Corpse Princess

Corpse Princess
Shikabane Hime manga volume 1 cover.
屍姫
(Shikabane Hime)
GenreAction, supernatural,[1] thriller[2]
Manga
Written byYoshiichi Akahito
Published bySquare Enix
English publisher
MagazineMonthly Shōnen Gangan
DemographicShōnen
Original runApril 12, 2005August 12, 2014
Volumes23
Anime television series
Directed byMasahiko Murata
Produced byKeiichi Kashiwada
Tomoko Kawasaki
Nobuyuki Kurashige
Hiroyuki Yamaga
Written byShō Aikawa
Music byNorihito Sumitomo
StudioFeel
Gainax
Licensed byCrunchyroll
Original networkAT-X
English network
Original run October 2, 2008 March 26, 2009
Episodes25 + OVA (List of episodes)

Corpse Princess (Japanese: 屍姫, Hepburn: Shikabane Hime) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshiichi Akahito. Premiering in Monthly Shōnen Gangan on April 12, 2005, the series centers on the "Corpse Princess" Makina Hoshimura, an undead girl who is hunting down 108 undead corpses in order to gain entry into heaven with the help of a secret society of anti-corpse Buddhist monks.

Feel and Gainax partnered together to adapt the series into a thirteen episode anime series. The first season, Aka (, Red), aired on October 2, 2008 on AT-X and finished on December 25, 2008. A second season, Kuro (, Black), aired between January and March 2009. The anime is licensed for North American distribution and release by Funimation, which has released the episodes in subtitled form as Shikabane Hime through various online distribution companies and through its own website.

The series made its North American television debut on the Funimation Channel on November 15, 2010.[3]

  1. ^ Pappas, Andre (July 7, 2014). "Shikabane Hime/Corpse Princess Manga Will End in September". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on September 30, 2019. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  2. ^ "Corpse Princess: Shikabane Hime Collection 1 - Aka". Madman Entertainment. Archived from the original on March 6, 2013. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  3. ^ "Funimation Channel Premieres Four New Shows in Primetime". Anime News Network. November 15, 2010. Archived from the original on March 5, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022.