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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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196 Japan<br />

to one’s parents and lord, moral principles, and frugality, were more often<br />

ignored than followed. <strong>The</strong> case of the forty-seven warriors of Akô who<br />

took revenge for injustice incurred by their lord has always been a subject<br />

of disagreement. Were they truly loyal retainers? As such, they were supposed<br />

to act immediately and not wait two years before taking revenge.<br />

Also, how is one to explain that out of hundreds of retainers only a small<br />

fraction remained to carry out the act of justified revenge? Such questions,<br />

together with the increasing number of samurai giving up their status to become<br />

merchants, show that the way of the warrior often remained a matter<br />

of theory rather than practice.<br />

High Culture<br />

Letters and arts have always been part of warrior culture, though reserved<br />

mostly for warriors of higher status. Since the early ancient period when<br />

leading warriors were military aristocrats, the study of Chinese classics and<br />

poetry, as well as writing Japanese poetry, has been a way for warriors to<br />

maintain their aristocratic identity. Similarly, acquisition of valuable ceramics<br />

or patronage of craftsmen and artisans has been a warrior’s way of<br />

expressing his refined manners and taste. Attention to high culture among<br />

elite warriors reached its apex twice during the medieval period, a time<br />

when, for the most part, warriors were more involved in warfare than they<br />

were to be later. <strong>The</strong> third Ashikaga shôgun, Yoshimitsu (1358–1408), under<br />

whose rule order prevailed in most of Japan, was an enthusiastic patron<br />

of the arts. His personal fondness for refined culture, which stood in<br />

contrast to his character as a warrior, is perhaps the central reason for the<br />

beginning of a period of flourishing arts and culture, commonly known as<br />

the Kitayama epoch, named after the place in which Yoshimitsu built a Zen<br />

temple, the Golden Pavilion.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Kitayama epoch not only brought new life into existing aristocratic<br />

culture, but also gave birth to new art forms such as Nô drama (a<br />

form of theater based on dance, which developed from native and foreign<br />

influence, sarugaku, and dengaku kyôgen theater) and Kyôgen theater<br />

(“mad words,” comical or farcical skits that were first interluded with Nô,<br />

but were later performed independently), after Yoshimitsu attended a Sarugaku<br />

performance (“monkey music,” whose characteristics are unknown,<br />

but the name suggests monkeylike comical performance) by Kanami and<br />

Zeami and became a generous patron of the performing arts. In the latter<br />

part of the Kitayama epoch, during the rule of Yoshimitsu’s grandson,<br />

Yoshimasa (1436–1490), there was a further development, with Yoshimasa’s<br />

patronage of linked verse poetry, the tea ceremony, and monochrome<br />

painting.<br />

After Yoshimasa relinquished the shôgunal post to his son in the midst

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