 (12 reigns/eras), encompassing approximately 144 generations (代) over a symbolic duration of around 20,000 years. The primary focus is on repairing any imbalances in the newly created heaven-earth structure, solidifying yin-yang harmony, and establishing the foundational principles of divine governance across the ordered cosmos.

In this phase, 伊弉諾 Izanagi (Male Who Invites) and 伊弉冉 Izanami (Female Who Invites) appear as key stabilizers rather than the primary originators of the Japanese islands. The famous spear-churning episode for land-birth (国産み kuniumi), so central in the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, is not emphasized as the defining act here. Instead, the Kuki Documents present Izanagi and Izanami within a much broader sequence of divine repair and consolidation, extending their role across long chains of generational inheritance.

This approach reflects the tradition’s overall expansion: what mainstream chronicles treat as a relatively swift transition from primordial creation to island formation is reframed as part of an ongoing, deliberate process of cosmic refinement that spans immense symbolic time.

4. Era of Divine Emperors Ruling All Nations (万国統治神皇時代 – Bankoku Tōchi Shin’ō Jidai)

This era represents the golden age of universal divine kingship, where the gods exercise direct rule over the entire world. 須佐之男命 Susanoo (Swift-Impetuous Male Deity) and 大国主命 Ōkuninushi (Great Land Master) are elevated to the status of world kings, with 出雲 Izumo (Izumo) established as the central seat of power.

The period spans 7 世 (7 reigns/eras), encompassing roughly 49 generations (代) over a symbolic duration of approximately 8,000 years. 天照大御神 Amaterasu Ōmikami (Great Heaven-Illuminating Deity), 月読命 Tsukuyomi no Mikoto (Moon-Reading Deity), and 須佐之男命 Susanoo (Swift-Impetuous Male Deity) are reinterpreted as three successive emperors of the Izumo line rather than siblings born from 伊弉諾 Izanagi (Male Who Invites).

Divine governance extends across continents and nations, encompassing what the documents describe as a truly global dominion. The era culminates in the famous 国譲り kuniyuzuri (Nation-Yielding or Transfer of the Land), a pivotal transition that preserves the heavenly legitimacy of the Izumo lineage even as authority shifts toward the emerging Yamato line.

In contrast to the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, which portray 須佐之男命 Susanoo (Swift-Impetuous Male Deity) primarily as a disruptive figure exiled from the heavenly realm, the Kuki tradition places him at the heart of a world-spanning imperial order. This reframing underscores the Izumo-centric cosmology of the documents, presenting the age as one of harmonious, far-reaching divine rule rather than regional or Japan-focused mythology.

5. Era of the Ugayafukiaezu Dynasty (ウガヤフキアエズ王朝時代 – Ugayafukiaezu Ōchō Jidai)

This transitional period, often described as a “floating reed” or “reed-floating” age, bridges the vast era of universal divine kingship and the more recognizable human historical timeline. It is centered on 鸕鶴草葺不合尊 Ugayafukiaezu no Mikoto (Reed-Floating Young Prince Who Did Not Fully Cover the Roof).

The era consists of a single overarching 世 (reign/era) that contains 73 generations (代), spanning a symbolic duration of roughly 1,200 years. Authority during this phase is decentralized and fluid—divine and proto-human figures move through a period of wandering, less structured rule, and gradual consolidation of lineage continuity.

鸕鶴草葺不合尊 Ugayafukiaezu no Mikoto (Reed-Floating Young Prince Who Did Not Fully Cover the Roof) serves as the pivotal figure, acting as the father of 神武天皇 Jinmu Tennō (Emperor Jimmu), the first human emperor in the official chronicles. In the Kuki tradition, this dynasty maintains unbroken descent from the preceding divine world-kings while preparing the ground for the shift toward earthly imperial succession.

Unlike the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, which treat the interval between the gods’ age and Emperor Jimmu as relatively brief and mythically condensed, the Kuki Documents insert this extended generational layer. The 73 generations emphasize persistence of divine bloodline and subtle transmission of authority, even as centralized cosmic rule gives way to more localized or migratory governance.

This “floating” quality—evoking reeds adrift on water—symbolizes a liminal phase: the divine order is no longer all-encompassing, yet full human historical structure has not yet solidified. It functions as the crucial link preserving the legitimacy of the Izumo-Yamato dual lineage into the subsequent era.

6. Era from Emperor Jimmu Onward (神武天皇以降の時代 – Jinmu Tennō Ikō no Jidai)

This era marks the transition into what is conventionally regarded as human history, beginning with 神武天皇 Jinmu Tennō (Emperor Jimmu), traditionally dated to his enthronement on February 11, 660 BCE and recognized in official chronicles as the first emperor of Japan.

The defining feature of this period, according to the Kuki Documents, is the establishment of 両統迭立 ryōtō tetchitsu (dual alternating succession or two-line alternation) between the 大和 Yamato (Yamato) and 出雲 Izumo (Izumo) royal lines. 神武天皇 Jinmu Tennō (Emperor Jimmu) subdues and incorporates the Izumo lineage—descended from 大物主神 Ōmononushi no Kami (Great Deity Who Possesses the Land)—rather than completely supplanting it. This integration preserves the heavenly legitimacy of the Izumo line while allowing Yamato to assume primary earthly rule.

The era extends through all subsequent recorded Japanese history, encompassing the reigns of the imperial line as documented in the Kojiki, Nihon Shoki, and later annals. However, the Kuki tradition reframes these events as a continuation of the ancient divine kingship rather than a clean break from the Age of the Gods. The 中臣 Nakatomi (Nakatomi clan) — and later the 九鬼 Kuki (Kuki family) as their direct descendants — are positioned as the hereditary guardians of secret transmissions, including imperial rituals, spiritual techniques, martial arts knowledge, and hidden genealogical records.

Key elements emphasized in this phase include:

  • Ongoing protection and transmission of the divine essence through the dual-line system.
  • The role of the Nakatomi/Kuki lineage in managing palace rituals (宮中祭祀 kyūchū saishi) and preserving esoteric knowledge (秘伝 hiden) that mainstream chronicles omit or obscure.
  • A view of Japanese history not as a linear progression from myth to history, but as the earthly expression of the primordial Izumo-Yamato cosmic order established in earlier eras.

As of January 2026, this unbroken lineage (万世一系 bansei ikkei) remains central to Japan’s official tradition. The current emperor is 徳仁 Naruhito (Naruhito Tennō), recognized as the 126th emperor, counted from 神武天皇 Jinmu Tennō (Emperor Jimmu) as the first. On February 11, 2026 — National Foundation Day (建国記念の日 Kenkoku Kinen no Hi) — Japan will enter the 2686th year since the legendary founding by Emperor Jimmu in 660 BCE. This date, celebrated annually with flag-raising ceremonies, shrine visits, and quiet reflections on national origins, underscores the enduring symbolic continuity of the imperial institution in the Kuki tradition’s view.

In this way, the Kuki Documents present the entire historical period—from Jimmu through medieval, early modern, and into contemporary times—as the unfolding of a single, unbroken divine mandate, with the imperial line embodying the legacy of the world-ruling gods of the previous eras.

7. Extension into Modern and Future Times (現代・未来への延長 – Gendai / Mirai e no Encho)

This phase is described as the ongoing extension and culmination of the divine chronology into the present era and what lies ahead. It is not numbered as a separate “世” (reign/era) with its own generations or successions like the previous periods, but presented as the living realization of the preparatory work across the preceding six eras.

The documents state that the primordial cosmic order — established through the vast lineages of creation, repair, global divine kingship, and dual Izumo-Yamato succession — continues to unfold in the modern world and will reach its ultimate purpose in the future. This involves:

  • The restoration of true divine harmony and spiritual order on earth.
  • The reawakening and full manifestation of the hidden transmissions preserved by the 中臣 Nakatomi (Nakatomi) and 九鬼 Kuki (Kuki family) lineages, including secret rituals, talismans (such as those for ghost-gate protection), and spiritual techniques.
  • A unification or alignment of the world under principles rooted in the ancient Japanese divine centrality and the legitimacy of the imperial line as the earthly expression of heavenly rule.
  • The resolution of imbalances between spiritual authority and material forces, leading to a renewed cosmic state where the divine mandate is fulfilled.

The texts imply that the modern age serves as the transitional ground for this restoration, with the ongoing imperial succession embodying the legacy of the world-ruling gods from earlier eras. Future events are framed as the natural outcome of the long preparatory process: a return to primordial harmony, the completion of the divine plan, and the realization of universal spiritual order. No specific mechanisms, timelines, or cataclysmic sequences are detailed; the emphasis remains on the inevitable fulfillment of the ancient blueprint through spiritual renewal.

Conclusion of Kuki Documents seven eras

The Kuki Documents (九鬼文書, Kuki Bunsho), as interpreted in Miura Ichirō’s research, present a vast cosmic narrative that culminates in the modern and future extension of the divine plan. While the earlier eras focus on primordial preparation, formation, stabilization, global divine rule, transitional bridging, and the historical unfolding from 神武天皇 Jinmu Tennō (Emperor Jimmu) onward, the final phase carries forward into contemporary Japan and anticipates a restorative fulfillment.

This living continuation ties the ancient mythology directly to the present imperial institution. According to official Japanese tradition (maintained by the Imperial Household Agency), the current emperor is 徳仁 Naruhito (Naruhito Tennō), who acceded to the throne on May 1, 2019, following the abdication of his father, 明仁 Akihito (Emperor Emeritus Akihito). Naruhito is recognized as the 126th emperor in the unbroken lineage (万世一系 bansei ikkei), counted from the legendary 神武天皇 Jinmu Tennō (Emperor Jimmu) as the first.

Emperor Jimmu’s enthronement is traditionally dated to February 11, 660 BCE (converted to the Gregorian calendar from ancient chronicles like the 日本書紀 Nihon Shoki). Japan commemorates this as National Foundation Day (建国記念の日 Kenkoku Kinen no Hi), a public holiday observed every year on February 11. In 2026, this means Japan will celebrate National Foundation Day on Wednesday, February 11 — a day off for most people, with government offices, schools, and many businesses closed. Observances typically include flag-raising ceremonies, quiet family reflections, shrine visits (especially at Kashihara Shrine in Nara, traditionally associated with Jimmu’s site), and some local events or parades. The holiday emphasizes national origins, unity, and patriotism in a subdued, reflective manner rather than large-scale festivities.

Footnote: Kuki Documents seven eras

The original Kuki Documents (九鬼文書) — the ancient scrolls preserved by the Kuki family — were destroyed in the wartime firebombings of 1945 (昭和20年), during the Allied air raids on Tokyo and other cities. Miura Ichirō had accessed and excerpted key portions in the early 1940s (around 1940–1941), making his book the primary surviving source of direct quotes from texts like Shinshi Ryaku, Jindai Keifu, and Tenchi Genmon.

Before the originals were lost, 高松寿嗣 Takamatsu Toshitsugu (1889–1972) — a prominent martial arts master in the Kukishin-ryū lineage — had been granted access to the documents by Kuki Takaharu. Takamatsu made his own copies and notes during this period.

After the 1945 destruction, Takamatsu recopied the contents from his pre-existing copies (rather than purely from memory), incorporating additional notes and cross-references with other Kukishin-related documents he already possessed from the Ishitani line. In 1947 (some sources cite 1949), he returned a complete reconstructed set of these scrolls to the Kuki family, ensuring the tradition’s survival in secondary form.

This chain — Miura’s pre-war transcription, the 1945 burning, and Takamatsu’s postwar restoration — explains why the Kuki Documents today exist only through excerpts, copies, and reconstructions.


三浦一郎 Miura Ichirō

三浦一郎 Miura Ichirō (1914 – 2006 ) was a Japanese scholar of Western history and essayist. He was a former professor at Ibaraki University and a professor emeritus at Sophia University.

After attending the elementary school attached to Toshima Normal School in Tokyo and the former Musashino High School , he graduated from the Department of Western History at the University of Tokyo .

After the war , he worked as a teacher at the new Seikei High School , then became an assistant professor at Ibaraki University , a professor at the same university in 1966 , a professor at Sophia University in 1970, a special professor at the same university in 1980, an

九鬼文書の研究 Kuki Bunsho no Kenkyū by 三浦一郎 Miura Ichirō.

Publisher ‏ : ‎ 八幡書店
Publication date ‏ : ‎ 1 February 1999

ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 4893502018
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-4893502018