Chigo

From BoyWiki
Revision as of 07:10, 12 February 2020 by Dandelion (talk | contribs) (Modified the filename and caption of an image)
File:Tsukioka Settei - Buddhist monk having anal intercourse with boy while masturbating him. Two-page Japanese woodblock-printed illustration from Onna Teikin Gejo Bunko, circa 1768.png
Buddhist monk having anal intercourse with boy while masturbating him. Two-page Japanese woodblock-printed illustration by Tsukioka Settei, from Womanly Virtue and a Library on the Private Parts (女貞訓下所文庫 Onna Teikin Gejo Bunko, circa 1768).

In premodern Japan, a chigo (稚児) was a boy novice of about seven to fourteen years of age in training at a Buddhist monastery.

This word can have a second meaning derived from the first: it denotes a young boy loved by a monk in the context of a relationship that was both initiatory, emotional and very often sexual.

Vocabulary

The word chigo稚児(approximate pronunciation: /tʃi.go/) consists of two characters:

  • chi = child
  • ko = child, boy

Literature

A particular genre is chigo monogatari, which tells a love story between a monk and a novice. For example in Aki no yo nagamonogatari 秋夜長物語 (Long Story for an Autumn Night), the anonymous author recounts the linking Keikai and young Umewaka.

Saying

A popular saying clearly expressed the priority given by the monks to their young companions:

Ichi chigo nor Sanno.

First the chigo then the god of the mountain. [[[1]]]

  • Tôzô Suzuki, Koji Kitowaza Jiten, Tokyodo Shuppan, 1956, p. 59 (trans. BoyWiki)

See as well

Notes and references

  1. Japanese transcript and English translation by Margaret H. Childs in " Chigo Monogatari, love stories or Buddhist sermons? "p. 1. [[Downloadable article)]]