Detail of Emperor Jinmu - Stories from "Nihonki" (Chronicles of Japan), for article on Emperor Jimmu legend

Japan’s founding legend of Jimmu shapes the world’s oldest imperial line

Long before the word “Japan” existed in any language, a myth took shape that would hold a civilization together for more than two millennia. At its center stood a figure named Jimmu — warrior, wanderer, and, according to the ancient chronicles, the first emperor. Whether or not he ever lived, the legend of Emperor Jimmu became one of the most durable founding stories in human history, anchoring a royal institution that continues to this day.

What the chronicles record

  • Emperor Jimmu legend: Two of Japan’s oldest written records — the Kojiki (compiled 712 C.E.) and the Nihon Shoki (720 C.E.) — name Jimmu as Japan’s first ruler, placing the start of his reign at 660 B.C.E. according to the traditional calendar.
  • Mythological descent: According to Shinto tradition, Jimmu was a direct descendant of Amaterasu, the sun goddess, making the imperial family’s claim to rule inseparable from the divine ordering of the cosmos.
  • Historical consensus: Modern historians and archaeologists do not treat Jimmu as a documented historical person; the Yamato state — the political ancestor of Japan’s imperial system — is generally dated to around the 3rd or 4th century C.E., centuries after the legendary date.

A myth that does real work

The story itself is vivid. Jimmu, born in the southern island of Kyūshū, leads his people eastward through the Seto Inland Sea. His older brother falls in battle. Jimmu pivots, landing on the far side of the Kii Peninsula to fight with the sun at his back rather than in his eyes — a tactician even in legend. A three-legged crow called Yatagarasu guides the company through the mountains of Kumano toward Yamato, the heartland of what would become Japan.

There, Jimmu defeats his rivals, receives the allegiance of a rival claimant who recognizes his legitimacy, and ascends to the throne.

It reads like poetry. It was also politically indispensable. For centuries, Japanese emperors derived their authority not from conquest alone, or from bureaucratic appointment, but from this unbroken mythological lineage. That lineage gave the imperial institution a stability almost without parallel in world history. Even during the long centuries of the Shogunate — when military rulers held actual power — the emperor remained the symbolic sovereign. Overthrowing that institution was, for most of Japanese history, simply unthinkable.

Shinto, order, and the idea of a nation as family

The Jimmu legend is rooted in Shinto, Japan’s indigenous spiritual tradition, which understands the universe as moving continuously from chaos toward order. Jimmu’s founding of the imperial line is, in this worldview, part of that cosmic process — the sun goddess extending her ordering influence into the human world through her divine descendants.

This gave rise to a distinctive political philosophy. Ancient texts describe the relationship between emperor and people as that of “a big family.” The land itself was understood as sacred — of divine origin — which meant that reverence for nature, for ancestors, and for community were not separate from political loyalty but expressions of the same underlying reality.

These values — care for the land, respect for ancestors, deep communal loyalty — survived the formal disavowal of imperial divinity at the end of World War II. They remain recognizable in Japanese culture today, even stripped of their theological framework.

How a name became a symbol

The name “Jimmu” was not original. It was assigned retroactively, in the 8th century C.E., by the scholar Ōmi no Mifune during the reign of Emperor Kanmu. Before that, early rulers were known simply as Ōkimi — “great lord.” The title tennō (“heavenly sovereign”) was also a later adoption, modeled partly on the Chinese imperial title Tiān-dì.

This is worth pausing on. The story of Jimmu was not handed down unchanged from antiquity — it was actively shaped, compiled, and codified by the scholars and political leaders of the 7th and 8th centuries C.E., who understood that origin myths carry governing power. The Kojiki and Nihon Shoki were not merely records; they were tools of statecraft, crafted at a moment when Japan was centralizing authority and needed a coherent national narrative.

In that sense, the “founding” of the Japanese imperial tradition may be better located in the early 8th century C.E. than in 660 B.C.E. — but both moments matter. One is when the myth was first lived; the other is when it was written into permanence.

Lasting impact

The institution that traces its origin to Jimmu — however legendary — is the oldest continuous monarchy on Earth. Japan’s Imperial House has maintained an unbroken line (with periods of reduced political power) across more than a thousand years of documented history. That continuity is itself a remarkable human achievement: a governing institution that survived civil wars, foreign contact, industrialization, military defeat, and occupation.

The concept of kenkoku — national founding — that flows from the Jimmu legend also shaped Japan’s modern national identity. February 11, designated in 1872 C.E. as the mythical date of Jimmu’s enthronement, remains a national holiday in Japan today, called Kenkoku Kinen no Hi, or National Foundation Day.

Beyond Japan, the Jimmu legend offers a case study in how origin myths function in human societies. They are not simply false histories — they are meaning-making frameworks that tell a people who they are, what they owe to each other, and why their land is worth caring for. That function is as old as human civilization itself.

Blindspots and limits

The Jimmu tradition has cast long and sometimes dangerous shadows. During World War II, the mythology of imperial divinity was weaponized to demand absolute obedience and prosecute catastrophic violence — a use the myth’s architects could not have anticipated, or perhaps could have. The story of a divinely ordered, unified nation also had little room for the distinct identities of the Ainu people of northern Japan, whose history predates and runs parallel to the Yamato tradition but was systematically marginalized within the imperial framework. Any honest reckoning with the Jimmu legend has to hold both its stabilizing power and its capacity for exclusion.

Read more

For more on this story, see: New World Encyclopedia — Emperor Jimmu

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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