Tradition / Region: Japanese folklore
Alternate Names: Fox Lantern, Fox Torch, Kitsunebi
Category: Fox, Flame
The Myth
Across many parts of Japan, people have long spoken of mysterious lights appearing in the night, known as Fox Fire.
These flames are said to be created by foxes. Some believe the fire comes from their breath, glowing as they exhale into the darkness. Others say foxes strike their tails together to spark the light, or that they kindle it from strange materials such as bones. Sometimes the fire appears as floating balls of light that drift across fields and roads.
Because of its steady glow, the light is often called a fox lantern or fox torch. When many of these lights appear at once and move together through the night, people say a fox wedding is taking place somewhere unseen.
One famous tradition tells that at Ōji Inari Shrine in Edo, foxes from across the Kantō region gathered on New Year’s Eve. On that night, countless fox fires were said to dance across the fields as the foxes assembled to receive ranks from their deity. Villagers would watch the number and movement of the lights, believing they foretold whether the coming year would bring a good harvest.
Thus Fox Fire became known as both a sign of the hidden world and a message carried in light — a glow in the night that revealed the unseen presence of foxes and the mysteries that followed them.
Gallery
Sources
Tyz-Yokai Blog. (n.d.). Kitsunebi. Retrieved March 1, 2026, from https://tyz-yokai.blog.jp/archives/1010653498.html
Interpretive Lenses
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