[Korean] The song sung by the nine elders of Kaya when summoning King Suro. The name of the song comes from the name of the place where it was sung, but it also has another connotation; "Kuji" was the name of a place but it means "delicious turtle." This poem song is one of the oldest recorded poems in Korean literature, and the words run as follows: Keobuga, Keobuga / Meorireul naeeora / Naeeonoch'i aneumyeon / Kuweo meogeuri ("Turtle, Turtle / Stick out your head / If you don't / (We) will roast and eat (you)). Besides being one of the earliest Korean poems, Kujiga is also important for its magico-religious significance. The chanting of the poem-song was accompanied by dancing, making it one of the earliest (if not the first) recorded instance of a shamanistic ritual (kut) in Korea. The form of the song is also a universal formula typical of ancient incantations: appellation - command - supposition - threat.
KUJIGA
Meaning of KUJIGA in English
Encyclopedia Mythica English dictionary. Английский энциклопедический словарь греческой мифологии. 2012