Most ancient cultures that have a moon and sun deity in their beliefs, make them of opposite s*x, right? Most of the time the lunar deity is considered female due to the link of the cycle of the moon (28 to complete a cycle) to the menstrual cycle (hardly ever directly; about 28 days per cycle). Also, being the Sun more influential to the daily life of people (agriculture, warmth, etc.) and being opposite to the moon in most ancient beliefs, solar deities are usually male.
Examples of this: Greek and Roman culture. But there are exceptions like Shinto: the solar deity is female, Amaterasu, while the male deity is male, Tsukyomi. (Pardon the spelling for the names, I forgot how to write them...)
Now, my question:
Why is Amaterasu, the sun, female and Tsukyomi, the moon, male in Japanese mythology?
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