24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

194 Japan<br />

Stories of loyal warriors were often recorded in the various war tales,<br />

from the very early tales during the Heian and medieval periods to much<br />

later accounts, among which are the most well known and celebrated,<br />

Chushingura, and literary works such as the sixteenth-century Budô<br />

shoshinshu (<strong>The</strong> Code of the Samurai) and the twentieth-century Bushidô<br />

(Way of the Warrior). Among earlier records, perhaps the best known is the<br />

story of Kusonoki Masashige’s exemplary display of loyalty to Emperor<br />

Godaigo in the final scene of the Battle of Minatogawa. Having his forces<br />

reduced to just a few tens of men, Masashige withdrew with his brother<br />

Masasue to a house where they planned to commit seppuku (suicide). <strong>The</strong>ir<br />

retainers lined up in front of them and after reciting a prayer they cut open<br />

their bellies (hara kiri). <strong>The</strong>n, Masashige asked his brother into which of<br />

the nine existences (i.e., the nine possible levels of rebirth, according to<br />

Buddhist teaching) he wished to be reborn. Masasue laughed and answered<br />

that he wished to be reborn into this same existence for seven more times<br />

so that he could fight the enemies of Emperor Godaigo. Masashige affirmed<br />

a similar wish after which they pointed their swords at each other<br />

and fell on the swords simultaneously. Some six hundred years later, the<br />

Japanese kamikaze fighters of <strong>World</strong> War II wrote down the same resolution<br />

on their headbands before going out on their last mission.<br />

Such behavior embodies the ideal for a samurai, but many famous warriors<br />

fell far short of that ideal. Loyalty and disloyalty were often complementary.<br />

Minamoto no Yoritomo hunted down his younger half brother<br />

Yoshitsune, forcing him to commit seppuku. Takeda Shingen forced his father<br />

into exile so that he could become the head of the Takeda clan. Akechi<br />

Mitsuhide, one of Oda Nobunaga’s most trusted generals, betrayed Nobunaga<br />

and assassinated him while Nobunaga was camping at a temple. Toyotomi<br />

presented his rush to take revenge as an act of supreme loyalty toward<br />

his lord. In practical terms, the general who avenged the death of Nobunaga<br />

could claim to be his successor by virtue of loyalty. Toyotomi knew that this<br />

reasoning was not good enough to secure his position, so immediately after<br />

killing Akechi Mitsuhide he appointed himself as the guardian of<br />

Nobunaga’s son, who was a young child at the time. Again, he claimed this<br />

role on the pretext of supreme loyalty to Nobunaga, but its practical implications<br />

were that Toyotomi now secured his position.<br />

Nevertheless, Toyotomi’s reliance on his display of loyalty as a way to<br />

support his claim to replace Nobunaga shows that appreciation for loyalty<br />

indeed existed, even if only superficially. Indeed, when Toyotomi was on his<br />

deathbed he made his generals sign a blood oath to maintain peaceful succession<br />

after his death. Although they all showed loyalty to Toyotomi and<br />

signed the oath, shortly after his death they fought each other in the Battle<br />

of Sekigahara.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!