Tenne (garment)
Script error: No such module "AfC submission catcheck". Tenne (天衣, lit. a "Divine Raiment" or "Heavenly Raiment") / Tenne (纏衣, lit. a "Wrapping Raiment" or "Heavenly Raiment") – Similar to the Hagoromo[disambiguation needed] (羽衣, lit. "Feather[ed] Raiment/Robe[s]")--the stole-like, feathered, Heavenly Kimono, Mantle or Vestments of Tennin, spiritual beings found in Japanese Shinto-Buddhism; Hagoromo allowed the Tennin wearing them to fly, earning Tennin the moniker of Hiten (飛天, lit. "Flying Heaven")--Tenne are Halo-like scarves of gauze, or a ribbon-like strip of narrow and ornamental, floating cloth found on the depiction of many deities and divine beings, denoting them as 'divine'.
A Tenne-like Hagoromo is mentioned in The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, when one such Raiment is placed-upon Kaguya-hime's shoulders, and makes her (apparently) forget all of the Shu[disambiguation needed] (取, lit. "Upādāna"; "Material World Attachment(s)") that Kaguya-hime had formed with her mortal foster-parents, friends and the Emperor of Japan (during the time that The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter is set in), and all of the sadness and compassion that came with those attachments, during the years she'd spent in the mortal world.
See Also[edit]
- Hagoromo[disambiguation needed]
- Glossary of Shinto
- Halo (religious iconography)
- Baldric
- Tippet
- Omophorion
- Pallium
- Tallit
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