|
|
| Line 1,725: |
Line 1,725: |
| * '''Thomas Lockley:''' Thank you very much for having me. It's been an honor. | | * '''Thomas Lockley:''' Thank you very much for having me. It's been an honor. |
| * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you for listening to this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Next time, we'll be discovering more about one of the most significant figures in Japanese history. You've heard his name, but we're going to take a much closer look at Oda Nobunaga. So join us for the next episode to find out more about the history behind the world of Assassin's Creed. | | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you for listening to this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Next time, we'll be discovering more about one of the most significant figures in Japanese history. You've heard his name, but we're going to take a much closer look at Oda Nobunaga. So join us for the next episode to find out more about the history behind the world of Assassin's Creed. |
| | |-|5= |
| | '''''Japan's First Unifier: Oda Nobunaga''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. In case you haven't seen it, the world premiere of Assassin's Creed Shadows was released recently, and we see that it sets the game in feudal Japan, a time renowned for its samurai and ninjas, a time rich in history, culture, and stories. As we have been for the last few episodes, we're continuing to explore this fascinating period in history, delving into the intricate landscapes of power and ambition, which as a player, you'll be able to explore firsthand in Assassin's Creed Shadows, meeting even more figures who dominated and dared to defy. From the rise of the infamous warlord Oda Nobunaga to the fortified palaces of the capital Kyoto, and the brutal battles of the Tencho Iga War, we'll dive deeper into this period in time that continues to fascinate. In this episode, we continue our epic journey exploring this turbulent time, focusing on the life of Japan's first great unifier, Oda Nobunaga, who we encounter in the But how did he emerge as Japan's dominant daimyo in an era of incessant social upheaval and civil war? To help answer this, I'm joined by Nate Ledbetter of the Department of East Asian Studies at Princeton University. Nate is an expert on 16th century Japan, so he's perfectly placed to help us peel back the layers of history and explore Oda Nobunaga's storied life. Welcome to Echoes of History, Nate. It's wonderful to have you here. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Oh, thank you for having me. Excited to be here. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' We have been kind of skirting around this guy, Oda Nobunaga. We've mentioned him several times. He crops up, obviously, a lot during this history. So I thought this was a really good chance to get to know him a little bit better. So we're going to have a whole episode devoted to Oda and everything that we can find out about him. I'm really looking forward to getting under his skin a little bit. And just to set the scene, Oda Nobunaga lives during this period of great upheaval in Japanese history, the Warring States period. What does Japan look like when Oda Nobunaga is born? So before he's politically active, what is the situation in Japan? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So this is an age called the Warring States period in Japanese, the Sengoku Jidai. And normally what that means when we describe it is that over the previous centuries, the imperial court in Kyoto had delegated control of the military establishment to a succession of warrior governments that we call shogunates or bakufu under the leadership of a shogun. But by the early 16th century, the current shogunate under the Ashikaga family had lost control over administration of the provinces, mostly due to internecine succession conflicts taking place within the ranks of their major supporters and also of their own house, the succession line of the shogunate themselves. We often hear the phrase gekokujo associated with this period or this idea of the low overthrowing the high. So lower ranking officials or samurai kind of rising up against their masters and establishing local dominance. What's really going on here is that with all the conflict within the shogunate and involving the major military governors that were subordinate to it, they're focused on their power struggles within Kyoto and within their own families. And so more and more they have to designate their subordinates out in the provinces, the deputy governors and such, as the local leadership and delegate that local power to them. So more and more of these higher ranking samurai nobles, military governors, members of the shogunate are more and more separated from what's going on in their actual domains that they nominally control. And so many of these subordinate families, the deputy governors and so on, use this lack of supervision to effectively take over control of the provinces. The Oda family, of which Nobunaga is the most famous, is one of these deputy families having governed Owari province initially in the name of the Shiba family of military governors. So when Nobunaga was born in 1534, the Oda family effectively had control of Owari province at this point, though the family itself was fractured and Nobunaga's branch was interestingly not the primary lineage. So kind of to sum up the whole idea of the Warring States period, we have these fractures at almost all levels of military society. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, so if he's born in 1534, it sounds like he's born in the middle of a pretty chaotic period, but he's also of relatively humble origins. You know, as you say, he's not the primary line of the family. He's not sort of a senior noble figure, which obviously makes it all the more impressive what he goes on to achieve. What do we know about what his early life is like? Who are his family and what position of power are they in? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So the Oda family, as I said, they were the deputy governors underneath the Shiba family in Owari. And he's born as the first legitimate son of a man named Oda Nobuhide, who is the de facto leader of the Oda family. Like I mentioned, his line was not the senior line, but Nobuhide was particularly capable and competent and brought his relatives under his control and for the most part, dominated the governance of Owari province. But he was in constant conflict with his neighbors, particularly the powerful Imagawa Yoshimoto to his east and a daimyo named Saito Dosan to his north in Mino province. So Nobunaga's youth would have been one where his family was in constant conflict, both internally and externally. He was designated Nobuhide's heir rather early on. And given the education that you would expect of an heir, he was given four of Nobuhide's high-ranking subordinates as his tutors, so to speak, to raise him up and teach him the ways that he would need to rule, both militarily and politically. But it's often said he was a bit of a wild child who preferred running around with his friends rather than studying, out hunting and raising all kinds of ruckus. Allegedly, he wore outlandish outfits like a tiger skin cloak. And generally, he didn't really act the part of an up-and-coming warlord. You'll often hear that he was called the fool of Owari. And whether this is true or not, if it was true, whether this was an act to throw enemies off guard or accurate and he really was just kind of off in his own little world, it's hard to know for sure. But in 1549, he marries the daughter of Saito Dosan, who is located to Owari's north in Mino province, as part of a peace agreement between Dosan and Nobuhide. And so he's being raised for the role of taking over as the Oda family's heir. It's unclear at this point whether he's really taking that role seriously. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Sounds a bit like one of those annoying rich kids. He's got all dad's money and a nice car to drive around in being flash and everything else, but not taking the role very seriously at this point. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Yes. Yeah. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' What happens then when Nobuhide dies? So, Nobunaga has been prepared. He's had this education, even if he's not kind of invested in it too much. Does he manage to succeed his father smoothly? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Smooth is the last thing that you would probably call it. So, Nobuhide dies in 1551. And despite Nobunaga being his heir, there's some contention based on his pattern of erratic behavior. One of the famous events that is often brought up is at Nobuhide's funeral. Nobunaga shows up allegedly very unkempt, not in the proper formal funeral attire, and acts very disrespectfully, throwing incense at the altar instead of performing the proper respectful rituals. And based off of this, we're told that some of his father's vassals form a faction around his younger brother, while other branches of the family see this as an opportunity for them to seize control, push this loser who's not ready for the job out of the way. Other vassals defect to the Imagawa or plot with the Saito. So, his position upon his father's death is actually very precarious. This somewhat changes, at least according to the stories we were told about young Nobunaga, which we always, of course, have to take with a little grain of salt, being as they were written after the fact, and maybe embellished a bit to build up kind of his legacy. But in 1553, one of his senior retainers, one of these four men who was designated as kind of his tutors and mentors, a man by the name of Hirata Masahide, commits suicide. So, think of the image of seppuku ritual suicide in your head. Can we just go into a bit of detail about what seppuku actually involves? Sure. So, much later in the Edo period, where things have been a little bit more formally codified in terms of what seppuku is, but the word literally means, you know, slicing of the belly, and you'll often hear the kind of more informal phrase harakiri associated with it as well, but it's essentially the idea that the soul of the body is seated in the stomach. And so, as a way to show your sincerity in death, the samurai would often take their short sword, known as a wakizashi, and use it to disembowel themselves, making two cuts in their stomach as a way to both, you know, show their bravery in the face of what must be an excruciatingly painful way to die, but also, you know, releasing their soul, as it were, through both of these avenues, kind of making it a pure death. You know, you'll often hear this act of seppuku being executed in the wake of a defeat in battle that's a little bit overblown. We have this image of the samurai never accepting defeat and always killing themselves rather than surrendering. That is far from the reality. But, you know, certainly in the Edo period, it was often used as a punishment. Sometimes samurai would commit seppuku as a means of following their masters into death if they felt particularly loyal. And at various times, that was outlawed because, well, what's the heir supposed to do and all the senior retainers who are supposed to advise him, you know, as he takes over, commit suicide? Well, you know, he's kind of out of luck. But anyway, another form that this could take was an act called kanchi, which is essentially a suicide of protest, normally done to protest what the person committing suicide would see as, like, unjust policies or maybe unwise decisions by his lord. So in this case, we have Hirata committing this form of protest suicide. And it serves as a way to wake up young Nobunaga to his rather outlandish behavior and how it's being detrimental to both, you know, his own well-being and the well-being of the Oda family. You know, how much of this is actually how things went down, it's almost impossible to say. But it does seem that from this point, there is a bit of a change in attitude. And he does begin to more seriously concentrate on consolidating his control over Owari and the Oda family. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' There's a really interesting parallel, I guess, in English history to Shakespeare's version of Henry V, who he paints as this wild child who immediately that he comes to the throne has this real conversion to an incredibly serious and driven person. We don't know how much of that wild Henry V is Shakespeare's imagination. There's not too much evidence of it. And it sounds like Nobunaga falls into that category a little bit, has a bit of a reputation, but we don't know how much he deserves it. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Yeah, you could definitely say that, at least according to the traditional narrative, he definitely has his Prince Hal stage. And then once his, you know, his father dies and he takes over, he goes through that a little bit more until this incident. You know, one of the theories of this, of course, is that because he understood his weak position, he was attempting to show that he was not a threat to any of the people who would be tempted to take over and overthrow him. That's out there. I mean, again, it's really hard to know the truth of this, and I'm sure it's some combination of all the above. But yeah, there's this idea out there, oh, he was this mastermind from the very beginning, faking it and acting all crazy so that he threw off his enemies. How much is true? How much isn't? I'll leave it up to the audience to decide. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So having had what's positioned as a wake-up call for him, how does Nobunaga then go about gaining control over the Oda clan? Having sort of seemed to alienate several of the other members, and others are positioning themselves for power. How does he bring all of that back together and establish himself as their leader? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So his first fight is to simply gain control of his own family, you know, largely inside of Owari province. There's some pressure from external enemies, the Imagawa to the east. But initially, from 1552 to 1554, he's contending with iterations of rebellion from his uncle, Nobutomo, who conspired to assassinate him and worked with other entities to try to make that happen. Nobunaga catches him and forgives him once. But you know, second time, he continues to plot. Nobunaga captures him and has him put to death. In 1556, again, out of fears that Nobunaga is just not up to the task, several of his major retainers side with his younger brother, Nobuyuki. But Nobunaga, you know, warned of potential treachery. At one point, feigns an illness instead of going to go meet his brother. So his brother comes to meet him. And when he does, Nobunaga has him and his entourage assassinated. So the 1550s is really the story of Nobunaga's consolidation of his power within the Oda family, establishing himself as the leader of the family, and by default, almost the ruler of Owari province. In 1559, his final obstacle is the castle of Iwakura and his cousin, Nobuyasu, who belongs to the senior branch of the Oda line. But he manages to take Iwakura castle and eliminate Nobuyasu. And this ends the internal threats. Now he's the daimyo of the Oda family and in control of Owari province. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's really interesting to wonder whether people underestimated him all along or whether it was that series of threats that really galvanized Nobunaga into the man that he would become. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' I think most of the time in questions like this, I tend to say it's a little bit of column A, a little bit of column B, but certainly having to navigate these struggles initially as he did, and likely, you know, as he was growing up underneath his father, he saw the fault lines along which, you know, different elements of the family fell. That certainly was a good training ground for the political and military maneuvering that would happen later on in his life. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So once Nobunaga has control of Owari province, how does he then go about looking outward and beyond his own borders? Because his province is quite a small one comparatively as well, isn't it? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Yes, so Owari is small, but it centers on a plain, the Nobi plain. Japan is very mountainous, right? So there's only a few large flat areas where cultivation can take place at large scale and Owari happens to sit in one of these, the Nobi plain. So while it's a small province, it's a particularly wealthy one in terms of agricultural income. So it's a good place to be based out of. It's far enough away from the capital that you're not in the middle of the intrigues and plots going on there, but it's close enough that you can get there if you decide to be part of those plots. So everything is really, as it so often is in history, it's a combination of luck, opportunity, and talent. It's really external forces that first act on him rather than him choosing to go out. Like I said, he consolidates his power by 1559 within Owari. In 1560, the powerful Daimyo Imagawa Yoshimoto to his east, who ruled Totomi, Tsuruga, and Mikawa provinces and came from the illustrious Imagawa line, which was one of the pillars of the former Ashikaga shogunate, he decides, or it's usually assumed at least that he decides, that he's going to make a run at marching on the capital of Kyoto to take charge of the central government. So he gathers together an army of 25,000 troops and begins his march east. The first stop is, of course, his neighbor in Owari province, Nobunaga. So he has to go through Nobunaga's domain. On paper, this is going to be very easy. He's got 25,000 troops, which at the time was a very large army, and Nobunaga only has a few thousand men, maybe 2,500. So we're looking at roughly around a 10 to 1 disadvantage. But Nobunaga, despite the fact that his advisors all counsel him to withdraw into his castle at Kyosu and withstand a siege, he decides that, you know, that's a losing strategy because what's he going to do against an attack by an army that size? He decides that his best course of action is to try to seek an opening and attack. I won't believe in the details of the battle because we have so much to cover, but the Imagawa forces by midday had made significant progress against the Odo forces invading. Though the Imagawa army was much larger, it was rather spread out and divided. The vanguard had taken several of these forts that Nobunaga had, but Yoshimune himself was with only a few thousand troops. And at his command post, they took a bit of a siesta, almost, if you will, in this small narrow gorge called Dengaku Hazama. And they were celebrating. Some of the Imagawa troops had already broken into the celebration sake in anticipation of their great victory that they saw coming, because, you know, how could you see anything else? A little bit after this, there's a rainstorm. This was in the summer, so the rainy season in Japan. And this thunderstorm breaks out, and it really helps Nobunaga maneuver his forces through the mountains, through these narrow passes, into position to attack Imagawa Yoshimoto's headquarters camp. They broke out of the tree line to attack the camp, and at first Yoshimoto assumes that it's a drunken brawl taking place amongst his men. Too late, he realizes that it's not, that he's actually under attack. And shortly after that, two of the Oda samurai relieve him of his head. In the aftermath, the Imagawa forces, deprived of their commander, melt away in confusion. And we have this almost legendary victory by Oda Nobunaga, outmanned 10 to 1, destroying the forces of this, you know, great daimyo. So it kind of makes a name for Nobunaga. Another key thing about this battle though, and the aftermath, is that in the confusion of the Imagawa family, with the loss of their head, several of their more talented and younger retainers, one of which we know today is Tokugawa Ieyasu, are able to claim independence. And Ieyasu establishes himself in his home territory of Mikawa, which is just to the east of Owari, and establishes an alliance with Nobunaga. Thus providing this secure flank to Nobunaga's east, allowing Nobunaga to then look, you know, in other directions as he begins to expand. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Incredible combination of luck and judgment and good timing and bad weather and early celebrations. But it all turns out perfectly for Nobunaga. We know he will establish control over someone who is effectively a puppet shogun for him shortly after this. How does he then move from being under such threat and pressure to suddenly becoming one of the most significant figures in Japan? Right. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So first, before I get into that in detail, I do want to say, you know, his father-in-law, Saito Dōsan, had ruled the province to his north, Mino province, but was murdered by his son, Saito Yoshitatsu, who then died since 1561, leaving his somewhat incompetent son, Tatsuoki, in charge. So Nobunaga, his next target is this province to his north, Mino province, which is much larger in size than Owari, and it's somewhat kind of the nexus of road networks in central Japan, where two of the major roads from Kyoto, the capital in central Japan, to the east, run through it. So it's a pretty strategic province to have. So he goes to war against Saito Tatsuoki, and it takes a while, but through diplomacy and bribery of the Saito generals, he's able to convince many of them to join his side, and by 1567, he's weakened them enough to besiege and take the main castle at Inabayama, which he then renames Gifu, to bring it back to the question that you had just asked. This renaming is symbolic, because it's a reference, it's a Japanese reading of the Chinese location where the Zhou dynasty was founded, way back in the BCE era, the early days of Chinese imperial lines. Also at the same time, he begins using his famous Tenkafubu seal, which translates as, all the realm through force. So at this stage, he now is in control of two provinces, which are small, but strategically and economically beneficial. And he's making these things, which in hindsight, we can clearly see are signals of his ambition, and a recognition of the primacy of military power. So was he wearing his tiger skin out hunting with the boys in Owari province, thinking, you know, one day I'm going to march on Kyoto and rule the entire country? I mean, that's hard to tell, right? But at least by the mid to late 1560s, this is his idea. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's striking that he seems to have such a vision so early on, but also that he's so open about it. You know, he's naming places in a way that clearly establishes a dynasty, and he's using a seal that talks about, I'm going to take all of this. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Right. Well, it's also hard though, and again, it's easy to see this in hindsight. It's really hard to say, you know, whether his peers at the time in 1567 took note of this in the same way. Like people across Japan further away, probably, okay, he took another province and, oh, you renamed the city. Okay, great. You know, I don't want to set it up as too dramatic, but certainly whether his peers recognized he had these thoughts, he did. So the victory over Imagawa Yujio Shimoto kind of made his name, but now he has Owari and Mino, which give him a fertile economic base and the two major roads, east-west through Japan. So then he works to consolidate his position by doing some preliminary campaigns into neighboring Ise province and establishing diplomatic relations. So he marries his younger sister, Oichi, to a warlord named Azai Nagamasa, who rules northern Omi province. And this is significant because Omi is the province that lies between Mino and Owari, which he owns, and the capital of Kyoto. So he's, in essence, securing a line of advance for future endeavors. One thing I want to stress is that for us, looking back on it, we have a tendency to look at a society like Sengoku Japan as a game board. If you picture the game of Risk, every territory is controlled by a warlord who is looking to conquer more and more territory until they control the map, and every player has the same goal. But the reality is that most I know were just way more concerned with personal survival rather than national hegemony. They're trying to expand their domain to prevent others from taking it over. They want the next line of mountains so that they can have a more defensible position and deny that to their neighbor. So they're usually conducting military action to eliminate local rivals, strengthen their immediate position. But given what we just kind of noted about Nobunaga, his renaming of his capital with historical reference to a Chinese dynasty at the Tenkofubu seal, we can see that he does have a somewhat more broadly focused goal. But even Nobunaga early on had to work with the existing political framework. As fractured, as dysfunctional as it was, you couldn't just unilaterally decide to start an entirely new government. So we often have the impression that the imperial court in Kyoto was impotent because it had no independent military or economic power, but it still carried immense political, social, and ritual power. And Nobunaga respected that greatly. Likewise, the Ashikaga shogunate had devolved from a relatively strong central government in, say, around 1400 to a shell of its former self by the mid-16th century, when we're talking. But people still thought of it as the legitimate military and political governing structure. The previous shogun, Ashikaga Yoshitaro, had been assassinated in 1565 and replaced by a puppet. So Yoshitaro's younger brother, a man by the name of Ashikaga Yoshiaki, had been traveling around the provinces trying to seek a benefactor who would back his claim and help him march on the capital. So shortly after Nobunaga establishes himself in Gifu, Yoshiaki arrives on his doorstep in 1568, thus giving him a pretext to make his move on the capital. So this is where, you know, how did he get to the point where he was marching towards Kyoto and planning to take control? This is kind of where that comes from. The fact that he can take a legitimate claimant to the Ashikaga shogunate and march on Kyoto under the pretext of putting him into power gives him the legitimacy to do so. So in November of 1568, he enters Kyoto with his army and installs Yoshiaki as the 15th Ashikaga shogun. However, here's where things start to differ from what you might have expected at the time. Because rather than accept Yoshiaki's offer to be his deputy shogun, Nobunaga declines that and any other position that Yoshiaki offers. And we often interpret this as he didn't want to be under the direct authority of the shogun, confined to a specific role. He rather wanted to retain kind of the freedom of action as the real muscle making things happen. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's fascinating that even with all of his ambition and his desire to reunite Japan to some extent, it's been fractured for more than a century. But he's still not looking to sweep away the idea of a shogun and an emperor and a capital in Kyoto. He's not looking to sweep the board clean and start again to reunify Japan. He's looking to rebuild those existing structures to be the scaffold that holds them up and makes them work again. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Absolutely. There's a lot of debate between historians about whether he was a revolutionary figure or a conservative figure. Was he trying to establish a new Japan or was he trying to restore an old Japan? And, you know, there's arguments, I think, for both sides. But I think long term, what he was trying to do was re-establish central control under his leadership. No question about that. But he did want to re-establish that central authority over all of the territory of Japan at this time and end sort of the chaos that we associate with the Sengoku period. But to do that, he needed to do some unusual or unprecedented things. He didn't have this vision of a completely revolutionized society sweeping away the imperial institution. He had great respect for the imperial institution. As we'll see, he didn't have very great respect for Ashikaga Yoshiaki in particular and absolutely intended to use him as a puppet to the best of his abilities. But we don't have this figure of, you know, I'm going to completely wipe away the entire old order. He wanted to buttress the previous order and reform it in ways that were sustainable. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Rather than whether he was a revolutionary or a conservative, we need to try and work out whether he was a conservative revolutionary or a revolutionary conservative. Right. That's a good way to put it. So given his rejection of a role as a kind of deputy shogun or anything official like that, he wants to go off and exercise his own power and authority, no doubt for his own ends. What challenges does he then face to his authority as he becomes more and more of a significant figure in Japan? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Well, clearly, you know, when one warlord rises up like this, it's going to engender resentment by others. In 1570, Nobunaga sends an invitation, sensibly on Yoshiaki's behalf, to local warlords for a reception in Kyoto. And this is almost a way to test who was going to accept his authority and who wasn't. And the daimyo of Ichizen province, Asakura Yoshikage, refuses the summons. So Nobunaga launches a campaign to besiege the Asakura's main castle. But unfortunately for Nobunaga, the Azai, his brother-in-law's family, his brother-in-law being Azai Nagamasa, had a multi-generational alliance relationship with the Asakura. So Nagamasa feels obligated to go to the Asakura's aid, and he launches an attack on Nobunaga's army's rear, forcing Nobunaga to break off the siege and retreat while a rear guard held off the Azai and the Asakura forces. So Nobunaga feels personally betrayed by this man who was a relative by marriage, and the Azai and Asakura are one of the initial threats that he faces. The two sides meet in July of 1570 at the Battle of Anagawa, where Nobunaga was joined by his ally, Tokugawa Ieyasu, and they fight this battle in the shallow Anagawa River. Both sides plunging into the water to engage the enemy. So if you picture this dramatic battle in this shallow river, Tokugawa on Nobunaga's right flank managed to rout the Asakura, and then crash into the flank of the Azai, while at the same time, Nobunaga sends his reserves around the other flank, and it causes the collapse of the enemy. It's a great victory, but the surviving members of the Asakura and the Azai forces find refuge on Mount Hiei, which is a mountain just to the northeast of the capital. And it's the site of the Enuryakuji Temple, which is the headquarters of the Tendai sect of Buddhism, and a military power in its own right. You know, we think of the stereotypical warrior monks. There's issues with kind of that stereotypical image, as you might expect. So what matters is that, you know, this was a Buddhist temple that had essentially an army of its own. And so this prevents Nobunaga from cutting off the Azai and the Asakura forces, and completely destroying them, and he has to back off. Which, as we can gather from Nobunaga's personality, does not particularly make him happy. Another group that, around this time, rises up to challenge his authority, and one that will probably be his longest-running enemy, is what's known as the Iko-Iki, or the Iko League. This was a confederation of followers of the true Pure Land sect of Buddhism, and its headquarters was the Ishiyama Hongan-ji, which was located in what is now present-day Osaka. But it had groups of adherents, called these Iki, or leagues, scattered throughout the provinces of central Japan. And in 1570, Nobunaga starts a war with them, because these self-defense groups, these Iki, and the Ishiyama Hongan-ji itself, resisted political and military control by local warrior rule. In fact, in 1486, the Iko-Iki of Kaga province overthrew the local Daigo, and ruled the province without any samurai rule for almost 100 years. Nobunaga's obsessed, at this point, with re-establishing central unified authority, so he sees this as an unacceptable threat. This is a political challenge, not just a military one to him, but a political challenge to the system that he believes in. So for 10 years, until 1580, he's in this constant on-and-off war with the Ishiyama Hongan-ji and their Iko followers in various locations throughout the provinces. And they're really the linchpin of the various coalitions that are opposing Nobunaga. You know, at this point, these are kind of like the main enemies that he's looking at. As we go through his career, he'll have many more coalitions that form mostly around or with the Iko-Iki as this base that they ally with. But in 1571, he realizes that the only way to solve his problem of encirclement is to break the circle. So he starts with Mount Hiei, the Enryaku-ji temple complex that had given refuge to his enemies. And in the fall, he rings the mountain and has his troops advance up deliberately. And according to eyewitness accounts from the time that are written down, his troops are killing anything that's alive, whether it be monks, laymen, women, children, reportedly even every animal that's on the mountain. And they burn almost every building of this massive temple complex. This is undoubtedly a brutal act. And combined with his war against the Iko-Iki, it is often used as evidence of his hatred of Buddhism. But I think more recent scholarship looks at it from a more pragmatic standpoint. He didn't really hate Buddhism. He hated Buddhist institutions that did not accept his secular authority. So he punished the monks of the Enryaku-ji and destroyed the complex because they supported his enemies and they didn't recognize his hegemony. And this is typical of his whole career. Of course, his enemies and many onlookers at the time were horrified and saw this as a sacrilegious act. But I do want to caution everybody from reading too much into it in terms of anti-religion. He was anti anybody who wouldn't submit to Nobunaga, right? Though this did galvanize some of the opposition against him, this is what draws in the Takeda of Kai province as an enemy in addition to others. And of course, in addition to the human toll, which is horrific, this is a massive loss of life, but it's also a loss of culture, of history. This was a major religious complex, so it had important documents, texts, artwork that all went up in flames with the exception of one small building that got overlooked. So, you know, massive events in both his career, but also in the history of Japan in terms of the loss of information we as historians have. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, it's one of those striking examples of how someone really significant in a country's history can be such a complex figure that, you know, he probably didn't hate the religion. As you say, he saw the political threat, but nevertheless, he did something culturally devastating for his own political ends. Absolutely. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' And, you know, in this, I think we do need to look at him as a pragmatist, but we can still recognize the horror, you know, especially from our modern standpoint of what some of his actions entailed. He was certainly not a merciful man, and if you opposed his authority, he was going to destroy you. That said, I do think it's important as well to keep it in the context of others at the same time would be doing the same things. The burning of temple complexes, especially as a form of political violence, was not unusual. We have many examples of it from Japanese history, so it's easy from the depictions of it sometimes to read that into it. Of course, part of our depictions come from the Portuguese Jesuit missionaries who were there in Japan observing all this, and they're ecstatic that Nobunaga is destroying the Buddhist institutions, so they play that up. And so I think that kind of influences our ideas of, oh, it's against Buddhism. No, he built temples, he supported other religious institutions. It was all political, much more so than any sort of religious idea. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' You mentioned that he didn't have too much time for Yoshiaki, the man he kind of installed as Shogun. How does that relationship play out in the end? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' That's a great question. Early assessments of their relationship by historians assume that Nobunaga's plan all along was to use him as a puppet and then throw him away and take power for himself. I agree with more recent biographers who see it as a little bit more complicated than that. Ashikaga Yoshiaki, obviously, as the Shogun, felt that he should be in charge. So after being installed in 1568, he attempts to rule, but he quickly sees that he cannot do anything without Nobunaga's help. And by 1572, there's some real tension between the two over who's in charge. Nobunaga issued several admonishments, which have been published and are famous, going so far as to note how the people call Yoshiaki the evil Shogun, in scare quotes there, and laying out rules for the Shogun's house to follow. Of course, Yoshiaki takes offense at this and who are you to tell me, the Shogun, how to run things? And so, like I said, early on, historians looked at this as Nobunaga's overstepping his bounds, he's trying to push Yoshiaki out. I think a different reading of it that is more compelling to me is that he really saw that this was the structure that should be in place and was trying to guide Yoshiaki back onto an actual correct path of governance, at least as Nobunaga saw it. And his efforts to maintain relations with Yoshiaki, at least initially, were very sincere. But Yoshiaki is the one who kind of pushes the relationship to the breaking point. In the early 1570s, he's orchestrating coalitions of enemies to move against Nobunaga. In addition to the Ikoiki, he's kind of another linchpin of the different coalitions against Nobunaga, trying to convince different daimyo to turn against Nobunaga, invade, come rescue me and Kyoto and be my savior and I'll grant you XYZ, so forth. This continues until 1573, when it's very obvious that Nobunaga has run out of patience. In 1573, he does march on Kyoto and expel Yoshiaki, which more or less ends the Ashikaga shogunate for good. And then Ashikaga would escape to western Japan, where he would take up residence in the lands of one of Nobunaga's enemies, the Mori family. And from there, he would continue to write different daimyo, constantly trying to create a coalition that could overthrow Nobunaga and reinstall him in power. |
| | * How effective that was? Well, we see that it didn't happen, but he certainly was doing his best the entire time to undermine Nobunaga. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' He sounds a little bit to me like someone who, even if he wasn't kind of my way or the highway kind of guy, he struggled with people who weren't as gifted and competent and driven as he was. And given that he's possibly one of the most gifted and competent and driven men of his time, kind of no one was able to keep up with him and nobody met with his approval and he was almost destined to fall out with everybody eventually. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' In a sense, yes. I mean, it would have been hard, you know, the whole metaphor of you can't have two suns in one sky, right? So eventually, regardless of what Nobunaga wanted, there was going to be a fallout with Yoshiaki, I think, as long as Yoshiaki had any pretensions of actually wielding political power. I think that was one difference between Yoshiaki and, say, the imperial court, the Emperor Ogimachi at this time. It had been well established by this point that the emperor was, you know, the head of the imperial court and the sovereign of the nation, but normal day-to-day political power was delegated to, you know, some sort of warrior governing body, one of the previous shogunates, or so forth. So that sort of conflict was not present with the imperial court. It's a good question as to whether or not had there been imperial court resistance to Nobunaga, how would he have handled that? How would he have acted? We don't see it, so we don't know. But all of his dealings with the court, he's very... deferential is not quite the right word, but he is respectful and shows that he wishes to work with the court. We mentioned whether he's a conservative revolutionary or a revolutionary conservative. I would say that he was probably a revolutionary conservative because he does want to keep the structures in place. He just wants that role as kind of the centre of political power. Perhaps it's because he recognises that he's competent and many of these others are not that he recognises he should be the one pulling the strings, right? Who knows? |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, I guess he struggles to share when nobody else is as good at what he wants to do as he is. We know that Nobunaga would not live to see a united Japan. What happens to him in the end? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So through the course of the 1570s, he's able to continue defeating enemies, expanding his power, bringing other daimyo into his fold or defeating and removing them. And we get to the end of the 1570s and into 1580, where the Ikoiki finally surrenders through the agency of the court. The court noble is sent by the emperor to broker a settlement and a surrender by the Ishiyama Honranji, which ends that. So he really reaches kind of his zenith, Nobunaga does in 1580, 1581 and into 1582. The Takeda family is finally destroyed in 1582. So we're at this total high point. And one of the few remaining enemies in the main island of Japan that he is concerned about is this family called the Mori family. And he's had one of his generals named by the name of Hashida Hideyoshi, who we would later know as Toyotomi Hideyoshi. One of his generals is leading a campaign against them. And having just completed the campaign in the east against the Takeda, he is given notice by Hideyoshi that a siege of a castle is almost complete, but he's worried that Mori reinforcements are going to come. So please send additional reinforcements to me in order to defeat the Mori. There's quite a lot of emphasis on how important this is. And this could be the master stroke that basically secures western Honshu for Nobunaga. So he's returned to Kyoto, and Nobunaga sends his retainer Akechi Mitsuhide with Akechi's army as the initial force to go reinforce Hideyoshi out west. And for reasons that are not quite clear, but of course lead to lots of speculation and dramatic interpretation, Akechi decides that instead of turning west to go support Hideyoshi, he's going to turn his forces east, march into Kyoto, surround the residence of Nobunaga, which is the Honganji Temple in central Kyoto. It's where he normally took up residence when he was in the city, and attack his own ward. We don't really know why. We don't really get a full explanation of Akechi's motives. There's lots of speculation that it had to do with resentment at court treatment by Nobunaga. One thing that we do know is that Akechi's mother had been killed by a rival clan where Akechi had given them his mother as a hostage, as insurance, essentially, against an attack. And Nobunaga superseded that and ordered the attack anyway. So they killed Akechi's mother. Other things are rumors that he was physically abusive and verbally abusive to Mitsuhide personally. You know, how much of this is after-the-fact storytelling, how much of this is true. I mean, it does kind of fit with Nobunaga's character as we see it. So it's probably, again, a combination of all this. But for whatever reason, Akechi decides that this is his moment while Nobunaga is lightly guarded. He's certainly not expecting anybody to attack him in Kyoto. They surround Nobunaga's residence, set it on fire. Nobunaga and his guards fight back but are eventually overwhelmed. Nobunaga commits suicide. And then his heir as well, who was also in Kyoto, is attacked by Akechi's forces and dies. So in one stroke, the Akechi have eliminated, basically decapitated the Oda family and thus ended Nobunaga's career. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It seems like an odd end for a man who had so much success against all of his enemies to be brought down by someone he would have considered a friend or an ally, even if he hadn't been particularly good to him. What do you think we should consider to be Nobunaga's legacy? You know, he loomed so large over this whole period, yet didn't quite complete his own project. In terms of where Japan would go after his death, what can we see as his legacy? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Nobunaga is the first of what are often called the Three Unifiers. We have Nobunaga, then we have Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who kind of picks up the pieces afterwards and carries on the unification of Japan. And then once he dies in 1598, Tokugawa Ieyasu takes over and establishes his own shogunate based in Edo, present-day Tokyo. There's the famous saying where Nobunaga planted the seeds, Hideyoshi harvested the rice, and Tokugawa Ieyasu ate the cake. And there's some truth to that. He's trying to establish order and get back to this previous level of centralized control. He realizes that he can't just do that through winning battles. Things do have to change. So one of the things that he institutes in large scale, though not systematic scale, is land surveys, sending out his administrators to take surveys of the arable land and their rice production yield. What this does is it establishes tax registers, it establishes known income values, and it enables Nobunaga to award rights to the land to his subordinates. And in some ways, assign them or move them based off of income levels. The pieces of land are very modular and he can move his retainers around underneath him. It's really Toyotomi Hideyoshi after him who turns it into a systematic evaluation of the entire Japanese realm. But without Nobunaga having started doing that, who's to say Hideyoshi would have been able to do some of the things he did? So that's one. Also this idea, from a military standpoint, he's one of the first military commanders who is able to have subordinate commanders in control of their own armies, mounting independent campaigns in all directions. And that's something that we don't see before this in the same sort of strategic scale. And then this idea of military force and military being a samurai and they are the political actors, I think is one of his enduring legacies. He destroys independent, non-warrior institutions with the exception of the imperial court. We talked about the Ikoiki and the other religious institutions that he brings under control. This is finished by both Hideyoshi and Ieyasu after him. But it's his notion that everything needs to fall under the central civil authority and that there's no independent religious or other institutions that really matters. In these ways, these are somewhat revolutionary ideas that his successors bring forward and have shaped their policies, which have then, of course, shaped the direction of Japan after him. But I think it's saying too much to say that, oh, he was a revolutionary who wanted to make all these changes. All of these changes came in large part as part of his somewhat conservative goal of re-establishing central authority. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' He's such a fascinating and complex figure who obviously has such a complex legacy to him as well, but such a central part to play in the Japan that we recognize after his life and probably even up until today. It's been absolutely fascinating to try and get a little bit closer to Oda Nobunaga. So thank you so much for joining us, Nate, and sharing all of that with us. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Thank you very much for having me. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you for listening to this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Next time, we'll be heading into the mountains to encounter the shinobi who fought Oda Nobunaga in the Tensho-Iga War. How did the samurai fight the ninja? The answer to that just might surprise you. So join us for the next episode to find out more about the history behind the world of Assassin's Creed. |
| | |-|6= |
| | '''''Samurai vs Shinobi: The Tensho Iga War''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. In case you haven't had a chance to see it yet, the world premiere trailer of Assassin's Creed Shadows has been released, and we can see that the game takes place in feudal Japan. This is a time famous for its samurai and ninjas, a time rich in history, culture and stories. For the next few episodes in this series, we'll be exploring this fascinating period in Japan's history. So far, we've travelled back in time to the Sengoku period, sowed the seeds for the unification of Japan and been introduced to several key figures who define this age of upheaval. In today's episode, we follow the sound of marching footsteps and clashing blades into Japan's mountainous Iga province to learn about the fearsome conflict that was the Tencho-Iga War between 1578 and 1581. Naoe, one of the two main characters in Assassin's Creed Shadows, was born in Iga and is part of the shinobi group that fought to defend the province's independence. To better understand Naoe's story, we'll be exploring what happened during the Tencho-Iga War. Who were the main players? Why was it such a distinctive conflict? And what did the outcome mean for the future of a unified Japan? To help us answer these questions and more, I'm joined again by the brilliant Nate Ledbetter of Princeton University. Welcome back again to Echoes of History, Nate. It's wonderful to have you back to explore another really, really exciting episode in Japanese history. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' It's absolutely wonderful to be back. Thanks. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' We're going to talk today about the Tencho-Iga War. Can you just set the scene for us a little bit? When and where are we in Japanese history? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Okay, so I'll start with the name. The Tencho comes from the era name in traditional Japanese chronology of the time period. So the Tencho period lasted from 1573 to 1592, so we're at the end of the Sengoku period, where Oda Nobunaga is in charge and extending his influence across the land. And specifically, the conflict takes place with one invasion in 1579 and then another invasion in 1581. So the years Tencho 7 and Tencho 9, according to the Japanese chronology. And Iga is a small province surrounded by mountains in central Japan. So it's just a little bit to the southeast of the capital of Kyoto. And at this time, like we said, this is kind of the high point of Oda Nobunaga's control of central Japan. So it's surrounded by the lands of Nobunaga and those loyal to him. And he gained control of neighboring Ise province by first having his second son, Nobukatsu, adopted into the Kitapadake family, which ruled that province. And then later on, having the members of the Kitapadake clan assassinated so that his son rose up to the hierarchy and essentially took over the clan from within. So we're at a point where Nobunaga is extending his power. He is almost supreme, at least in central Japan, with very little opposition. But we have this one small province that is managing to, so far, escape his attentions. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So this is the fly in Nobunaga's ointment as he's trying to repair Japan. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Right. If you were to look at a map of Japan at this time, Nobunaga's markers are all over central Japan. This is like the eyesore sticking out of Nobunaga doesn't control this one little patch that hasn't been filled in with his standard. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And I feel like the Oda Nobunaga that we talked about before would not have liked that little blip on his map. Not particularly. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Everything needs to be under his control. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And what are the main factors that lead up to open war with Ige? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Well, like I said, there's that independence that isn't particularly endearing to Nobunaga. He wants everything under his control. But they're not really necessarily a threat, militarily per se, to him. So for most of the time that he's establishing his hegemony, he is concentrated elsewhere. Ige at this time is ruled by an independent league, or Ikki, that did not recognize any daimyo's hegemony. And even gone so far as to expel the military governor of the province that had been appointed by the Ashikaga. So we have a case where there's this independent territory in the middle of Nobunaga's domains. And his son, his second son, Oda Nobukatsu, was in charge of the province next to it. And was looking to kind of establish his own reputation, spread his wings a little bit. And so here we have Iga province next to him, a place where he can launch an invasion, you know, take it over. It's small, how hard could it be, right? Be an easy victory, and it turns out not to be. And so, you know, that's kind of the background before we get into like the actual details here. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And we've got the basis there for a great story, haven't we? We've got Oda Nobunaga, who is on the rise and is just growing and growing in power. We've got this tiny little island in the middle of all his authority that's resisting him. And we've got this son who's desperate to prove himself to his dad and thinks, I know what I'll do. I'll sort this Iga province business out. Like you say, how hard can that possibly be? Fortunately, it's quite hard. Otherwise, that'd be the end of our conversation, I guess. It would be. It'd be merely a footnote. In terms of the Ikki in particular, in Iga, are there any standout leaders there? It's sort of a league, and they've expelled the senior samurai figure. But are there standout leaders for them, or is it very much a collegiate effort? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' To directly answer your question, the answer is no. I mean, we have the names of a couple of the senior leaders, if you will. But it really was more of a collective than any hierarchical organization that we would associate with, like there being a daimyo and samurai underneath him and so forth. That's not to say that there wasn't a hierarchy. There was. But it's really hard to just name one person as an acting figure on the Iga side of things. And part of this is because of the way that they constructed it. This is born out of sort of the chaos resulting in the wake of the Onin War of 1467 to 1477. That's often seen as the beginning of the Sengoku Age, the Age of Warring States, as we call it, where central authority underneath the Ashikaga shoguns is breaking down. They're losing their connections to the provinces and unable to control things. And so when you have a time of chaos, you have people who are both trying to make their way and fend for themselves. And some of those people do so by preying on others. We have a rise in banditry. We have a rise in lawlessness. We have little local bands rising up, and some of them go on to become legitimate warrior bands and daimyo sometimes in their own right. In response to this as a way to limit internal conflict in their own ranks, in 1494, we see two documents. They're not quite constitutions in the way that we would think of it, but they kind of form the rules for local life within Iga as a community. The first one is a document signed by 350 commoners, peasants, villagers, and so forth. And it's an agreement to abide by specific rules that limit conflict over rice paddy land, access to forests, mountains, and fields. And it kind of gives a general code of conduct. So in the absence of authority coming from the center, they decide to create their own sort of rules for them to live by. And then later on that same year, we see another document signed by 46 people representing families of note from Iga province. We can think of these families as rural samurai. So we're really not yet at a point where the samurai are a hardened social class that we normally think of. But these are warriors. The Japanese term is jizamurai, or warriors of the land. They're not necessarily attached to any particular lord, but they practice the profession of arms and they have military experience. And they're kind of like a class above the peasants and the commoners of the local area. So these 46 families sign an oath vowing not to fight over taxes or the collection thereof to work together to prevent insubordination of the peasants underneath them. And these two groups form a united front in coordination to maintain local order and peace and limit the amount of violence, whether it's internal or whether it's coming from external sources like bandits or even larger warrior organizations like a daimyo from a neighboring province who wants to move in. So there's no one person who holds absolute power. They don't like elect a president or something like that. You know, it's easy to look at this and see, oh, is this a democracy? No, it's not, at least not in the modern sense of we think of it. There is a hierarchy. There are the upper class. Those 46 samurai families are in charge and so forth. But it is much more of a collectively driven organization than certainly the daimyo houses that we are normally associated with this period. Other leagues like this have risen up in other places at this time, fairly common in the absence of central authority for locals to take measures to protect themselves. But most other places, it didn't last very long, either because someone in it decided that they were going to take over and become a daimyo or because unlike Iga, they were not very defensible and so subject to outside pressure from invading daimyo armies and so forth. So one of the things that's important to as you're visualizing kind of this province of Iga is it's ringed by mountains. It's very mountainous internally as well. But there's a ring of mountains around it that prevents easy access to it. It's very easily defensible. And there's six main passes, several on the eastern side, a couple in the north, and then a couple on the western side, through which if you're going to bring an army, you have to go through one of those passes in order to get there. So it was much easier for the Iga Iki to keep outsiders out than it would have been for other similar organizations, which is why they lasted as long as they did. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So it sounds like with Nobunaga as well, we need to add into that idea that this is a blip within his sphere of influence where he's not in control. We can also add to that that he's not a fan of different ways of doing things. We talked about him as maybe being a revolutionary conservative, but he wants Japan to have the structures in place. And here is a place that's doing its own thing, that doesn't have a daimyo, doesn't have a samurai in charge, is outside the structures of Japan. So that's another reason for him to focus his interest there. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Absolutely. Like we talked about in the previous podcast where his violence towards religious organizations stemmed from this idea of do they fall under the purview of the centralized civilian state or not, and him forcing them to do so or going to war with them. This is a very similar thing. He's not willing to allow this kind of grassroots governing by a local community. He wants the same structure imposed over the entire country. So absolutely, this falls outside the bounds of what he's willing to accept. Like I said, it's not really important in terms of his target list as he's rising up the ranks and as he's building his hegemony. We can almost think of this, if we wanted to simplify things, as this idyllic little province full of villages of people mining their own business. That's not entirely true, of course. One of the things that the Iga warriors did was often hire themselves out as contractors to other entities, be they temples or be they other daimyo factions and whatever. So in the 1540s, we have reports of Igamono or men of Iga being hired to do things like espionage or sabotage of the enemy castles. So you can kind of see where we have this league of warriors and peasants that exists in kind of this quasi state of equality, but not really, but for the time fairly egalitarian. And they are capable militarily. Many of them are experienced hunters and trackers through the mountains. They have the kind of outdoor living skills we might attribute to military specialties of today, like commandos or something like that. So while they weren't necessarily trying to take over control, they did also have a military presence outside of their province because they could be hired or requested to assist with campaigns elsewhere. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So from Nobunaga's point of view, they're not a threat, but their existence is a continual offense to him that at some point he's going to want to deal with. Is there a catalyst that brings all of this tension to a head and actually causes him to go to war with them? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So, like I said, they expel the military governor who really wasn't doing a whole bunch anyway, if we're honest. And Nobukatsu, Nobunaga's second son, takes that as an excuse of, oh, see, they're not observing the proper order of things. They're not part of the structure. So he decides on his own accord that he's going to expand his domain into Iga without permission from his father. Part of this is ego-driven. He wants to prove to his father that he can operate on his own and so forth. So in 1578, he dispatches one of his generals, a man by the name of Takigawa Kazumatsu, to build a castle just across the Iga border that they're going to use as a staging point for a future invasion. The warriors of Iga are alerted to this and realize what this means. So they decide to attack and destroy it, which they do in November of 1578. And Takigawa is taken completely by surprise. The castle is burned. Takigawa, in his small force, is forced to retreat. Obviously, cease work on the castle, retreat back to Ise after losing a second battle where they tried to retake the ground. So we have this initial kind of probe into Iga that is very quickly defeated and destroyed. Now, Nobukatsu is somewhat embarrassed. He wants to avenge this. So the following year, in October, he decides he's going to launch a much larger invasion. So he gathers around a little over 10,000 men and invades Iga province through three of those passes that I mentioned. In his main body, he has 8,000 men going through the northernmost pass at Nagano. And then he has a group of 1,500 men through one pass and 1,300 through another pass, these two passes to the south. But again, the Iga forces, speaking to their ability to collect intelligence and know what the enemy is doing, are ready and waiting at these narrow sites to ambush Nobukatsu's forces, which they do. They use their skill in guerrilla tactics and their local knowledge of the terrain. I don't have specific descriptions of the things that they were doing, but you can imagine, right? They're setting ambushes, they're hitting in small groups, they're hitting from all sides, using the terrain and the vegetation as cover, and generally not fighting fair, because why would you? And they inflict heavy losses against Nobukatsu's forces, again, forcing him to retreat in a humiliating defeat. And this is the one that really kind of sparks everything, because now this is too big to hide from Dad, if you will, right? He'd done all this, he hadn't asked his father, he wanted to prove himself. He actually does the opposite and shows himself to be somewhat incompetent, at least in this endeavor, and Nobunaga is furious. He couldn't believe that his son had put himself in a position to be defeated and humiliated like this. So he supposedly threatens to disown Nobukatsu. He doesn't end up following through on it, but he's not pleased. Like I said, he would be very happy to eliminate this kind of island of resistance inside his territory, but it's not a huge priority. So he's very upset that Nobukatsu did this without his guidance, without better planning, and that he failed at it, most important. So he's got other fish to fry right now. This is not totally important to him. But in 1581, he comes back and we have the main invasion of the Tensho Edo War. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Up until this point, it sounds a little bit like a teenager who's thrown a house party without his parents' knowledge and has done an awful lot of damage, and his dad's really, really annoyed about him. You know, it's not the end of the world, but everyone's not very happy about this. But then there is going to be a reckoning. And so when we get to the main events of the Tensho Edo War, before we kick it off in 1581, it might sound like a silly question given the position that Nobunaga's in, but who should we consider as kind of the favorite or the underdog? Because you've painted a really nice picture of Iga as this incredibly defensible place with an incredibly capable population and very limited access to it. So for all of Nobunaga's power, can we consider him favorite in this fight, or does Iga have a really good chance? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' So up front, I'll say that I don't think you could consider the Iga League the favorite at any point. We're just dealing with too much might. In 1581, Nobunaga is really at the height of his power. Not to say that he's not being challenged by other daimyo, but at this point, it's almost inevitable in many people's eyes that he's going to complete the conquest of Japan. Of course, we know that he doesn't, because he meets his untimely end at the hands of an assassination, but barring that, there's no reason why he wouldn't have continued his conquest. And in 1581, he's largely eliminated many of these larger threats, or they're reduced to the point where they're not a threat to his authority in central Japan. So he's able to muster resources and manpower that are just on a scale that Iga clearly cannot compete with. That said, I do want to point out some advantages that the Iga Iki had. One is this long experience with unconventional warfare, we'll say. Another is that because of their makeup, it's not quite egalitarian or democratic in the way that we would think of it, but they're led by lower-level warriors, localized power-based holding warriors, but they integrate the commoner population, if you will, into their organization. Often you'll hear people talk about the Iga Shinobi clan or ninja clan or something like that, and that's misleading because this wasn't a family-based organization in the way that we think of the Oda being a military and political entity organized around the Oda family. That's not what this was, but they were able to conscript almost the members of the community from all levels, give them military training, and utilize them in ways that we don't necessarily see to the same extent in other locations. So it wasn't just these 46 families that signed the oath document saying that they would work together and they're household warriors. It was a mobilization of the entire community, in essence, to resist external aggression. Unfortunately for them, at this point, armies had grown in size. They're not dealing with the same sorts of banditry threats or smaller daimyo armies that they had in previous decades. Nobunaga can, at the snap of a finger, mobilize an army of 60,000, no problem. That all said, as much as we would like to romanticize some of the advantages and some of the things that the Iga collective was able to do, if Nobunaga was serious, there's no question that Nobunaga was going to be the favorite in this contest. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' The Tencho Iga War pits the samurai and Nobunaga and that way of fighting against the shinobi, also known as the ninja. Those are two very cool words that you just kind of glossed over. I need to come back to those words. What do we mean by shinobi and ninja? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' The two words are the same. In fact, they're based on the same Chinese kanji character, which can mean a variety of things, one of which is to sneak or to be unseen. This is where we get the description of them as masters of disguise, sneaking into castles and causing havoc and so forth. Even today, in Japanese, you use the term shinobi komu, to sneak in to somewhere. So that's where that word comes from. At the time, shinobi was in use. There were also groups who were called other things. One of the terms you'll see in documents, particularly in eastern Japan, is the term Murata. And many of these groups started out as either groups of bandits or groups of local level, warriors of the land, like I mentioned in Iga, who didn't necessarily want to accept the authority and be absorbed into a daimyo's organizational system, but were more than willing to do dirty jobs for pay. So pretty much all major daimyo had some sort of relationship with a group like this that they could contract out to do various things, whether it was espionage, whether it was sabotage attacks, or even within Owari, the Oda had a relationship with a group called the Hachisuka, led by a man with that name, who eventually becomes a retainer of Nobunaga, and then of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and then a daimyo in his own right. So as we talk about the Sengoku period and these different groups who rise up to become daimyo, this was one of the paths that one could take, starting out as basically a military contractor for odd, dirty jobs. So back to the idea of shinobi, though. This term is used more in central and western Japan than Murata was, and it's one way to describe sort of these special operations missions or roles that the Iga members, or just to the north of Iga is Omi province, and the district of Omi province that borders on Iga is known as Koka. We have a group there that sort of formed their own league, much like we see in Iga, in the district of Koka, and that gives rise to these legends of the Koka ninja versus the Iga ninja. Sometimes you'll see Koka romanized as Koga, K-O-G-A or K-O-K-A. The local pronunciation is Koka, so that's what I'm going to go with. We see these two kind of rise in our imaginations as competing ninja clans throughout time and history, and that's not really accurate. I mean, there were times where they did conflict, but there were also times where they cooperated with each other, you know, recognized each other as kindred spirits, if you will, in terms of maintaining independence and doing these sorts of contract jobs for various lords and so on. Koka falls under the control of Oda Nobunaga as he conquers the province of Omi, so they don't quite have the same independent tradition that we see in Iga with the Iga-Iki and the Iga League, but they develop somewhat a similar reputation, and it's these leagues specialties of clandestine warfare, you know, guerrilla tactics and so forth that later balloons into the modern ideas of ninja and shinobi. One of the things that I do want to stress is like you mentioned that this pits our idea of samurai versus the shinobi or the ninja, and that's a false dichotomy because like I mentioned, you know, there were samurai, local samurai, who were participants and even the leaders of the Iga-Iki, training the peasants in how to do various types of warfare and guerrilla defense. There were also in other examples that we look at of the shinobi or the ninja, there are plenty of samurai who were doing those types of missions. So it's more like if we were to put it into modern terms, conventional versus unconventional military sets, right? You know, you have the army who does the let's go attack with tanks and siege territory or whatever, but then you have within the army, there are certain units who are trained in special operations and do more of the sneaky, cool stuff that makes it into movies, right? And that I think is a better way to kind of frame the idea of what a shinobi is at this time. They're warriors, they could fight conventionally, and many of them did, but they would also have these additional skill sets that allowed them to do some special missions. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, so maybe we've slightly romanticized our visions of ninjas as all dressed in black with smoke bombs going off and assassinating everybody. But we should think of them perhaps as modern special forces as, you know, the UK's SAS, the American Navy SEALs, that kind of absolute pinnacle of military ability in guerrilla warfare. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Yes, and doing, you know, very similar things, whether it's, you know, deep intelligence gathering in enemy terrain, or whether it's extraction missions, or sometimes taking out the enemy and so forth. So it's almost better to think of it as like an occupation than it is a lifestyle. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Given that this war has begun, we understand that Nobunaga is going to be pretty much unstoppable once he focuses his mind on it, although he's going to meet some resistance. How does the war play out? And is there a key moment that determines the failure for one side or the other? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Well, I hate to be reductive, and I hate to be unromantic, I guess I should say, in this. But really, the key moment of failure is when Nobunaga decides to get serious and invade Iga with more of a plan than his son had. So we like this idea of the romantic notion of a guerrilla defense against a powerful foe reminiscent of Vietnam or Afghanistan against major powers. But that's not what this was. It was not a protracted war once Nobunaga decided to invade. Even Nobunaga's invasion only lasted a day before he was turned back. The second larger invasion of 1591 lasts nine days. Unlike this protracted guerrilla war that we might have in our minds, it was really a quick invasion by Nobunaga, quickly taking a couple castles, receiving their submission, and then everybody moves on with their lives. To go into the details, Nobunaga invades September 30th, and it's a much larger scale. Different reports of the war say he had somewhere between 40,000 or 60,000 troops. And the key that he really does is not only numbers, but it's the fact that he owns all the territory surrounding Iga. So he's able to send army forces that are equivalent largely to the size of the force that his son had in 1579. But he can send that from six different sides. And this means that the Iga Iki cannot concentrate their forces to prevent any of these invasions coming in from any one pass. Whereas, you know, in 1579, they only defend three passes from one direction. Now it's six passes coming from all directions, including their neighbors to the north in Koka, who, as I said, Nobunaga owned Omi province by this point, so had the assistance of the Koka specialists in guerrilla operations and warfare to advise and assist him. And this is probably where we get a lot of the imagery of this rivalry between Iga and Koka, because Koka did assist Nobunaga in his invasion. He also allegedly had some Iga members who offered to him to help show him through the passes and give him that advantage. So there may have been internal to Iga support for Nobunaga. So the image that we have of the Iga defense turning back the samurai really comes from the 1579 invasion by Nobukatsu. Nobunaga invades, he outnumbers the Iga defenders about four or five to one. And the Iga defenders are spread across the province, they can't concentrate in one location. They end up being concentrated in two castles, one in the north, Hijiyama Castle, and one in the south, Kashiwada Castle. But it all ends with the surrender of Kashiwada Castle on October 8th. At that point, there's no more organized resistance to Nobunaga. It's overwhelming force, and he knows it, the Iga Iki know it, it's the end. And so Nobunaga himself visits Iga in early November to take a tour of his new province, and then withdraws it and gives it to his son Nobukatsu as part of his domain to administer. So I apologize that it's anticlimactic, almost. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' That leads me to an interesting point, because it does sound so, as you say, anticlimactic. And it isn't this huge power struggle that goes on for a long time between two different ways of doing things. Yet we still remember it as a significant moment. The Tensha Iga War is a thing that is remembered. Why does it have such a legacy? Why does it stand out in a period in Japanese history that is all about war and fracture and conquest? Why does this one stand out? |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' That's an excellent question, because you're absolutely right. From a military campaign standpoint, it's interesting that the first invasion is repelled in the way that it is. But the second invasion is not really all that remarkable in terms of military campaigns compared to his other campaigns against some of the Daimyo or the Iko-Iki or Kie that we talked about in the previous podcast. So why do we remember this? It's because of Ninja, Shinobi, right? We have these remnants of the Iga-Iki who are now no longer free, in a sense. They are under Nobunaga's control. The territory is absorbed into Nobunaga's territories, just like other formerly independent locations, and they would not rise again as an independent force. Like we talked about in the previous podcast, Nobunaga's overriding ambition is to eliminate any alternative sources of political legitimacy, whether it's religious, whether it's military, or whether it's this sort of not really democratic, but it kind of almost feels democratic to us, quasi-egalitarian state. So all of that goes away. It is now a domain administered by one of Nobunaga's retainers. It would go on to be a domain held by a Daimyo underneath the Edo period shoguns of the Tokugawa. The reason I think it sticks with us is because of this image of resistance in an unconventional way. We have this image of guerrilla-style resistance by well-trained, mountain-savvy warriors of the shadows, and it largely comes to us because once Iga is conquered, if you didn't die in the campaign, what are you going to do? You have no homeland anymore. I suppose some people probably stayed and just served the Daimyo that was placed on top of them, but many of them chose to leave Iga and work as contract warriors for hire. So taking the skills they had become famous for and using those as a means to gain both economic stability and legitimacy, find themselves employment. So we hear stories about different men of Iga. Igamono becomes almost like a synonym for shinobi. If you were to hire a man from Iga, everybody knew what you were hiring this person for. It was to do cloak-and-dagger dirty deeds. Many of them went to work for a retainer of Tokugawa Ieyasu who has become famous in ninja lore, a man by the name of Hatori Hanzo. Hatori Hanzo had family ties to Iga. He's often referred to or portrayed as in pop culture as a ninja, but he was a samurai retainer, a warrior just like many of the warriors that fought for any of the Daimyo of this period. He appears in most of Tokugawa Ieyasu's battles until Hanzo dies in the 1590s. He is considered one of Tokugawa Ieyasu's closest retainers. But because through his family ties, he had a knowledge base of these sort of unconventional guerrilla tactics. He also had, through those ties, the ability to kind of act as a landing place for many of these men of Iga. And so many of them went to work for Tokugawa Ieyasu under the command of Hatori Hanzo. And so these later notions of the ninja as black-clad, sneaking around castles at night and so forth come from when the men of Iga spread out and became these contract warriors hired to do these sorts of clandestine jobs. And that fact that many of them worked for would eventually become the leader of all Japan in Tokugawa Ieyasu. There's actually a gate of what is now the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, but underneath the Tokugawa shoguns was the Shogun's Palace. One of the gates is named the Hanzomon, the Gate of Hanzo, the Hanzo Gate. And this is because Hatori Hanzo and the men of Iga that he recruited acted as a special guard force for the Tokugawa shoguns. And so, you know, here you have these men who are trained in sneaking into castles, assassination, espionage. Well, who better to defend against that sort of thing than people who are trained how to do it? And so one of these gates gets named after him because it was this force that was responsible for guarding that part of the gate and performing espionage and sabotage and irregular warfare on behalf of the Tokugawa. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Fascinating. So Iga as a province fell, but the sort of the idea of Iga continued and flourished in other ways and in other places. And it's been fascinating to talk through this episode. And just to get to talk about Hatori Hanzo shinobi ninja has been absolutely cool. So thank you very, very much for joining us again, Nate, and for going through the details of the Tensho Iga Warforce. It's been absolutely fascinating. Thank you very much. |
| | * '''Nathan Ledbetter:''' Oh, absolutely. A pleasure. And thank you again for having me. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you for listening to this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by HistoryHit. Next time, we're swapping the mountains of Iga for the bustle of Japan's imperial capital, Kyoto. What role did the city everyone wanted to control have to play in the Sengoku period and the story of the unification of Japan? So join us for the next episode to find out more about the history behind the world of Assassin's Creed. |
| | |-|7= |
| | '''''Kyoto: Japan's Imperial Capital''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis, currently in this series we're deep in the heart of an era that has shaped legends. The world premiere trailer for Assassin's Creed Shadows has been released and we can see that the game takes place in feudal Japan, a time renowned for its samurai and ninja, a time rich in history, culture and stories. So over these episodes we're continuing to explore this fascinating period in history. So far we've travelled back in time to the Sengoku period, sowed the seeds for the unification of Japan and met some of the key characters that helped define this age. In this episode our journey takes us back to the heart of imperial Japan, to the city that was the country's capital for a thousand years, Kyoto. In Assassin's Creed Shadows as a player you'll get to visit the imperial city, wander through Kyoto's streets or perhaps gain an even better view from the rooftops, jumping from one building to another along the city skyline. Today we're joined by author and historian Lesley Downer who specializes in Japanese history, particularly the geisha. Lesley's latest book The Shortest History of Japan is out now, so who better to help us peel back the layers of history to reveal how Kyoto came to be the cultural and political centre of Japan and how conflict over who controlled the city laid the foundations for Japan's unification at the end of the 16th century. Hi Lesley, thank you so much for joining us on Echoes of History. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' Thank you Matt, very pleased to be here. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's a pleasure to have you. So we're talking today about the city of Kyoto which most people will think of Tokyo as the capital of Japan but Kyoto was a very important city in the periods that we're talking about. So in terms of geography whereabouts in Japan is Kyoto? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' So Kyoto is the absolute heart of Japan, it's exactly in the middle and geomantically, let's go to geomantics, it's perfectly placed to be the capital city which is what it was for a thousand years. It's got mountains behind it on three sides, it's got the sea in front, it's got two rivers running through, it fulfills all the necessary requirements of feng shui to be the perfect place for a capital. So Tokyo has been the capital for about less than 200 years and before that Kyoto was the capital for a thousand years. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And what is it about that arrangement of mountains and the sea and the rivers, why does that make it an ideal location? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' It's in terms of auspiciousness, it's the Chinese rules of geomancy, the Chinese rules of feng shui, it's the most auspicious place. It was also central so therefore you can get down to the south to Kyushu, you can get up to the north which when the city was founded was where the so-called wild tribesmen of the north were whom the Japanese of that time wanted to conquer. So it's centrally located, it has roads branching out in every direction, also it has rivers which is useful for carrying goods to and forth but it's not really a practical matter. I suppose also the mountains provide protection from three sides. In terms of climate it's not so ideal, it's called a banshee, it's like a basin and it collects the heat and the humidity in that low circle of land that it lies on. So it's quite hot, quite steamy, you can see the mountains, it's very beautiful. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Sounds incredible. I can imagine the mist rising from the city up into the mountains. When does Kyoto begin to rise to prominence in Japanese history? When does it emerge as the capital city? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' It didn't emerge, it was created as capital city. Emperor Komu, who was the greatest emperor in Japanese history, he was the charlemagne of Japan and before his time the capital had been Nara, but it was kind of taken over by the Buddhist priests. It was rather like, was it Henry the, I forget which Henry, who said, you know, who will rid me of this turbulent priest? But there were a lot of turbulent priests around, Henry II, yes. And there were all sorts of scandals to do with these Buddhist clergy. And then he, Emperor Komu, founded a capital in Nagaoka, which is near Nara. And that one, there was an uprising, people got killed, there were ghosts, obviously not going to be any good as the capital. So he then set out on a supposed hunting trip with his geomancers to find the perfect place. People were not particularly concerned with practical considerations, they were concerned with where would be auspicious. And so he settled on Kyoto as the place to be his capital. And he then had it built, and that was an enormous job to build it. And it was in 794 that he, with an enormous entourage of his attendants and his army and everybody else, arrived by palanquin in Kyoto, in the Imperial Palace there. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And so is Kanmu then still remembered as a foundational figure in Japanese history? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' Yes, he was the greatest emperor. He was the only emperor that really wielded a lot of power. After him, emperors stopped wielding power. And also before him, quite a lot didn't wield that power. There were always regents who were ruling instead. But Kanmu was a very decisive emperor, who was actually very strong and very brilliant. But after him, a particular family, the Fujiwara, took over power. So although there was always an emperor throughout the whole history of Japan, there has always been an emperor descended in an unbroken line of descent from the sun goddess. But none since Emperor Kanmu have had power, and not that many before him either had power. So it's always been a system in which you have, rather like our King Charles, you have the figurehead at the top. But there's other people that are actually making the big decisions. And that was how it was after Kanmu. But in Kanmu's time, he made the big decisions. And one of his big decisions was to build the capital in Kyoto. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And does Kyoto also at the same time or later, does it emerge as a spiritual centre for Japan too? Does the Buddhist religion centre itself in Kyoto or does it remain separate? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' The Buddhist religion is a very complex thing. And there's an awful lot of different sects. It's rather like, you know, where is the centre of the Christian religion? Is it Rome? Is it Constantinople? Is it Canterbury? There were the different sects of Buddhism arrived in Japan at different times. And the first sect grew up in Nara, as I said, and caused trouble. And that stayed in Nara. The whole point was to leave those priests behind in Nara and move to Kyoto. Other sects then grew up. A lot grew up at the time of warrior rule. They grew up in Kamakura, not in Kyoto, including the Zen sect, which became very dominant, particularly because it was the chosen sect of the warrior class. Its kind of ethics, its mode of being, its simplicity, its asceticism, its kind of purity, its lack of words made it appeal very much to the warrior class. And there were many great Zen prelates who set themselves up in Kyoto. So if you go to It's absolutely full of Zen temples, and other temples too, but I would say primarily Zen temples. The Zen priests had a link with China. And they were able to facilitate trade with China to bring back ideas, bring back goods. So the Zen church became very wealthy, as well as being very influential. And one of the very first Zen prelates was a man called Musou Soseki, who was the mentor of one of the first shoguns, who was one of the Ashikaga shoguns called Takauji. And Musou built the wonderful moss temple in Kyoto, which in his day was not mossy at all. And he also built Tenryu-ji, which is the flying dragon temple. And that was to commemorate the soul of one of the emperors who had died, unfortunately, as a result of the shogun's actions. So that's a very famous temple that he founded. And in that temple, he created a beautiful garden. And one of the contributions he made was to decide that you could attain enlightenment, you could have a Zen life, you could practice Zen meditation, not just by meditating, but also by making beautiful gardens, by doing beautiful calligraphy. And then other arts grew up connected with Zen. In fact, most of Japanese culture, not sure whether this is an exact thing or not, but a lot of Japanese culture is imbued with Zen. So later Japanese cultural things like ink painting, the noh theatre, the tea ceremony, are all kind of linked with Zen. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I think for me, that early connection with the warrior class is interesting because we associate Zen with being really calm, and maybe disconnected from that idea of violence. So it's beginnings connected very closely to the shoguns and the warrior class is just interesting to me, I think. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' There's sort of two threads throughout the whole of Japanese life and Japanese history. And one is the kind of austere Zen thread, which Westerners tend to really like, and the kind of very plain, simple buildings without any furniture in and straw mats, beautiful smell of rice straw, wooden walls, and all that. And that approach appealed very much to the samurai who were very pure and direct in their attitude to life. Samurai weren't particularly about violence. Violence was sort of incidental. It was about how to lead a very direct and pure life. And the other side is the Shinto side, which is to this day, colourful and wild and crazy. And there were huge carnivals with men in loincloths, I'm using the present tense here, carrying shrines, carrying the Shinto gods on their shoulders, dancing through the streets of Kyoto and every other Japanese city, drinking lots of sake. That goes on and Zen goes on. And that's a side that Westerners tend not to quite so much identify with Japan. And that relates to a figure we're going to come to in a while, I suspect, which is Hideyoshi. There's the flamboyant side of Japan, and there's the aesthetic side of Japan. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So how then is Kyoto affected by the Sengoku period? As we move into this period of fracturing, and then towards the reunification of Does Kyoto remain important, even as power is dispersed more widely across Japan? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' So just before we get to the Sengoku period, we have various very important shoguns, the Ashikaga shoguns, Ashikaga Yoshimitsu. Yoshimitsu was the third in the line of the Ashikaga shoguns, and there'd been lots and lots of warfare before his time. And the Ashikaga shoguns were of the warrior class. So to get to be a shogun, they were of the Minamoto family, which entitled them to be shoguns. But the first two spent most of their reigns putting down all the kind of rival problems that were coming up. Yoshimitsu was very, very clever, and he was also a great patron of the arts. And he, first of all, built the Flower Palace, which was to the north of the emperor's palace, indicating that he was more powerful than the emperor. And the emperor came to his palace for a visit. He stayed for about five days in the Flower Palace. And they had boating, and they had dancing, and they had theater, and they had all these wonderful things. And in the end, both the emperor and Yoshimitsu were 23 at the time. And the emperor poured some sake for Yoshimitsu, which emperors don't normally do. So Yoshimitsu was incredibly pleased. So he did a dance in response to having had sake poured for him. He then, as soon as he could, he did what a lot of these guys did, which was he abdicated, gave the kind of token power to his son, which he didn't have to worry about admin. And he could then spend his whole time being a patron of the arts, which is what he really liked. And he founded a temple called Shokokuji, which was the main school of painting for a whole school of artists. There was the greatest ink painting artist of Japan called Sesshu, came out of that school. He also, he fell in love with a young lad called Zeami, who was 12. And Zeami became his companion. And Zeami was the one who created under his auspices, the no theater. So Zeami was from a theater family. So clearly, he was very, very low class by definition. But because he was Yoshimitsu's companion, he was able to mix with the most cultured people in the entire land and acquire all that gloss. And he then created a theater, which would be for these people, a very sort of austere, ethereal, beautiful theater, which would be for very, very cultured people, which was the no theater. So Yoshimitsu patronized all these different sorts of art, sponsored them, encouraged them. Also, the tea ceremony was growing up in his time. Those are the main things, I think, ink painting and the no theater. Also pottery, ceramics, calligraphy, poetry writing. Poetry writing goes right through the entire history of Japan. People are always writing poetry. He is famous as a major patron of the arts. That's the whole point of Yoshimitsu. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And is it under Yoshimitsu, do we see the high point of the power of the shogun? If he's now being considered above the emperor and the emperor is serving him sake, are we seeing a real high point of the shogun and the shogun's power in Kyoto? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' Yeah, that's quite an interesting question, because that's probably right, that this was the high point of the power of the shogun in Kyoto. His grandson, Yoshimasa, was the one who presided over Kyoto being burnt down. So that was obviously a low point of the power of the shoguns. And after them, people like Oda Nobunaga and Hideyoshi could not become shogun because they were not of the right family or the right class, but they could become very, very powerful and become the regent. But then the most powerful shoguns of all, of course, were the Tokugawa, but they shifted their power base to Edo. So within Kyoto, probably Yoshimitsu was the most powerful of the shoguns. And then after him, we have the Sengoku period, which is the period of incredible warfare, which is completely bonkers warfare. I mean, it was a couple of different lords who really hated each other. There was a whole excuse for it, but the excuse is kind of irrelevant. These two lords, I think it was the Hashimoto's and the Yamanas have been itching to fight for a long time, and they fought for 10 years. It's said that they destroyed the whole of Kyoto. That's not quite true. They destroyed the upper class part of Kyoto. So 10 years of fighting included looting, arson, and all these other things. But this mainly happened, this was the temples, this was the palaces, that lot got destroyed. Meanwhile, the shogun who lived at that point was a guy called Yoshimasa, who was living during the end of the 15th century. And he retired. He was very interested in the arts, and he was not remotely interested in fighting, and he kept well out of this fighting. And he went off to the east of the city, and there he built a fabulous pavilion, the Silver Pavilion. And there he carried on having a life of leisure and art with his friends while all this was going on in Kyoto. His pavilion was facing away from the city, so he didn't have to see it was burning. And it was facing towards the mountains on the east. And he was, again, an amazing patron of the arts. And under him, ink painting flourished, pottery flourished, every possible art form. Oh, linked verse became very important. So the war came to an end. The part of the city that had not burnt down was the part where the merchants and the artisans were, because they were poor chaps, and so nobody bothered with looting them. But they weren't that poor. So they were actually supplying and selling stuff to both sides in this war and getting richer. And the end of the Onin War, this is the Onin War, everything had sort of fallen apart because Kyoto was in such a state of devastation. The emperor was very poor. One emperor had to wait for about 10 years for some donor to pay for his coronation. And another emperor died and didn't get buried because nobody could afford to pay for a funeral. That took quite a long time. And another emperor sold his calligraphy. That was the only way he could kind of keep going. And Francis Xavier, the Jesuit priest, showed up in Japan at that time. He showed up in a city called Yamaguchi. And his theory was, I will go to Kyoto, I will convert the emperor to Catholicism, and then everybody else in the whole country will follow him. And he got to Kyoto. It was a complete wreck. It was sort of a burnt out ruin. He couldn't find the emperor. So he gave up. So that was Kyoto. The result of that was the whole society kind of fell apart. And a lot of the lords headed out to the provinces, partly because they were broke because they'd had their houses burnt down. Meantime, quite a lot of peasants and serfs could come out of the countryside into the city and recreate themselves as merchants or as artisans, because they could make things, they could sell things. And so a whole new culture grew from that period of incredible disaster. In fact, a really fantastic and flamboyant culture arose from that period of disaster. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' How does Kyoto become involved then in the reunification of Japan? Is it still somewhere that people focus on as the capital? If you want to control Japan, you have to control Kyoto. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' It was the capital. It just was the capital. So the first great unifier who eventually started bringing stuff together was Oda Nobunaga, who was a really amazing figure. And he came from a very small domain, very small, if you like, princedom, and through brilliant, brilliant warfare, managed to take more and more land. And with each land, his army grew bigger and bigger. And eventually, it's very complicated, but he was asked to reinstate the shogun. The big question was, who's the shogun? And the shogun, it was still the old shoguns, just like the ones I mentioned, Yoshimitsu and Yoshimasa, who had been such patrons of culture. So one of their descendants, Yoshiaki, was around, and he was a pretty hopeless guy, but he was officially the shogun. So Nobunaga's excuse for entering Kyoto was to reinstate him as shogun. But actually, he, like a lot of these guys, Yoshiaki, the shogun, was very treacherous. He wanted to get rid of Nobunaga, and he instigated a plot against him. So Nobunaga had him arrested and taken off to a castle in the middle of nowhere and left there forever. So that was the end of him. Nobunaga could not become shogun because shoguns had to be members of a certain family. And he was not a member of that family, the Minamoto's. But he was definitely the most powerful person in the land. And he also had to butter up the emperor. So the emperor was still rather broke. The emperor throughout centuries was very often very poor and very often just basically getting pocket money from whoever is in power, but still had respect and was still officially descended from the Sun Goddess, the most respected person in the entire land. So Nobunaga then gave the emperor lots of money and burnished the imperial palace, made it good. So he gave himself legitimacy as a ruler by helping out the emperor. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So aside from the damage done to Kyoto at the beginning of the period, the political fracturing of Japan and then it's coming back together doesn't really impact Kyoto's position and power. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' No. Also, Japan, unlike England, is a country of up to that point, mainly wooden buildings, and the country of lots of earthquakes. If you've ever been there, you know exactly what to do if there's an earthquake. I'd be under my desk in a second if there was an earthquake. So people are used to everything falling down, and they're used to everything going on fire because that happens in earthquakes, and they're used to rebuilding. So it didn't take as long as it would have taken to rebuild London, to rebuild Kyoto. It didn't take that long. So it could be rebuilt pretty quickly. And it happened again and again in the history of Kyoto and also in the history of Edo, which was the city that later became Tokyo. Time and time again, they were burnt down. So Kyoto was back on its feet quite quickly, but it was just known to be the capital. The name Kyoto means capital city. Kyoto is the capital and Toh is city. And the name Tokyo, incidentally, Toh is eastern and Kyoto is the same, Kyoto is capital. But Kyoto was the capital and that was that. And so each of these unifiers, the first being Nobunaga, first of all established themselves in Kyoto. So Nobunaga didn't finish the process of unification. He had a very dramatic and spectacular assassination by one of his own men. It's an amazing story. But that happened in Kyoto. He was in a temple where it was his land. He thought he was absolutely fine. He didn't have that many guards and one of his own generals turned against him. So he was killed there. And his trusted lieutenant, who was a guy called Hashiba Hideyoshi. Hashiba Hideyoshi had a lot of different names. He started off the son of a farmer and he was called Hiyoshi. And he was also called Saru-san, which means Mr. Monkey because he was an ugly bloke and looked like a monkey. He was small and ugly. He had a lot of girlfriends. He had a really devoted wife to whom he wrote wonderful letters. This is all by the by. Hideyoshi is a great guy. Hideyoshi came galloping back from the campaign he was engaged in when he heard that Nobunaga had been killed. And basically Nobunaga's method had been force and violence. Hideyoshi was the golden tongue. He used persuasion. He was nice to people. And he got everybody to pledge allegiance to him. Everyone right across the whole archipelago as it existed at that time. So that didn't include what is now Hokkaido. But from the top of Honshu Island down to the bottom of Kyushu, pledged allegiance to him. And then, so there's this period of 30 years between when Nobunaga walks into Kyoto, which is in 1568, and Hideyoshi's death in 1598. That 30 years was an unbelievable period of glory. And because Hideyoshi came from a poor family, he was a farmer's son. He had climbed his way right through the ranks, which only two people in the whole of Japanese history did. But he sort of didn't have anything to prove to anybody. He was very nice to the emperor, but he loved culture. He wanted to enjoy all those wonderful things that the upper classes had. But under him, the sort of culture he liked was show. He liked display. He liked sort of flamboyancy. For example, there are paintings of the wonderful kimonos people wore. And there are also beautiful paintings of how Kyoto looked with all the people on the streets, people dancing, the beautiful buildings, the temples, the palaces. He built a palace in the middle of called Jūrakudai, in the middle of Kyoto, where Nijo Castle is now, for those of anyone who's been there, right in the center. And then he also built Momoyama Castle in the south of Kyoto. And he also, while he was at it, I'm not sure if I'm answering your question anymore, but he had an enormous tea party for the entire population of Kyoto, the entire population, including all the poor people, and got them all to come. And it occupied a whole sort of enormous shrine grounds. And I think there was something like 800 tea pavilions there. Part of tea is displaying your beautiful utensils, and he displayed his gold utensils. And he also had an entire tea hut made of gold, the Golden Tea Hut, which is sort of ironic, because the whole point of tea is that it is poor, and it is aged, and it is austere, and it is all those things. He did the reverse, but that was okay too. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Bringing a bit of bling to the tea ceremony. You mentioned then that there were some illustrations of Kyoto. Do we have a good idea of what Kyoto may have looked like in its heyday? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' It depends what you think was the heyday. I mean, we know what it looked like in Emperor Kamu's time when it was founded. Yeah, we know that very, very well. I think for some reason we know that better than we do how it looked in Hideyoshi's day, but it looked quite similar. So it was laid out in a grid plan. Let's start with Emperor Kamu. So in the Heian period, it was laid out on a grid, like a chess board, with equal-sized square areas. And then it had long kind of boulevards going down the middle. It had small lanes going off to the sides. It had the Emperor's palace up at the top with beautiful green roofs, red columns, very spectacular. You could see the Emperor's palace wherever you were. And along these boulevards, people trundled in ox-drawn carriages. Ladies were hidden, always hidden. But when they'd trundle up and down in ox-drawn carriages, they'd always let a bit of their brocade robes sort of flow out of the window so that people would know there was somebody really special inside. There's a huge story of what their lives were like in Heian. It was very interesting. People would write poetry. One of the key things was whether you were any good at writing poetry or not. If you heard that a lady was beautiful, you would compose a poem, and you'd write it on beautiful scented notepaper, and you would have it sent to her, and she'd take a look at it. You'd never seen her because you don't see these ladies. You would not have seen her. And you, of course, would be a prince or an aristocrat or a noble. You wouldn't be just a person. And she would take a look at your poem, look at your calligraphy, look at your paper, and decide if you were worth getting to know any better or not. And if she thought you were, then she would brush a reply. These are very short poems. And she'd send it back, and then you would take a look at it, and you'd think the same thing, oh, that calligraphy is not that great. Maybe I won't bother. Or you'd think, wow, this is amazing calligraphy. And then you would wait till nighttime. And when it was pitch dark, because it was pitch dark, you would go in to her palace, and you wouldn't see her. And all around would be her servants. But servants don't exist, and they can't see anything, so that's okay. And they would know it was you, because you would be wearing a particular perfume that you had blended yourself. And wherever you went, everybody would know that this is Prince Genji. So you would go, and you'd make love to her in the dark, and then you'd leave before cockcrow. And maybe if things went on, you might get to have a look at her and discover whether she was actually beautiful or if she wasn't beautiful. So there was all this stuff going on among the aristocracy. That was Kyoto in that heyday, which is around like the 9th, 10th centuries, which is the era of the Tale of Genji, which is the world's first novel. Then if we kind of sweep past all these other wonderful periods, and we get up to the time of Hideyoshi, Hideyoshi sort of basically laid out Kyoto as it is now. He cut those squares in half, so you have rectangular blocks rather than square blocks. He also built a wall around the outside of the city, which isn't there anymore, but he had that built. He also built these glorious palaces. So you would have very glorious palaces on the main boulevards, which again, are still always in like a chess board, laid out like a grid. And you'd also have glorious temples, probably not radically different in appearance from glorious palaces. And then you'd have the whole merchant's area, which would be tiny little lanes of small dark houses with bamboo blinds outside, very nice houses, which still exist. If you go to Kyoto, you can go down these little lanes. They're so thin that you have to walk down or you just go down on a bicycle or something. They're sort of dark wood houses, steep, steep stairs, several floors. I think they're called eel lanes because they're like eels. They're kind of long and thin like eels. And then you could see from the streets of Kyoto, you could see the mountains to the east, which is where Yoshimasa was looking when Kyoto was burning down behind him. You could see the mountains to the north. You could see the mountain to the northwest, which is always the unlucky direction where there was a huge complex of temples on the top and still is. And you could also see Arashiyama to the west, which is where the Flying Dragon Temple was and lots of other beautiful temples and bamboo groves. So you always could see those all around. You can to this day. So Hideyoshi laid out Kyoto as it is now, basically. And the street plan is still the same as Hideyoshi laid it out. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So why would Northwest have been considered an unlucky direction? Why was that particularly inauspicious? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' That's an almost impossible question to answer. All I can say is the Northwest was the unlucky direction. It just was in geomantic terms. So when Emperor Kamu had the capital built there, one of the things he knew was that there was already in the Northwest, a mountain called Mount Hiei, on which was a huge Buddhist temple. So that therefore counteracted the unluckiness. That was very important. And then more Buddhist temples and more Buddhist temples were built on that same mountain. And in the end, there was something like 3,000 Buddhist temples up there, which was all an excellent thing for countering the unluckiness, except it became rather unlucky itself, because those Buddhist priests then came down and started rampaging around the city. And then unluckily, Nobunaga had to go up and destroy the entire temple compound, which he did. He burnt down the whole lot. But there are temples there again. But why the Northwest? I don't know. It's like if you picture the tube map, it's sort of around Stratford up there. It's kind of that's the unlucky direction. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's fascinating that it almost becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy that they put all of these temples there to counteract the badness of the Northwest. And then all of the badness comes out of the Northwest to rampage through the city, and they have to go and destroy everything in the Northwest. Presumably, you've got all of the nobility living in their big palaces. But would there have been other walks of life in different parts of Kyoto that were perhaps a little less auspicious? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' Yeah, starting at the top, you'd have the emperor there, you'd have his courtiers there. You'd have lots of warriors who'd also live in sort of fairly fabulous villas. You'd also have lots of monks and priests. There's loads of unbelievable number of temples. I mean, uncountable number of temples and monasteries in Kyoto and sub-temples. So there'd be loads of monks living in those places. Then you have down one side of the city is the River Kamo. And you've got the River Kamo dividing the city from the Eastern Mountains. And at the foot of the Eastern Mountains is an area of flat land, which became a big area of carnival. So if you wanted to have fun, you go there. So when you're having a respectable life and your wife and your family and everything else are there, you stay away from the mountains. But you could also cross the bridge to this area of carnival, where there would be sumo wrestling, there'd be jugglers, there'd be theater, and there would be ladies of pleasure, lots of ladies of pleasure. And at various times, within Hideyoshi's reign, a particular man whose name was Saburoemon Hara, he said to Hideyoshi, why don't I gather together these ladies of pleasure, who are a little bit chaotic, because it's good to have a bit of order. There's no issue with morality about this. It's to do with orderliness. So he gathered them into particular places, which became pleasure quarters, which of course were number one, there was a wall around them. So you could keep an eye on what went on because there were bad guys that went there as well as good guys. Number two, you could tax them. And so these became very famous pleasure quarters. There's one in Kyoto, there's a very famous one in Edo, which is now Tokyo. So there's all those people, there's all the inhabitants of the pleasure quarters, there's all the theater people. Theater people and denizens of the pleasure quarters were considered the lowest of the low. That's a bit like, don't put your daughter on the stage. They were kind of low level people on one hand, but on the other hand, they were kind of celebs. So when you see woodblock prints, a lot of those are of courtesans and they're of theater people. Those were like pinup posters. So that would be the fun part of the city over between the river and the mountains. The river was called the Kamo. And in 1603, which is just after Hideyoshi's time, there was a woman called Izumo no Okuni, who was a shrine maiden, and she thought of a fabulous way of advertising her wares, which was to dance on a stage. Usually she cross-dressed, she dressed like a man with swords, and she did very funny skits. And loads of people came to watch her perform. So that gave a lot of customers for afterwards. And that was the beginning of what became known as the geisha and the courtesan. Of course, people like that had always been around, but this was a kind of coalescing of it. Which brings me to the other people I forgot about, which is of course the Portuguese. So the Portuguese were there in Hideyoshi's time. In fact, they got there before Hideyoshi's time. They got there in about 1535. And there was a whole kind of, what's the word, a sort of seasoning of Japanese culture with Portuguese stuff. The dishes like tempura came from Portuguese cuisine, which was called tempura because the Portuguese used to eat fried foods on certain holy days called a tempura. And Hideyoshi enjoyed wearing Portuguese clothes. In fact, lots of it was a real hot thing among the Japanese nobles was wearing Portuguese clothes. You're wearing a cross. It didn't mean anything. It was like, you know, they were fashion victims, but they thought this is really great. And so there were also, when you see pictures of Okuni dancing, this woman dancing, there were Portuguese there watching her as well. There was also the Portuguese around Oda Nobunaga. There were some that knew him very well and he liked them. He had no interest in Christianity, but he just thought these are clever men. They're kind of fanatical like him, so he liked them. So there's that whole flavour of the Portuguese around the place as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Kyoto, the way you describe it, sounds like a fascinating, bustling, cultural hub where there is just something going on all of the time. It sounds like an incredible place to be. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' Oh yeah, absolutely. I was kind of reading up around it in preparation for talking to you and thinking, as I always think about Japan, damn, I wish I could have been there. I wish I could have been at Hideyoshi's tea party for sort of the entire population of Kyoto. He also had a cherry viewing party for a thousand people. I wish I could have seen those glorious kind of gold painted screens. I mean, this is the thing that within his palace was the absolute opposite of the austerity of Zen. The walls were painted in gold with paintings on them, but the gold also made it very bright inside because it caught the light. There's very little lighting inside those enormous rooms. I would love to have been to Japan or been in Japan at that time. I think it would have been a fantastic place to be. Also, Kyoto was and is a centre of craftsmanship. So very beautiful fabrics, very beautiful pottery, very beautiful making of incense, fans, just about everything that you think of when you think of Japan. All those exquisite artefacts were being made in and are being made in Kyoto. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I guess it's not a spoiler. We mentioned it a little bit earlier that Kyoto isn't the capital of Japan anymore. Does Kyoto then have a kind of fall? Why does the capital move away from there at some point? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' So after 14, let's see, we're still with Hideyoshi. After Hideyoshi's death, he wanted his son Hideyori to succeed him. That didn't work out. There was a and Tokugawa Ieyasu won. He finally properly unified Japan and brought it to peace. He gave Japan 250 years of peace, which was a phenomenal time, an incredible sort of development of culture. At the beginning of this period is 1603, the battle. The end of this period is 1868. In that 250 years, Japan changed completely and became close to becoming the modern place it is now. And what happened was that his descendants, rather as with the emperors, the first guy is very strong, but then you have sort of not such great people succeeding him. Some were better, some were worse. But towards the end, things were probably not as great as they might have been. Added to which the Tokugawas had ancient enemies and they had defeated them in the battle of Sekigahara. And those enemies were from the southwest, from the Kyushu area, from the sort southwestern part of Honshu. And they wanted their revenge. And they rose up and with the help of the British, and they actually toppled the last of the Tokugawa shoguns who abdicated. And at that point, the southwestern lords took over. So they once again didn't have legitimacy, but they once again immediately said, oh, we represent the emperor. And that gave them legitimacy. But they decided in that 250 years, the Tokugawa's capital was not Kyoto. The official capital was Kyoto, but the Tokugawa city was Edo. So the center of policy, the center of government, the center of culture, more and more gravitated towards Edo. And so these southwestern lords decided that they would make the capital not Kyoto, but Edo. And so they marched up, they took Edo castle. And in 1868, the then emperor, who was 14, I think, or 16, he was a teenager, marched or didn't march. He was carried by palanquin topped with a phoenix up to Edo and into Edo castle, which became the imperial palace and Edo became Tokyo, which is the eastern capital. So therefore Kyoto was no longer the capital at all. It was no longer the official capital. So there was a kind of time of, I think, being a bit depressed. I think the people of Kyoto were a bit depressed, particularly because the emperor was the heart of their whole city and then he'd gone. But he did that same emperor when he was old, was taken back to Kyoto and buried in Kyoto. I think he was buried on the site of Hideyoshi's Jurakudai, of Hideyoshi's glorious palace, which had long since disappeared. But that's where he is. So Kyoto did have its kind of down moment. And then the people of Kyoto decided they had to do something about this. But what they realized was that Kyoto is still the cultural center. And it was still where all these wonderful handicrafts were made. There's also the sort of feeling that you get in Japan. You can almost spot a Kyoto person. It's a bit like, I don't know how to put this, a bit like spotting an old Etonian. They're a little bit posh and they're a little bit cool. They're very, as the sort of aesthetic, they're very good at tea ceremony. They're very good at flower arranging. They might be more likely to wear a kimono than somebody from Tokyo, for example. So that Kyoto culture remained and that Kyoto classiness remains. There's a famous proverb, which is that the people of Osaka will bankrupt themselves for a good meal. But the people of Kyoto will bankrupt themselves for a fine piece of silk. So they're like that. They're kind of clothes people. I've forgotten what the people of Tokyo will bankrupt themselves for. It's not food and it's not clothing. So Kyoto somehow had a resurgence. It was also the center of the geisha, which is quite important, actually. It recreated itself as a center of traditional culture. So Tokyo is a big modern city. And as you know, Kyoto did not get bombed in World War II because it's such a center of traditional culture. It's got so much. And also it's not entirely, but it's largely a wooden city. And there was also a law was passed, which again, I think has been broken, but there are laws about the height of buildings you can build in Kyoto. You're not supposed to build very tall buildings. So it's mainly a low rise city. So it has maintained its kind of aura of being somewhere classy, somewhere creative. Maybe it's the heart and maybe Tokyo is the head or something. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. It's interesting that the politics sort of overtakes Kyoto and the emperor leaves, but Kyoto manages to cling onto enough things to retain its importance. I should say in the heart of Japan and the Japanese, it still means something. It doesn't just kind of give up and fade away. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' But it also has had that position for a thousand years. That's a really long time. It's also things like it's the home of tea ceremony. It's the home of flower arrangement. I mean, the headquarters of the various schools of tea ceremony, mainly in Kyoto. It's also, for example, it's the home of Noh, which is the very sort of Zen imbued theater of the samurai. But then Kabuki, which is really wonderful and wild and wacky. That's more the theater of Tokyo. I mean, you can see Noh in Tokyo, you can see Kabuki in Kyoto, but the sort of heart of it are those cities. And at Heian Shrine, which is a very central, very beautiful shrine in Kyoto, in the summer in June, they have something called Takihi Noh, which is Noh performed by torchlight, which is burning brands. So it's lit by torchlight. And there's these kind of figures performing Noh very, very slowly and singing this kind of very extraordinary singing, which I can't attempt to describe, but that is Kyoto. So they're very different from each other. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Has Noh theater not changed very much since Kyoto's heyday at the end of the Sengoku period, maybe? Is that something that someone from 16th century Kyoto would still recognise today? Does it connect us to this past? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' It's interesting. I haven't thought about that, but my immediate thought would be yes. The most famous Noh plays are written by Zeami, and he is from the period of Yoshimitsu, which is way before those wars. There are some other Noh plays, but they're mainly still written by him. They are the repertoire, the way that the Noh stage is, which has a long kind of platform leading to the stage. There's a pine tree painted on the back. The costumes are very lavish, but very stylised and is performed with masks. So the main character wears a mask and the masks are very, very famous. They're works of art. The mask, as it moves, it changes expression. So you have the same mask, and as the face moves, it can look happy, it can look sad. Also, the head actor of the Noh theatre is going to be the oldest man. It's performed entirely by men. And you can get an old man playing the part of a beautiful young woman, and you completely believe it. And I saw a Noh performance when actually the actor's mask fell off. So you see the face of the old man, you look, you see a young woman, you see a young woman, you just do. I think most of the singing is done by a chorus who sit at the side of the stage and they have drums that they play, that they beat, they have flutes that they play. I would say it is probably that people from the 15th century would probably recognise it. Kabuki changed a lot. Kabuki is a different thing. Kabuki is absolutely wonderful. And up till the 19th century, the Kabuki actors improvised. And I've also seen a production of Kabuki, in which this fabulous actor, he commits the ritual suicide, he commits seppuku in a waterfall. So you've got a real waterfall with real water on the stage, big stages, much bigger than you get in London, huge stage. So he drives his sword into his stomach, red blood comes pouring out. He then makes a speech of about half an hour, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, with blood, red blood pouring out. And then he says, no, I shall die. And then he finishes it. It's like that. It's really extraordinary. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I was going to end by sort of asking you whether you would have liked to have lived in Kyoto during the Sengoku period. I'm getting a sense that I might be able to guess at your answer. Is it a place you think you would have liked to be? |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' When you say the Sengoku period, you see that includes the period when it got burnt down. I could have been a merchant when it got burnt down, that would be okay. I think it would have been really fun being there. I could have been a Portuguese because I'm not Japanese. When you see pictures of all these Japanese pictures of the time showing life, everybody's out on the streets, they're all dancing, they're having festivals. Yeah, it would depend who you were. You'd want to have had a bit of money, I think. And you possibly would have more fun if you were a man than a woman. But you could probably have some fun if you were a woman too, actually, I think you probably could. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. And all of Hideyoshi's gold ceremonies and parties and things like that, that all sounds like a fantastic time to be in Kyoto. Yeah. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' No, I think those 30 years between 1568 and 1598, I think that would have been an amazing time to have been in Kyoto. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Well, thank you so much for joining us, Lesley. It's been an absolute pleasure to get to know Kyoto a little bit better and to understand its importance to Japan during this period, but also beyond it to today. So thank you so much for joining us. |
| | * '''Lesley Downer:''' Thank you. You should definitely go. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I will definitely try. Thank you very much. Thank you for listening to this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Join us next time as we explore a key aspect of Assassin's Creed and ask how we could fit in to feudal Japan. What clothes might we wear? What might we eat? And would I be the most legendary samurai of all time? So join us for the next episode to find out more about the history behind the world of Assassin's Creed. |
| | |-|8= |
| | '''''Shogun and Shinto: What Life Was Like In Feudal Japan''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm your host Matt Lewis. You're joining us as we dive deep into the heart of an era that has shaped legends and popular culture for centuries. In case you haven't seen it, the world premiere trailer for Assassin's Creed Shadows has been released. And we can see that it transports us to feudal Japan. This is a time renowned for its samurai and ninjas, a time bursting with history, culture and stories. And for the past few episodes, we've been exploring some of this fascinating period. So far, our journey's taken us back in time to the upheavals of the Sengoku period, as the seeds for the unification of Japan are being sown. We've travelled to the heart of Imperial Japan, then the city of Kyoto, and we've met some of the key characters that define this age. Today, we invite you to imagine what daily life might have been like in feudal Japan. In Assassin's Creed Shadows, we'll meet a whole host of characters, including merchants, farmers, as well as legendary warriors. What would the average day have looked like for someone who was a farmer, a merchant, or maybe even a samurai? And what would they have dressed like? What would they do for fun? And what does all of this tell us about the social categories of the time? I'm joined by Kate Kitagawa, author and historian of mathematics. Kate currently works for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency as senior counsellor for international relations. She's also a former teacher at Harvard University of the history of medieval Japan. And this is the period we've invited Kate onto Echoes of History to talk about. Today, we ask Kate to shed some light on the different people that made up Japanese society. People we'll meet in Assassin's Creed Shadows, and how the ever-shifting political landscape of the 16th century shaped Japanese society and culture, paving the way towards unification. Welcome to Echoes of History, Kate. |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Thank you very much for having me today, Matt. Good to see you. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I'm really excited to get into this episode about kind of everyday life in Japan. How would we fit in if we found ourselves in feudal Japan as players of Assassin's Creed Shadows are about to? So if we're in the Sengoku period in Japan, who do you think you'd be, Kate? Are we peasant farmers? Are we merchants? I mean, obviously, I'm the most legendary samurai of all time. That's how I imagine myself in feudal Japan. But where do you see yourself? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' I also like to be a strong samurai, because that's probably the high chance of survival. And I probably would enjoy the most about the country life. So that's maybe like peasants in the countryside would be my second choice. But I will go with your scenario. Maybe we both become the strong samurai. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I think we would make a fantastic team. And we would almost definitely take feudal Japan by storm, Kate. So how then is feudal society in Japan set up? Is there a class system similar to what we might recognize in the UK? You know, we have our class system. Is there that kind of categorization to society? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. So the most famous categorization that we know of now started sometime in the 17th century. So it was something like a pyramid. There's the strong samurai known as shogun. It will be ruling, you know, always the country. But also there was an emperor. So this is like a high class, just very few people at the top. And then there will be samurai class, the people with sword and they have great fighting skills and so on. And then below that, there will be farmers and then artisans and merchants. So those people were in a hierarchy like a pyramid. And it has been known as the class system. So installed strongly during the 17th century. But before that, there are a long history of a samurai ruling. And then back then, especially the time we call Sengoku, that's the time of wars. Those class systems were not really rigid. So people are moving like, you know, more freely between the classes. Also, they will be fighting against each other. So the system was not really working until the 17th century. So if we go back to like the beginning, then we could probably imagine us like being a strong samurai. And then there will be the clans around us to help us out. And they will rule the regions. And then sometimes when we get into trouble, we must fight. But then, you know, those kind of system are strongly becoming more structural, leading up to the feudal society in the 17th and 18th century. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I'm quite interested that when you listed that structure of society, farmers came above artisans and merchants. And I think in lots of Western cultures, it's possibly the other way around that we would consider the farmers to be beneath the artisans and the merchants. Is that quite an unusual thing for Japan that farmers were considered higher in the social ranking than merchants and artisans? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. So merchants are at the bottom and the farmers are above them. So what happens to that structure is to praise farmers' work even more and then to suppress the wrongdoings of merchants. Because merchants having like lots of money and they have skills to, you know, have the commercial activities going on. If they are like higher up, near samurai, then there will be a high chance of having a conflict between them. So they decided that merchants to be at the bottom so that they have like less respect regarding the social class. But then they'll still be able to do commerce and also a lot of money lending and all other activities that let the society move forward. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Interesting. So the idea that they could become wealthy and powerful is counteracted by giving them much less status within society to stop them being a threat to the ruling samurai classes. What kind of jobs and what kind of crafts would people in feudal Japan have been engaged in? So we obviously have the farmers who are working the land, but what other jobs and crafts are available? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. Well, maybe one important thing is the sword makers because, you know, those swords and also all other armors, it has to be very strong and prestigious and expensive. So those are the professionals that will make only swords for life or only like armors for life. So those people are really succeeding their businesses over generations. In other businesses, unfortunately, there is a marginalized class that they dealt with, like say butchering and also like some sort of dirty work. So that they are isolated from the mainstream society and they have been recognized as like a specialized group, but also some sort of prejudice over this group. Those are different sorts of jobs that we recognize in history. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's interesting how some jobs can end up being viewed that way when they tend to also be vital to the economy. You know, if it's butchering, people want the animals to eat, they want the food, but they don't want to think about how it's arrived there. And there's some sense of a lack of desirability around the process of doing it, but somebody has to do it. |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. So that's very unfortunate in a way. And also from the time that we respect the farmers, that we hope that we respect all those people who will be engaged in those work that's necessary to our life. But, you know, it wasn't the case. But also one theory is about the blood being so impure. So, for example, the butchering is involving with the blood and also like the taking life. That's really something that Buddhism disrespect, for example. So in that regard, those people have to be doing the work in the darkness or in the dark, in a way. That's why, you know, there are some people who are a little bit treated differently from the beginning. You're right that we would hope that those people would have gained much respect over time. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And how did the relationships work between some of those social classes? So we have a feudal system. How does land ownership work? If I'm a farmer, I'm quite well respected. Do I own my own land or do I hold that from someone who is socially superior to me? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. That depends on the time. So the earlier times when imagine like long time ago, say 12th century and 13th century, land has still been like not registered. Right. So that you have to claim the ownership and you have to be gaining approval from someone that has a power over the region. So around that time, the ownership has been decided between your landlord and yourself. And your work will be defined between you two. But then when it becomes more complicated, the society evolves and then like commercial activities going on. And then there will become more registration of the land and that becomes more systematic than before. So over the time, because that personal bonding was stronger at the beginning, loyalty, for example, you have to be loyal to your land master or even the master himself. And then that becomes like in the beginning of how owning the land becoming a part of the samurai's work. So it has a little bit of evolution from the old times. And then now, as you can imagine, that feudal society was known for having a good working land ownership between the owners like rulers and the farmers or the samurai. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Was there much movement between those social classes? Could someone who was born a farmer, could they rise through the ranks and become a daimyo or a local ruler of any kind? Or were things much more strictly controlled in terms of the levels of society? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Strictly controlled. So unfortunately, there are not like subtle moves between the classes. So usually in farmers being registered as farmers, and then they will be farmers forever. So back then, during this Sengoku period, when the class systems were not really rigid, then back then, those are people who had the sword recognized as samurai. Then the people who did not have the sword were peasants. So there was like two types to begin with. And then at one point that, you know, this separation started to happen. And then there is almost no point of return. So since then, the guys who were the family and also the clans that started to have no training in martial arts, meaning they have the swords and weapons, they become the samurai. And then the rest, it's always been fixed since the 17th century onward. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And do we see that changing and being settled during the Sengoku period? So while all of this warring state period is going on, is that upheaval also affecting the social structures of Japanese society? Is it helping to free them up or is it helping to tighten them up? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Well, it's an interesting question, because I think it works both ways. So first of all, the samurai will have to decide their own sort of structure of the samurai, who's at the top and who will be supporters and who will be the helpers and so on. So around that time, it was more like, you know, this making a system. But at the same time, as I said, the peasants, they could still become the samurai at the time because no registrations, no central authority and so on. So there are like massive dynamics going on. And at the same time, the rulers are deciding who will become stronger than whom and if we will own more land than whom. So they're like both going on. That's like an interesting features of the Sengoku period. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And if we're aspiring samurai, we're going to find our sword maker, we're going to find our armour maker, and you and I are going to take feudal Japan by storm, Kate. But while we're preparing to do that, where are we living? What do houses look like during this period in the countryside and in the towns? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right, they're very simple. So the countryside and towns, so they had the simple structure of just a roof and then some basic structures. And sometimes if somebody decided to have a fish market or some sort of market in front of their house, and then that's an origin of merchants class. But then they did have those decorations on the facade and then they will have something to sell in front of their houses. So that's a very basic structure. But for the higher classes, they had some sort of symbolization by building the tall castles, for example. That's like very visible sign of power. So the castle, it has to have the structure of visible strategy. So sometimes, you know, the sea or sort of canal surrounding it. So it's not just a tower because if it's just a tower, then somebody will come and knock this out. So that's not great. So they have to show some sort of wisdom of having the barricade and wisely decorated on the side of the castle. And then it has to be tall so that they can see or oversee the whole town and so on. So the house for the samurai becomes those inner quarter of structure, let's say castle keep. So then they will have some sort of, you know, symbolized lifestyle that the ruler would have. Also, there is a special structure related to the house is the tea house. You might have heard about the samurai practicing the tea ceremony, for example. And then tea ceremony has been done in a small room. And it's usually decorated specially for this, but decoration has to be very simple. So it's not like much of decoration having the items all over, but it's very simple. And then it has a structure representing the calmness and representing its own sort of traditions and so on. And sometimes the flowers just having that little flower display that would help also to show how this simple space would speak. So this tea house is not higher up in the castle, but it's usually separated. And then sometimes even in the mountainside. So those are the structures that's probably unique to the Japanese samurai society. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And who would live in a family home? Did the Japanese people during this period keep extended families close to home or did they tend to sort of move out of home quite early? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. Interesting question. So the merchants or those people who started to sell specialized goods, they will be passing this business to the next generations. That means the family will stay closer together and necessarily. So that usually the main house will have the first son and the second son and the third son somewhere in the region. And then the business will just keep on going until the next one will find the successor. And then the next one will find the next successor and so on. This structure let the family become very close. And then from the structure of the samurai as well, that they will have to be tight group. You know, they have to be bonded very strongly, especially when you become massive force, then they can't really have an internal conflict. Ideally not. Right. So they will have to have those structures. And then the relatives will become the close vassals, for example, so that they will all live somewhere close. So imagine there is a castle, the ruler will be at the top and then they will have the village of the relatives and also close vassals. So like related clans. So they all live at one place. And then this is like a merchant's group living and selling the specialized goods to all the people, including the samurai. So the structure of the town started to become, you know, more categorized. And then also samurai's region like this is a samurai village and this is merchants, you know, markets and so on. So those started to become more visible as the class structure started to become fixed. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And one of the other things I'd like to talk a little bit about is what you and I might have worn if we found ourselves in Sengoku, Japan. I guess for women, we associate the kimono perhaps most closely with Japanese society. Is that what most women would have worn or is that unusual? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Oh, it is usual formal clothing. So the kimono is the thing that the woman would wear. And also for men as well, they would wear kimono, but in that different sort of style and made. So the kimono usually has clothing, you know, across the sleeves, you know, in front of you. And we both look at men and women wearing the same style and with this family crest sometimes here and there on the neck. So you can see on the kimono which clan that you belong to and like what kind of class that you are associated with. So the kimono is not just beautiful, but the quality and also the patterns that will make all the people stand out. And also patterns too. They wore cotton, but also like kimono style make. So that's made is the same. So they will look like, you know, they are wearing the same style of clothing. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So were the styles between sort of the upper and lower classes less about different shapes and styles of clothing and just more to do with the quality and the flamboyance and the flashiness of it? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' So when I looked at this folding screens made in the beginning of 17th century, they are depiction of women. So the high class woman had an umbrella and also she wore a hat. So that would be a huge difference that it makes because in the lower class woman, they will wear kimono in a similar style, just a low quality. But they will not usually have an umbrella and so on. So there will be a great difference that we can see even on the folding screens from the time of their living. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' You and I are going to look amazing when we take over feudal Japan, Kate. We're going to have the best swords and we're going to look absolutely fantastic. |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. Yeah, I would love to do this and hopefully without violence too. So that's something that I focus on in my research because, you know, back then that was the only choice that those strong allied samurai would take over. And that did happen, we have to admit, but nowadays we like to give up the swords. So Mats, with your virtue and then me, Kate, being like a kind person, then we can make a great team to have a good influence to the world. And then back then it just started to become obvious about the muscle power about swords and then killing and so on. But at the same time, women realize the importance of nonviolence as well. So the nonviolent part, that's about women, say, having the writing skill. So, you know, women write to other people passing through the message and then that message become the clear information that's been certified by the sender. And then that was very important in a chaotic world that you need a very good writing to convey that information or will to pass on. So, you know, writing skill, it's nonviolent, but it becomes also another tool to make promises. So once we become the rulers, we like to make rules and then somebody has to write about it. And then women really helped and women educated children and so on. So with those powers of nonviolence that they started to create a better condition in a society, I think we need to really emphasize that aspect of the rulership as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' In what other ways would being a woman in feudal Japan have influenced your life during the period there? I mean, I guess, you know, I'm much more focused on medieval European society where women were treated very badly, kind of set to one side, often marginalized. But we do know that they operated this really soft power, which is similar to what you're talking about women doing in Japan. But in what other ways would being a woman make your life different from that of a man? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. So women started to become financially independent during the Sengoku time. So that's something different from other societies. The other societies, why the women stayed, you know, in that sort of like second class is that financially they will have to be dependent on their father or their husbands or even their sons. Then around that time of the unification of Japan, the Japanese women started to have the financial independence as one of the quality of life that they will have to sustain. So that sometimes even the father died or husband died or any relatives died that they themselves can live. So, you know, it's like a starting point of having like a little bit of equality, a little bit of more rights in a society by claiming her own land or financial assets and so on. So I think they started to realize also about getting into the financial transaction that has made a great impact to the samurai world. It's not only men that could own the lands and wealth. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Do you think women in medieval and early modern Japan had it better than women in medieval and early modern Europe? They seemed like they had more independent power and authority and possibly more respect. |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. Well, I've been reading women's stories from all over the world. And I think, you know, some people really exerted their wills and powers and also wishes and so on. So it might be really depending on one's agency, like what they want to do with their lives. But in general, maybe the Japanese woman would have a little more equal rights to men than the women in medieval Europe, on average, I must say. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' So one of the other things we would need to do to fit in in feudal Japan is to be able to find food for ourselves. We need to be able to eat. So players in the game, you know, they're trying to meld into feudal Japan and to pass for part of society. So if we were looking for a meal in Sengoku, Japan, what kind of food might we be eating? And is that different depending on our class? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. Usually the basic food are the same. So the special foods like in seasonal ones or very expensive ones, those are consumed by the samurais and the ruling classes. But the very basic things like, say, rice and grains mixed with fish and salted plums and all other nutritious fruits. I think those are the very basic things that everyone sort of shared in the society. So they used to eat twice per day. So one is obviously around breakfast and then they will have another meal at night. And meal itself, as I said, will be simple, like, say, miso soup. You know, there's a soup that comes with the grain and then those salted because preservatives almost always salt. So the salted fish, salted pickles and then other things comes with it. And then soup and then grain and those combination are the basics. And in some unusual seasonal food, like the fish that only comes into this season or some sort of chestnuts, you know, that's like really delicious. Not just the dessert aspect of it, but it's more like seasonal aspect that they enjoy a lot. And then also some wealthy people will drink sake. So the sake has become a good item for the men to hang out together and then they are enjoying the sake. And the lower class too, depending on like how rich and how poor, but they basically had an access to those drinks. So the varieties of drinks available for them. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Do you think food at this time would have been nice? Would you have liked to live on the diet of feudal Japan? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' I've been hearing a lot about the balanced diet back then being so good. So sometimes when we go on diet, for example, we would like to shape up a little bit, say minus two, three kilos that we model. Look back and say, look, you know, this is miso soup and then grain and then some pickles. And then just salt is important for our bodies. So that's like a basics that keep us going. So I think still a good part of wisdom that coming from the basic food from a long time ago, sort of alive in our lives as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. And I guess, you know, in a world of ultra processed food, we're talking about stuff that was really good for you and full of nutrition. But I really feel like I would have struggled with the two meals a day as a greedy man. I like my three meals a day. I feel like two would not be enough for me. And obviously you and I, we're now busy taking over Japan. What would we do if we wanted to relax? Were there games in medieval Japan that we know about? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Right. One thing that the samurai ruler, especially the unifier, Toyotomi Hideyoshi liked was the noh play. So there are theaters all over Japan. That time theater is our show place, like a stage. And then there will be some players. And it's even sort of 3D because imagine that there are some walls around the stage. And then on this side, like right side, that can be used for one scene. And then it moves to the second part, you know, to the front of the stage. And, you know, the third part, again, like it comes back on the stage and then fourth part moves on to the left hand side. So those are really clever sort of 3D theater that they had. And then that's very joyous to watch. And at the same time, the samurai like to even play by themselves so that they could play the role of person A, you know, showing up at these scenes and so on. So that becomes more sort of intellectual exercise combined with the games enjoyed. So I think that no play is really good feature of that time. Also chess. Many people still play chess and they're really fascinating game. So similar to chess that Japan had go. So that's like a black and white sort of stones being on the table. And then they play like chess. So they did have those things at that time, even like, you know, the merchant class and an artisan class. They enjoy that as well. From long time ago, Japanese people like the haiku poems. So the haiku has a longer version that can be saying like, So I will say first part and then Matt will continue. And then I will reply depending on what Matt started to create. Could be the story that I will continue. It could be a reply to what you have said. So those kind of wordplay that always been culture, really interesting and long standing culture of Japan. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Amazing. It sounds like a medieval haiku rap battle that we could get engaged in. That's right. And I guess one of the other things that we associate quite closely with Japan is sumo. When does sumo emerge as a sport? And is that something that people would go and watch as a big group? Is that a community activity to go and watch sumo? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' So I don't know exactly when that started. But I remember there is also a screen that's writing sumo wrestling scenes of, I think that was rabbit and a frog. So the rabbit and the frog playing the sumo is coming from sometime say around 12th century. That has been a really long time ago. So it's back as long as the feudal Japan's starting point of the samurai rulership. The sumo has been there for entire time of Japanese samurai culture. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And were there big religious festivals as well? We have bank holidays in the UK. Would there be days when everyone had the day off work to engage in a community celebration of some kind? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' So there are many celebrations. So at the Emperor's court, there is a court system that Emperor and other courtiers live. They have this calendar of events. So the calendars of events depend on like, say, in May, you will do this, like bank holidays, as you said. So May, we will have this celebration. June, we have this celebration. So those seasonal events has been always recorded in the diary of courtiers. And similar to that, farmers, depending on the harvest, right? So they will have the big festival to play for like huge, you know, good, you know, grain, you know, gaining this and so on. So those kind of festivals also available. And for samurai, there are many different kinds. So one kind is similar to this Emperor side. So it's like a high culture. So they will adopt the seasonal events like taken into their regions and then they will do their own version of it. But at the same time, sometimes just to worship the dead or ancestors that they had a special occasions to sort of pray and then give some offerings at the events and so on. So the samurai class was more combining this high culture and also the religious side of the ceremonies altogether. So there are varieties of the events that's happening. And also it's a class specific as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I mean, it's been fascinating to try to understand better the social structures, the way that Japan worked, the kind of food that people would eat, what you might have worn to try and fit in and blend in. But for most people during the Sengoku period, would they have been aware of the high politics and the war and the struggles that are going on? Or are we talking about most of the population would still be farming and just trying to get the crops in every year and not really engaging too much with the politics that's going on? Would it have affected everybody's daily lives or would it have been really an issue of the upper classes fighting with each other? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Okay, that's a really interesting question. So the first segment of the samurai rule, the samurai's so-called headquarters was in Kamakura. That's the current Kamakura city near Tokyo. So the Tokyo city was not known at the time that Tokyo was a city yet, but the Kamakura was not known nationwide. So when the Kamakura rulership was going on and being consolidated, it's not that many people would know about the politics. So it's like say regional understandings of this is where Shogun lives and this is what Shogun does. And then in Kyoto, there is an emperor and has been residing all the time. So the Kyoto people like residents will be more aware of what's happening around the courtiers and so on. So around the first sort of segment of time, the very first samurai rules, I would say that not so many people would know about the politics. That will continue the middle segments of the samurai rule that we call usually medieval Japan. And then medieval Japan as well, this Kamakura headquarters of the samurai has been moved and taken by a different family. And then the samurai headquarter became the Kyoto as well. So in Kyoto, the dual structure of this courtiers, emperor's house and the shogunate. So the Kyoto people will be really subject to what political moves are. But other people like say around outside of Kyoto, they will be happily living in their regions. And then they will have those like farming going on and they would have rather stable time so they could enjoy. And around the time, the clear cut was this big war called Oni War. So that's 1467, so like mid 15th century. And since that time, I say 150 years, it will be chaotic time of war. So, you know, the political system was collapsing and then people will be seeing the fights all over. And as I said, the class system was not rigid yet. So people could take up the weapons so easily. So that taking up the weapons so easily, meaning that they will have to know what's going on in politics. So this 150 years of fighting and not only the samurai, but so many people nationwide will know about what's going on at the top level. And then afterwards, this peaceful sort of ruling started to happen by the shogunate Tokugawa. So that's 17th century and onward. So the class system is becoming more rigid and then people are becoming very calm and also practicing their own religions. And it's not all about so happy every day. But here's things compared to other times like Sengoku Japan or those 150 years that people had less affected by the politics. So those are some sort of sequence of the time that, you know, people are interested or involved in politics. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. So in terms of Assassin's Creed Shadows, when players are in Japan in this Sengoku period, they are in a time when people are really heightened and aware that there is civil war, there is politics, there is things going on all over the place. It almost is getting into every aspect of everybody's life all throughout Japan. So you're in a place that is on heightened alert, if you like. That's right. And I guess the last question I have then. So I would undoubtedly, as much as I would like to think of myself as the greatest samurai of all time, if I were in feudal Japan, I'd probably be rubbish. I'd really struggle with two meals a day. I'd probably faint. How do you think you would have fared? Could you have lived in Sengoku Japan? |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Oh, wow. That's an interesting question. I think I will secretly eat the third meal. That's probably the point to survive if I could be wealthy enough. But I think the Sengoku Japan was very critical that people thought about the system, how the human has to be living, what the meanings of the family, love and life itself. So I think, you know, that was a time that people really lived. Even the short time, you know, there are some unfortunate incidences of death and so on. But I think the Sengoku time that I really cherish as a historian. And if I were there at that time, that I would probably have life that I would be convinced that I lived. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's interesting that it's such an important part of Japanese history and culture. If I could steal that third meal and if you and I could find decent sword makers, I feel like we could take Japan. Or at least we could have a go. |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' That's right. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' We could be the most legendary samurai together. OK, that's been absolutely fascinating. I hope that's given people an idea of what it might be like to be on the ground in feudal Japan. The buildings you're going to see, the people you're going to encounter, the food you're going to have to eat and the way that you're going to have to live your life to fit into feudal Japan. It's been absolutely fascinating. Thank you so much for joining us to share all of that. |
| | * '''Tomoko Lisa Kate Kitagawa:''' Thank you very much. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you for listening to this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Next time, we leave feudal Japan and head to a different world from the Assassin's Creed universe, Victorian London, to meet the person who gave that era its name, Queen Victoria. So join us for the next episode to find out more about the history behind the world of Assassin's Creed. |
| | </tabber> |
| | |
| | ===Syndicate=== |
| | <tabber> |
| | |-|1= |
| | '''''Queen Victoria: The Woman Behind An Era''''' |
| </tabber> | | </tabber> |