Ninja AD 1460-1650 Turnbull
Ninja AD 1460-1650 Turnbull
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                                         Ninja AD 1460–1650 Turnbull
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STEPHEN TURNBULL is
the world's leading English
language authority on
medieval Japan and the
samurai. He has travelled
extensively in the Far East,
particularly in Japan and
Korea. For Osprey, he has
authored many titles
including Men-at-Arms 86:
Samurai Armies 1550-1615,
Campaign 69: Nagashino
1575, Warrior 29: Ashigaru
1467-1649, and New
Vanguard 44: Siege
Weapons of the Far East (2)
AD 960-1644.
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                    R E C R U I T M E N T AND TRAINING                                       13
            Ninja recruitment • Ninja selection • Ninja training • Belief and belonging
                               CONDITIONS OF SERVICE                                         23
                  The ninja homelands • Daily life in the ninja village • The ninja house
                                                         NINJA IN WAR                        43
             Ninja at Sawayama, 1558 • Ninja at Maibara, 1561 • Ninja at Udono, 1562
          Ninja at Sekigahara, 1600 • Ninja at Osaka, 1615 • Ninja at Shimabara, 1638
                   M U S E U M S , COLLECTIONS AND
                                                     RE-ENACTMENT                            57
GLOSSARY 58
    I N T R O D Uhttps://www.yakibooki.com/download/ninja-ad-1460-1650/
                 C T I O N : THE ELUSIVE NINJA
          ew military organisations in world history are so familiar yet so
          misunderstood as Japan's ninja, so to write a Warriors book on the
                                                                                  This woodblock print by
           topic provides a unique challenge. Ninja certainly existed, but so     Yoshitoshi is a fine print of a
    much myth and exaggeration has grown up around the undoubted                  ninja assassination. The
    historical core of the subject that writing a book such as this could be      traditional details associated
    almost as daunting a prospect as producing a Warriors volume on the           with ninja are perfectly depicted.
    outlaws of Robin Hood. To resolve the matter I have decided to 'play it       The ninja is attempting to
                                                                                  murder Oda Nobunaga in 1573.
    straight'. Any references to ninja that could fly will be identified as the   He tried to sneak into
    myths they are. Quotations from written accounts of ninja exploits will       Nobunaga's castle of Azuchi to
    be confined to chronicles that are respected for their accuracy.              stab Nobunaga while he was
    Descriptions of items of ninja equipment will be confined to implements       asleep in his bedroom, but was
    illustrated in old 'ninja manuals' such as the 17th-century Bansen Shukai,    discovered and captured by two
                                                                                  of the guards. He then
    or preserved in one of Japan's several (and remarkably underplayed)
                                                                                  committed suicide, and his body
    ninja museums. The reader will therefore find collapsible ladders, secret     was displayed in the local
    explosives and hidden staircases, but will have to look elsewhere for         market place to discourage any
    human cannonballs and ninja submarines.                                       other would-be killers.
4
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                 Ninja AD 1460–1650
NINJA - JAPAN'S SECRET     WARRIORS Turnbull
For any military historian the ninja remains one of the most fascinating
mysteries of Japanese samurai warfare. The word ninja or its alternative
reading shinobi crops up again and again in historical accounts in the
context of secret intelligence gathering or assassinations carried out by
                    https://www.yakibooki.com/download/ninja-ad-1460-1650/
martial-arts experts.  Many opportune deaths may possibly be credited to
ninja activities, but as they were so secret it is impossible to prove either
way. The ways of the ninja were therefore an unavoidable part of
samurai warfare, and no samurai could ignore the secret threat they
posed, which could ruin all his carefully laid plans. As a result ninja were
both used and feared, although they were almost invariably despised
because of the contrast their ways presented to the samurai code of
behaviour. This may be partly due to the fact that many ninja had their
origins in the lower social classes, and that their secretive and
underhand methods were the exact opposite of the ideals of the noble
samurai facing squarely on to his enemy.
   This paradox, that ninja were beneath contempt and yet
indispensable, is a theme running through the whole history of ninja
warfare. It is also fascinating to note that the popular extension of the
image of the ninja to a superhuman that could fly and perform magic
also has a surprisingly long history in Japan. Such stories were being told
as early as the beginning of the 17th century, when many of the
historical accounts became mixed up with other legends.
                                                                       Ninja with sword. A member of
                                                                       the Iga-Ueno ninja re-enactment
The roots of the ninja                                                 society poses for the camera
Secret operations, from guerrilla warfare to the murder of prominent   during the 2002 Ninja Festival.
rivals, are topics that may be found throughout
Japanese history, but it is only from about the mid-
 15th century onwards that we find references to
such activities being carried out by specially
trained individuals who belonged to organisations
dedicated to this type of warfare. Much of the
activity is focused around the Iga and Koga areas of
central Japan, so this location and time period will
provide the major setting for this book.
    The traditional view of the ninja as a secret,
superlative, black-coated spy and assassin derives
from two different roots. The first is the area of
undercover work, of espionage and intelligence
gathering (and even assassination) that is
indispensable to the waging of war. The second is
the use of mercenaries, whereby the leaders of
military operations pay outsiders to fight for
them. In Japan these two elements came together
to produce the ninja and, curiously enough, the
ninja provide almost the only example of
mercenaries being used in Japanese warfare. Part
of the reason for this was that secret operations
were the antithesis of the samurai ideal. A daimyo
 (warlord) would not wish to have his brave and
noble samurai's reputations soiled by carrying out                                                       5
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    such despicable acts. Instead he Ninja
                                       paid others to do them. Turnbull
                                             AD 1460–1650        It was an
    unusual but highly valued service, and the Japanese historian Watatani
    sums up the situation as follows:
https://www.yakibooki.com/download/ninja-ad-1460-1650/
    The komuso, flute-playing Zen       commendably thorough. He first feigned illness so as not to be sent back
    mendicants, provided a useful       to Kyoto with his father's mortal remains, and the apparent affliction also
    disguise for a ninja as they
                                        ensured for him a place within Homma Saburo's house.
    were able to roam the country
    at will, their identity disguised
                                           He chose well his moment to strike. It was a night of violent rain and
    beneath the curious 'wastepaper     wind, and the guards on duty were sleeping in their quarters beyond the
    basket' hat. These komuso,          courtyard. Homma Saburo had actually changed his sleeping room, but
    however, are the genuine article,   Kumawaka found it out, and was about to rush upon him when he
    photographed in Yura (Wakayama
                                        remembered that he had not actually got a sword of his own, a strange
    Prefecture) during the midnight
    Bon Festival in August 1997.
                                        omission for an assassin. Realising that he would have to do the deed
                                        with Saburo's own sword, he was concerned that the light burning in the
                                        room would awaken him when Kumawaka attempted to draw it from its
                                        scabbard. The means he used to prevent this happening would have
                                        done credit to any ninja:
                                            Kumawaka slowly drew Saburo's sword. He held the point of the blade
                                        to his victim's chest, kicked the pillow away and drove the sword into his
                                        body. Kumawaka's subsequent escape to safety is also in true ninja style: