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  • Fumi-e - Wikipedia
    Fumi-e contained images of the Virgin Mary and Jesus, which government officials ordered all to trample on Those who were reluctant or refused to do so were arrested for being Christians
  • The Japanese Christians forced to trample on Christ - BBC
    This practice of stepping on Christian images - known as fumie - was widespread in the city of Nagasaki in the 17th century Nagasaki, an important port city, was first introduced to
  • When Belief Meant Betrayal: The Grim Ritual That Hunted Christians in Japan
    Enter fumi-e, introduced officially in 1629 It was a disturbingly effective solution: if you were suspected of being a Christian, you were ordered to step on a metal, wooden, or paper image
  • A Short History of Hidden Christians in Japan
    Fumie literally means “ to stamp or trample on an image, ” referring to a religious icon usually bearing a likeness of Jesus or Mary Suspected Christians (Kirishitan) were rounded up in each village and forced one by one to trample on the venerated image placed before them
  • Fumi-e - Wikiwand
    A fumi-e was a likeness of Jesus or Mary onto which the religious authorities of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan required suspected Christians (Kirishitan) to
  • Fumi-e — Grokipedia
    The practice of using fumi-e originated in 1629, when the shogunate mandated annual testing in Nagasaki, targeting residents regardless of social status—commoners, monks, or samurai —to publicly affirm loyalty by trampling images of Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, or crucifixes
  • A Cross Hidden in Plain Sight: Japan’s Hidden Christians
    Japanese Christians were exiled to remote islands, tortured, martyred, or forced to commit fumie (a practice of stepping on a cross or image of Jesus or the Virgin Mary to prove one was not Christian)
  • Stomping on the ‘Fumi-e’ (踏み絵) To Ferret Out Hidden Christians
    They instituted the ‘ fumi-e ’ system — public rituals on a regular basis where everyone was ordered to trample on ‘ fumi-e’ which were Christian images usually made of bronze depicting Jesus Christ or the Virgin Mary This system, introduced in Nagasaki in 1629, continued until February 12, 1858
  • Marian Images and Underground Christianity · The Christian . . . - Omeka
    However, starting in 1629 in Nagasaki, the shogunate used these images, which they called fumi-e (踏み絵, “trampling-on image”) against Christians Officials forced suspected Christians to trample on images of Christ or Mary to prove their lack of faith If they refused, they were arrested
  • E-fumi - The Memory
    The ‘e-fumi’ ceremony can be described as ‘trampling the cross’: a person was forced to trample an e-fumi (literally: stepping on picture), an object depicting, for instance, Christ or Mary





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