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.

• <strong>The</strong> Seductress, who preoccupies the warrior leader, diverting him from<br />

his task with her feminine wiles.<br />

Only in passing does one hear about women in the mass: slaughtered, or<br />

“given” to the warriors as “spoils of war.” That they were surely raped and<br />

often murdered was apparently considered too trivial a fact to even mention<br />

in later warrior tales, once the conventions of the genre had been codified.<br />

Still, unless one is willing to imagine a conspiracy of silence in which<br />

women’s roles on the battlefield were suppressed in both historical records<br />

and battle tales, it is a fair assumption that onna-musha (women warriors)<br />

were unusual. This is borne out by the prominence given to the few women<br />

about whom accounts are written. Interestingly, in the cases of both of the<br />

most famous of these women, the naginata (a halberd associated with<br />

women’s martial arts today) was not their weapon of choice.<br />

Japan’s most famous women warriors are Tomoe Gozen and Hangaku,<br />

also called Itagaki. In the Heike Monogatari, Tomoe Gozen was a<br />

general in the troops of Kiso Yoshinaka, Yoritomo’s first attack force. She<br />

was described as exceptionally strong and hauntingly beautiful, with pale<br />

white skin like that of a court lady. Her last act, on the verge of Yoshinaka’s<br />

defeat, is the subject of many plays and poems. She was ordered to retreat.<br />

Rather than simply leave, however, she instead rode directly into a group<br />

of the enemy, singling out the strongest. She matched his horse’s stride,<br />

reached over, sliced off his head with her sword, and cast it aside. Tomoe,<br />

has not, however, ever been proven as a historical figure, although not for<br />

lack of trying. Although Tomoe is claimed by more than a few naginata traditions<br />

as being either their founder or one of their primordial teachers,<br />

there is no factual justification for such a claim. It is, instead, merely an attempt<br />

to associate their tradition with a powerful, romantic figure who<br />

lived long before their system was even dreamed of.<br />

Hangaku, daughter of the Jo, a warrior (bushi) family of Echigo<br />

province, was known for her strength and accuracy with the bow and arrow.<br />

During an uprising of Echigo against the central government, she held<br />

off the enemy from the roof of a storehouse. After being wounded in both<br />

legs by spears and arrows, she was captured, then released in the custody<br />

of a famous warrior. <strong>The</strong>re is an account of her later defending the Torizakayama<br />

Castle with 3,000 soldiers. <strong>The</strong> enemy numbered 10,000, and she<br />

was defeated and killed.<br />

Thus, at least in the earlier periods of the Heian and Kamakura periods,<br />

women who became prominent or even present on the field of battle<br />

were exceptional. This does not mean, however, that Japanese women were<br />

powerless. <strong>The</strong>re is a common image of Japanese femininity based on the<br />

accounts we have of those women of the Imperial court, swaddled in lay-<br />

Women in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>: Japan 693

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!