Jorōgumo is a form of Japanese youkai (Yōkai) in Japanese folklore. This is a form of spider ghost or spider spirit, is a spider youkai in the guise of a woman. The spiders mentioned here are the Jorō spiders (Nephila clavata). The scary legend of Joro-Gumo began to appear in the Edo period (1603-1868), from this time, in folklore appeared and circulated the story of Joro-Gumo.
Jorōgumo is a spider elf that seduces men and eats them. It is described as a 400-year-old spider and has cultivated as a youkai that specializes in harming people. This is a giant spider that has the ability to transform into a beautiful woman. When transformed into a beautiful girl, Jorōgumo often appears in inns or churches in deserted areas, few people pass by. This leprechaun often plays the lute and plays the flute to seduce men into her lair. After seducing the enemy, she often binds them to her terrible web and begins to secrete venom and eat the victim.
Occasionally, Joro-Gumo appears in the form of the upper half of a human, the lower half of the body is in the form of a spider. In addition, another variation of the Joro-Gumo legend states that the spider youkai sometimes appears in the form of a woman holding a baby. When a man passes by, Joro-Gumo will ask him to take care of the child. Then he will be extremely surprised and terrified when they discover that the child they are holding is made up of thousands of eggs of the egg spider.
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