'' (portable shrine) in the city of
Beppu,
Ōita Prefecture, on
Kyūshū In
Yamagata Prefecture among other areas, thickets in the mountains during summer, there are several tens of
tsubo of moss and sand that were revered as the "nesting grounds of tengu," and in mountain villages in the
Kanagawa Prefecture, they would cut trees at night and were called "tengu daoshi" (天狗倒し, tengu fall), and mysterious sounds at night of a tree being cut and falling, or mysterious swaying sounds despite no wind, were considered the work of mountain tengu. It is also theorized that shooting a gun three times would make this mysterious sound stop. Besides this, in the
Tone District,
Gunma Prefecture, there are legends about the "tengu warai" (天狗笑い, tengu laugh) about how one would hear laughter out of nowhere, and if one simply presses on further, it'd become an even louder laugh, and if one tries laughing back, it'd laugh even louder than before, and the "tengu tsubute" (天狗礫, tengu pebble) (said to be the path that tengu go on) about how when walking on mountain paths, there would be a sudden wind, the mountain would rumble, and stones would come flying, and places tengu live such as "tenguda" (天狗田, tengu field), "tengu no tsumetogi ishi" (天狗の爪とぎ石, tengu scratching stone), "tengu no yama" (天狗の山, tengu mountain), "tengudani" (天狗谷, tengu valley), etc., in other words, "tengu territory" (天狗の領地) or "tengu guest quarters" (狗賓の住処). In
Kanazawa's business district Owari in
Hōreki 5 (1755), it is said that a "tengu tsubute" (天狗つぶて) was seen. In Mt. Ogasa,
Shizuoka Prefecture, a mysterious phenomenon of hearing the sound of
hayashi from the mountains in the summer was called "tengubayashi" (天狗囃子), and it is said to be the work of the tengu at
Ogasa Jinja. On Sado Island (
Sado,
Niigata Prefecture), there were "yamakagura" (山神楽, mountain kagura), and the mysterious occurrence of hearing kagura from the mountains was said to be the work of a tengu. In Tokuyama,
Ibi District,
Gifu Prefecture (now
Ibigawa), there were "tengu taiko" (天狗太鼓), and the sound of
taiko (drums) from the mountains was said to be a sign of impending rain. The
Shasekishū, a book of Buddhist parables from the
Kamakura period, makes a point of distinguishing between good and bad
tengu. The book explains that the former are in command of the latter and are the protectors, not opponents, of Buddhism – although the flaw of pride or ambition has caused them to fall onto the demon road, they remain the same good,
dharma-abiding persons they were in life. The ''tengu's
unpleasant image continued to erode in the 17th century. Some stories now presented them as much less malicious, protecting and blessing Buddhist institutions rather than menacing them or setting them on fire. According to a legend in the 18th-century , a tengu
took the form of a yamabushi'' and faithfully served the abbot of a
Zen monastery until the man guessed his attendant's true form. The ''tengu's
wings and huge nose then reappeared. The tengu'' requested a piece of wisdom from his master and left, but he continued, unseen, to provide the monastery with miraculous aid. In the 18th and 19th centuries,
tengu came to be feared as the vigilant protectors of certain forests. In the 1764 collection of strange stories , a tale tells of a man who wanders into a deep valley while gathering leaves, only to be faced with a sudden and ferocious hailstorm. A group of peasants later tell him that he was in the valley where the
guhin live, and anyone who takes a single leaf from that place will surely die. In the , written in 1849, the author describes the customs of the wood-cutters of
Mino Province, who used a sort of rice cake called
kuhin-mochi to placate the
tengu, who would otherwise perpetrate all sorts of mischief. In other provinces a special kind of fish called
okoze was offered to the
tengu by woodsmen and hunters, in exchange for a successful day's work. The people of
Ishikawa Prefecture have until recently believed that the
tengu loathe
mackerel, and have used this fish as a charm against kidnappings and hauntings by the mischievous spirits.
Tengu are worshipped as beneficial
kami (
gods or
revered spirits) in various regions. For example, the
tengu Saburō of
Izuna is worshipped on that mountain and various others as , one of the primary deities in
Izuna Shugen, which also has ties to
fox sorcery and the
Dakini of
Tantric Buddhism. Izuna Gongen is depicted as a beaked, winged figure with snakes wrapped around his limbs, surrounded by a halo of flame, riding on the back of a fox and brandishing a sword. Worshippers of
tengu on other sacred mountains have adopted similar images for their deities, such as or of
Akiba and of Saijō-ji Temple in
Odawara. ==In popular folk tales==