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  • Eder Matthias (1978), Geschichte der japanischen Religion: 1.Band die alte Landesreligion. Asian Folklore Studies Monograph No.7,1
  • Havens Norman and Nobutaka Inoue (2004), Encyclopedia of Shintō:Volume Two Jinja. Institut of Japanese Culture and Classics: Kokugakuin University.
  • Havens Norman and Inoue Nobutaka (2001), Encyclopedia of Shinto: Volume One Kami. Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics: Kokugakuin University.
  • Naumann, Nelly (1988), Die einheimische Religion Japans, Bd. 1: Bis zum Ende der Heian-Zeit. Leiden: Brill.
  • Sakamoto Tarō (1991), The six national histories of Japan. Vancouver: UBC Press.


Hitachi Fudoki

  • Akimoto Kichirō 秋本, 吉郎 (1971), Fudoki 風土記. Nihon koten bungaku taike; 2 日本古典文学大系2. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten.
  • Aoki Michiko (1997), Records of wind and earth: a translation of Fudoki with introduction and commentaries. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Association for Asian Studies.
  • Aston, William George (1956), Nihongi: chronicles of Japan from the earliest times to A.D. 697.London: Allen & Unwin.
  • Chamberlain, Basil Hall (1932), Ko-ji-ki or Records of Ancient Matters. Tokyo: Thompson
  • Domenig, Gaudenz (2008),”Land of the Gods Beyond the Boundary: Ritual Landtaking and the Horizontal World View.” Japanese Religions 33/1&2, S. 1-17.
  • Inoue Tatsuo (2006), “The Hitachi fudoki and the Fujiwara.”, Joan R. Piggott (Hg.), Capital and countryside in Japan, 300-1180: Japanese historians interpreted in English. Ithaca, NY: East Asia Program, Cornell University, S. 103-127.
  • Isomae Jun'ichi (1999), “Myth in Metamorphosis: Ancient and Medieval Versions of the Yamatotakeru Legend.” Monumenta Nipponica 54/3, S. 361-385.
  • Funke, Mark (1994), „Hitachi no Kuni Fudoki.“ Monumenta Nipponica 49/1, S. 1-29.


Izumo Fudoki

  • Piggott, Joan (1989), “Sacral Kingship and Confederacy in Early Izumo.” Monumenta Nipponica 44/1, S. 45-74.