- Aug 13, 2025
- 00:03:21
Research Reels: Planets and the Weekdays in the Japanese Buddhist Imagination: Examining the Kuyō hiryaku 九曜秘暦 (Secret Calendar of the Nine Planets)
"Now, contrary to what we might expect, I argue that for Buddhists at least the planets were less wandering stars above and more deities that presided over the passage of time."
Postdoctoral Scholar Jeffrey Kotyk presents his recent work on a Japanese scroll from 1125, displaying planetary deities in both humanoid and zoomorphic form. The scroll, he argues, demonstrates "the compartmentalization of the pantheons in medieval Japan."
Publication
- Kotyk, Jeffrey. "Planets and the Weekdays in the Japanese Buddhist Imagination: Examining the Kuyō hiryaku 九曜秘暦 (Secret Calendar of the Nine Planets)." In Imagining the Heavens Across Eurasia from Antiquity to Early Modernity, edited by Rana Brentjes, Sonja Brentjes, and Stamatina Mastorakou, 235–248. Milan: Mimesis International, 2024. https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000F-B6EC-A.
Copyrights
Produced by the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
Image: The Harry G. C. Packard Collection of Asian Art, Gift of Harry G. C. Packard, and Purchase, Fletcher, Rogers, Harris Brisbane Dick, and Louis V. Bell Funds, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, and The Annenberg Fund Inc. Gift, 1975.
Music: Blue Dot Sessions - Vessel One (CC BY-NC 4.0)