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  • Hello, I’m Simon Whistler, you are watching TopTenz Net and today we are looking at the

  • top ten horrifying facts you didn’t know about samurai warfare.

  • This video will focus on Japan’s 16th century when warfare was at its height however, all

  • the facts have been taken from two 17th century records from a war-master to Kishu-Tokugawa

  • family but more about that at the end.

  • (Holds book up)

  • 10 The primary aim of the samurai on the field

  • of battle was head collecting One of the lesser highlighted facts about

  • the samurai is that they were primarily a head cult.

  • Their warrior culture focused on the capture, collection, identification and displaying

  • of decapitated human heads.

  • Their society was based on the accruement of agricultural land or the financial gain

  • from controlling land.

  • In return for captured enemy heads, a general would dole out new portions of wealth to his

  • men.

  • The higher the status of the enemy head or the level of the achievement needed to obtain

  • it, the greater the rewards would be.

  • A Japanese battle may see champions leaving the field with bags known as kubibukurowhich

  • were net or cloth sacks that held the heads they had taken.

  • Also, a samurai on horseback may have heads tied to cords which hung from the rings of

  • the saddle.

  • 9 Providing proof that an enemy head had not

  • been falsified With a reward system based on decapitated

  • heads, it became apparent that some samurai of lesser scruples would try to cheat the

  • system and use lesser heads as higher ranking ones for financial gain and prestige.

  • To combat this the samurai had certain ways of identification.

  • If there was another trustworthy samurai to vouch for the kill his word could be taken.

  • Alternatively, a samurai would need or to bring back one of the neck plates of a samurai

  • helmet or even his sword which would show it was taken from a warrior.

  • If bringing in a general’s head, a samurai would need to have his war baton which was

  • used to command troops otherwise the kill of such a high priority target could not be

  • confirmed.

  • Furthermore, some samurai were thought to have killed women and monks and presented

  • their heads for reward.

  • Therefore, if a head was deemed suspicions in any way it was known as onna-kubi – a

  • female head or a yamai-kubian improper head.

  • If a head was confirmed as reliable then it was recorded in the kubichō – the book

  • of heads.

  • 8 The displaying of decapitated heads and cries

  • of war If in a skirmish a new head had been taken,

  • the victor was to lift it up with his left hand and let forth a mighty battle-cry to

  • which any allies in the vicinity would lift any heads they had captured and join in with

  • the cry.

  • Heads would then be taken off the battlefield by the samurai or even their servants, however,

  • even at this point a samurai had to be careful, other servants or even samurai would snatch

  • heads from people who were not concentrating.

  • To help prevent this the samurai would place a cord through the mouth of the head and out

  • of the throat and wear it like a handbag to keep it safe or as said before keep it in

  • a head bag.

  • After the battle, a ceremony known as jikkenthe head inspection was conducted.

  • This involved the picking of good enemy heads to be presented to the lord, where he would

  • seated in armour with spell-casters and bowmen to defend him from evil spirits or he would

  • be on horseback where he moved along lines of gibbeted heads.

  • Heads of high ranking warriors would be placed in a box with Buddhist spells upon it and

  • wrapped in a cloak with an arrow pushed through the top where the cloth ties, at which point

  • it would be sent back to the enemy in respect.

  • 7 Samurai would create oaths of bonding before

  • going to war The word of the samurai was stronger than

  • iron according to the documents we are using today and such an oath was truly binding.

  • Samurai used different types of oath, this could be keppanthe blood oath which was

  • a promise given to the gods and sealed in blood or it could be the shichimai-gishō

  • the seven sheet oath, where a promise is given seven times on seven sheets of paper

  • to different gods.

  • However, not all samurai were honest.

  • Samurai would get themselves into small groups and make pledges that if any of them fled

  • and left the battle then their: houses, property, wives and children would belong to the rest

  • of the group.

  • This was done to ensure bravery.

  • The samurai then made their servants swear oaths, saying that if they served them well

  • they would reward them, but if they were to abandon them in battle then they would be

  • hunted across all of Japan and their entire family line would be put to death for their

  • crimes.

  • It is unknown how much of a reality this is, but records show that such promises were put

  • in place.

  • 6 Samurai prayed to the gods of war for victory

  • and some wore the costume of death Samurai prayed to gods such as Hachiman and

  • Marashiten.

  • Before war, samurai would roll their flags up and prepare themselves at a holy place

  • dedicated to Hachimanbecause the ideograms used for flag and Hachiman have a connection.

  • The samurai believed in a host of war gods and some believed that the hole in the top

  • of a samurai’s helmet was installed so that the 98,000 gods of war could enter into them

  • allowing them to be godlike in battle.

  • In truth the hole is a vent to allow air to escape but some samurai did believe this.

  • If an army was scattered they would take a flag called the Dragon banner to a height

  • on a hill so that the army could regroup, they thought that the gods of war rested in

  • high places and that the spirit of war would pull the men back togetherhowever some

  • samurai said it was simply easier to see the banner at a height.

  • Also, any samurai who wanted to die in the upcoming battle would wear the costume of

  • death.

  • This meant that they would cut the ends of any of the cords of their armour, such as

  • the helmet or arrow cape as it signified that they could not retie them, meaning that they

  • are not going to prepare for battle again and that they would either be victorious in

  • battle or be left dead on the field.

  • 5 Bellicose language was the order of the day

  • For a samurai even language had to correctly represent a warrior attitude as they could

  • be frowned at or questioned if they used the wrong verbs to describe different actions

  • in war.

  • This point is based in subtle plays in the Japanese language and as we are talking in

  • English they are not evident, but for us it is similar to the feeling of screamingflee

  • for your lives!

  • Andlet’s make a tactical withdrawal”.

  • Thus, a samurai should loosen his bow string but never say remove, he should never fold

  • a flag but roll it away, samurai never cut down bamboo to make poles for war banners,

  • they hunt bamboo for war banners.

  • There are many examples of this but they are steeped in an understanding of Japanese but

  • to encapsulate this idea remember that a samurai is never killed in battle he simply achieved

  • death to say otherwise would be a disgrace to his memory.

  • 4 If a new sword is given on a campaign of war

  • it must be bathed in blood This one shows one of the conundrums of being

  • a samurai leader.

  • Many know of the rumour that a Japanese katana must taste blood if it is drawnbut this

  • is a simplification of the historical reality as there are many instances where a samurai

  • sword is drawn but does not take blood.

  • Ancient scrolls tell us that when a leader of a troop or captain has done well he may

  • be rewarded with a new sword by the general or lord, but this puts him in a tight spot.

  • It is a rule that samurai leaders do not enter into combat unless the battle has gone wrong

  • and that the task of the leader is to lead and direct his men, but it is also a tradition

  • that when a new sword is given in war it must be bathed in the blood of enemy kills, a baptism

  • of blood if you will.

  • So for a leader to accept this sword he must either forsake the correct way of the captain

  • or step down from his position so he can take the sword into battle.

  • To get around this the samurai could either decline the new sword or ask that it be entrusted

  • to the lord’s squire until the end of the campaign.

  • 3 Skinning a human face

  • As we learned before, samurai culture is based on head taking and is possibly one of the

  • largest head cults in history, but what happens when there are just too many heads to take?

  • If the amount of heads is too many for the samurai and servants to carry, a samurai can

  • ask permission of his captain to engage in the activity of hana o kakucutting off

  • enemy noses.

  • A samurai could use a nose instead of a head to show he had achieved victory in battle

  • and these are much easier to carry as they are placed between the chest and the breastplate,

  • but remember a samurai needs to prove that it is not an improper head.

  • To do this there are two main ways: if the nose is cut off from the bridge then the cut

  • must go down and around the mouth and back up to the bridge of the nose, then the lower

  • part of the face is peeled off, the reason for this is that samurai would often wear

  • a moustache or have stubble and thus prove that it was at least a male head.

  • If the nose was cut from the base of the nostrils then the cut had to go up and over the eyebrows

  • and then the skin was peeled off.

  • This is because women shape their eyebrows differently to men and again the sex of the

  • head could be identified.

  • To this day there is a shrine in Kyoto Japan where tens of thousands of noses taken in

  • the Japanese invasion of Korea in the 16th century are buried.

  • However, many of these are civilian because Toyotomi Hideyoshi - the leader of the invasion

  • and Japan - ordered that everyone, men women and children should be killed.

  • 2 Taking the head of your friends while under

  • fire As we have seen taking an enemy head was of

  • extreme importance but it was also important not to allow your own head or a friends head

  • to fall into enemy hands.

  • Therefore, if a samurai force was losing a battle or skirmish, brave people would engage

  • in an action known as shingarito defend the retreat.

  • These people helped injured comrades while under enemy fire or would decapitate their

  • already dead allies who were lay on the ground.

  • However, to ensure that the samurai was not accused of foul play and for killing their

  • own allies they would try to have a servant do the task.

  • However, if the warrior was famous for his loyalty and bravery his word would not be

  • questioned and it was ok for him to take the allied head.

  • That being said a samurai could not guarantee that his head would not end up on an enemy

  • spike, so some samurai perfumed their helmets to make sure their decapitated head was well

  • presented.

  • Also, if allied heads were brought back or for those fallen in a siege then their teeth

  • may be stained black to elevate their social rank in death.

  • 1 Samurai did not fight fairly

  • The idea of a samurai as an enlightened warrior who was chivalric and noble is a half myth

  • with some elements of truth.

  • The common thought that a samurai would declare his name on the battlefield and find an equal

  • in rank, who would then pair off in a fair fight is a leftover from ancient times in

  • the earlier parts of samurai history.

  • By the 16th century the first person to clash on a battlefield was called ichiban yarithe

  • first spear and that person should exclaim their name to the opponent, but after this

  • the armies entered into general melee.

  • Samurai would have two types of people with them when at war, a form of man-at-arms who

  • may assist them in combat and also servants who were preferred not to join in the fight

  • but who would help remove their master’s gear from the field of battle.

  • However this means that those men that help in combat may often shoot, stab or slash the

  • enemy from the side and make it a two on one combat or even a two on two situation.

  • There is also the case of the action of the old hawk teaching the young hawk where an

  • elder, father or uncle with take a young samurai into the battle, help him kill a target and

  • then return with the head.

  • But best of all is the promise between samurai to form death squads, this is where one warrior

  • would face the enemy, another warrior would defend the area from people trying to interfere

  • and the last warrior would come up on the enemy from behind and cut his throat and if

  • the group did this multiple times the entire team would gain a head.

  • Not so chivalric after all.

  • Outro I hope that you enjoyed the video.

  • If you found these facts interesting you may like to read the original scrolls which have

  • been translated into this (holds up book) The Book of Samurai by Antony Cummins and

  • Yoshie Minami.

  • It is the first in a series of books that will be published in the future.

  • A link to the book can be found in the description below.

  • For those who would like a free download on samurai skills that can also be found below

  • with information on Antony Cummins and his team.

  • For those who liked this video remember to click like and subscribe.

Hello, I’m Simon Whistler, you are watching TopTenz Net and today we are looking at the

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關於SAMURAI WARFARE的10個最可怕的事實 (Top 10 Most HORRIFYING Facts about SAMURAI WARFARE)

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    黃柏皓 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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