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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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(third–fifth centuries A.D.), when the Japanese acquired the knowledge of<br />

iron casting, marked the first significant turning point in the making and<br />

wielding of swords. By the Asuka period (fifth–sixth centuries), the Japanese<br />

were making good-quality, straight, single-edged swords that were<br />

placed in a decorated scabbard. <strong>The</strong>se swords were by far more effective in<br />

cutting down an opponent than anything the Japanese had previously produced.<br />

<strong>The</strong> production and use of the sword as an effective weapon required<br />

warriors to practice wielding and stabbing. <strong>The</strong> precision with<br />

which a warrior had to wield his sword required more definite, predetermined<br />

movements, thus marking the first true swordsmanship, unsophisticated<br />

though it may have been.<br />

<strong>The</strong> transition from sword techniques for the straight sword to those<br />

for a curved sword necessarily occurred at the same time that such curved<br />

swords were first produced. This transition occurred gradually during the<br />

tenth century, when straight swords were still used by warriors but curved<br />

swords had begun to appear. In the tenth century, Japanese makers were already<br />

experimenting with single-edged curved swords and were producing<br />

some double-edged curved swords as well. By the tenth century, with the<br />

rise of the two most important warrior families—Taira (also Heike) and<br />

Minamoto (also Genji)—and consequently, with improvements in military<br />

technology, Japanese warriors chose the single-edge curved sword. <strong>The</strong> preferred<br />

curved blade allowed for only one effective cutting edge at the outer<br />

side of the blade, while the inner side of the curvature was no longer sharpened,<br />

leaving it thick. <strong>The</strong> Japanese preference for a curved blade resulted<br />

from the nature of Japanese armor and the development of equestrian<br />

fighting skills. <strong>The</strong> hard leather or metal Japanese armor vis-à-vis the light<br />

Chinese armor, together with limitations incurred due to the seated position<br />

on a horse, gave the curved sword a better cutting power, and it was<br />

easier to draw while on horseback.<br />

<strong>The</strong> use of swords was first recorded in the Nihon Shoki and in the<br />

Sujin-ki, where the term tachikaki to refer to sword fighting first appeared.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se records provide only fragmentary information on the use of swords.<br />

More specific information on sword fighting in ancient and premodern<br />

Japan appears in the Gunki (War Tales), namely the Hôgen monogatari<br />

(Tale of the Hôgen), Heike monogatari (Tale of the Heike), and Taiheiki<br />

(Record of Great Peace). <strong>The</strong>se and other sources indicate that from the<br />

late Heian period until the late Kamakura period, swordsmanship on the<br />

battlefield was secondary to mounted archery, which was the primary<br />

method of warfare, and to wielding halberds (naginata) and spears (hoko).<br />

Furthermore, it is clear that swords were mostly used after the warrior dismounted<br />

from his horse to engage in close combat. Mounted swordsmanship<br />

is only recorded in some picture scrolls, which rarely show warriors<br />

Swordsmanship, Japanese 591

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