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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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356 Ninjutsu<br />

ninja boom that spread widely overseas as part of a larger international fascination<br />

with martial arts. Consequently, ninjutsu has been incorporated<br />

widely into action novels and films set in locations worldwide and has even<br />

lost its Japanese character, as American kids and even cartoon character<br />

turtles have been cast as ninja. <strong>The</strong> ninja has become a thoroughly romanticized<br />

and orientalized figure in contemporary global culture.<br />

Early History of Ninjutsu<br />

Ninjutsu ryûha texts maintain legends about its origins, but scholars consider<br />

them to be highly inaccurate. It seems probable that techniques of<br />

spying and scouting, gathering information for purposes of waging war,<br />

were introduced in the seventh and eighth centuries—most likely in organized<br />

form through the Chinese military classic by Sunzi (ca. 300–237<br />

B.C.), <strong>The</strong> Art of War. Prince Shôtoku is said to have been the first to employ<br />

someone as a shinobi in the defeat of the Mononobe in 587. Others<br />

suggest that yamabushi (mountain ascetics) who were practitioners of<br />

shugendô—a syncretic form of Shintô-Buddhist belief focusing on the worship<br />

of mountains—may be the progenitors of later ninjutsu. In general,<br />

early accounts of ninja activities are unsubstantiated.<br />

As the scale of battles increased and war bands became better organized<br />

in medieval times, the need for spies and unconventional tactics became<br />

critical. In the early fourteenth century, for example, Kusunoki<br />

Masashige is said to have relied on ninjalike activities. He reputedly employed<br />

Iga ninja to steal into Kyoto to discern the military situation. Moreover,<br />

in defense of his fortress, Masashige placed lifelike dolls on the battlements<br />

to make his troops appear more numerous. His skills in guerilla<br />

warfare led later schools of ninjutsu to claim connection with Masashige.<br />

After the Ônin War (1467–1477) and the spread of warfare throughout<br />

Japan, various daimyo (regional warlords) began to employ ninja as<br />

spies on a regular basis to assist them in expanding their domains. Although<br />

ninjutsu ultimately spread from the capital region to central and eastern<br />

Japan, local village samurai families in Iga and Kôga (plains areas surrounded<br />

by mountains on the border of Iga and Ômi provinces) primarily<br />

developed the techniques. By the late fifteenth century there were reputedly<br />

fifty-three Kôga and two Iga ninja houses, the leading families being the<br />

Hattori and two of that house’s offshoots, the Fujibayashi and Momochi.<br />

Among the daimyo who employed ninja for their skills in espionage<br />

were Takeda Shingen, Uesugi Kenshin, and Hôjô Ujiyasu. In the Battle of<br />

Magari in Ômi province in 1487, Rokaku Takayori sent ninja into the<br />

camp of the besieging Ashikaga bakufu army, where they set fire to the<br />

headquarters and forced the withdrawal of Ashikaga troops. It was<br />

through such deeds that the reputation of ninja spread among the daimyo

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