is not a specific sword, but a common noun for any sword of this length. In Japanese mythology, numerous deities own a sword of this kind. Some examples of well-known Totsuka-no-Tsurugi:
is not a specific sword, but a common noun for any sword of this length. In Japanese mythology, numerous deities own a sword of this kind. Some examples of well-known Totsuka-no-Tsurugi: The totsuka sword used by Izanagi to kill his offspring Kagu-tsuchi. This one is also named . The totsuka sword used in the oath between Amaterasu and Susanoo. Amaterasu received this sword from Susanoo, snapped it to three pieces, and created the Three Munakata Goddesses from its debris. This sword was not named. Another totsuka sword in Susanoo's possession, which he used to slay Orochi. This sword is also named , , or . The sword is enshrined as the shintai of Isonokami Shrine. The totsuka sword wielded by Takemikazuchi in the quelling of the Middle Country. This sword is known as , and is the main enshrined dedication in Isonokami Shrine.
== Susanoo legend == After the sword's owner, Susanoo, was banished from heaven by the reason of killing one of Amaterasu's attendants and destroying her rice fields, he descended to the Province of Izumo where he met Ashinazuchi, an elderly man who told him that the Yamata no Orochi ("Eight-Branched Serpent"), who had consumed seven of his eight daughters, was coming soon to eat the last one: Kushinada-hime.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).