Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Hattori Hanzō

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Revision as of 23:05, 20 March 2025 by imported>Darman36 (Haven't met him (yet?), but I know that people for sure keep talking about him. Only heard in kuji-kiri flashbacks so far)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
"Those who cling to life, die; those who defy death, live."
―Hattori Hanzō.[src]-[m]
He who increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow.

This article contains spoilers, meaning it has information and facts concerning 20 June 2025. If you do not want to know about these events, it is recommended to read on with caution, or not at all.

This template should be removed from the article Assassin's Creed: Shadows.

Hattori Hanzō (服部 半蔵, 1542 – 1596) was a vassal for Tokugawa Ieyasu, the last of feudal Japan's three great unifiers (三英傑). A famous samurai and ninja, Hanzō was also a member of the Japanese Brotherhood of Assassins.

Biography

Early life

Hattori Hanzō was a vassal of the daimyō Tokugawa Ieyasu, and a ninja trained in Iga.[2][3] Aside from the ninja arts, Hanzō was also trained as a samurai, and his skill with the yari was legendary.[1] In 1565, he had a son, Hattori Masanari.[4] When the Assassins caught wind of the Templars' expansion into Japan, they sought to recruit new allies. The Brotherhood inducted ninja like Hanzō, from whom they in turn learned new skills and techniques.[5]

Fight for the Sword

The Assassins eventually formed an alliance with Ieyasu, and together they formed a plan to retrieve the Sword of Eden and aid Ieyasu in conquering the land.[1] Hanzō worked closely with Chaya Shirōjirō Kiyonobu, who often acted as a contact on Ieyasu's behalf.[6]

In 1571, on Ieyasu's orders, Hanzō assassinated the daimyō Mōri Motonari, a strong opponent of Ieyasu's ally Oda Nobunaga, in order to allow Nobunaga to conquer the Mōri clan's lands.[6] Two years later, after the Tokugawa and Oda forces fought the Takeda clan at the Battle of Mikatagahara, Hanzō and Ieyasu's vassal Honda Tadakatsu entered Takeda Shingen's camp.[7] Shingen was killed during the ordeal, and Hanzō retrieved the Sword of Eden from him.[1]

Five years later, on 19 April 1578,[8] Hanzō assassinated another rival daimyō, the Templar Uesugi Kenshin.[1] In June 1582, word reached the Tokugawa that Akechi Mitsuhide planned to betray his lord Nobunaga, who possessed the Sword of Eden. Hanzō stayed with Ieyasu to ensure his lord's safety, and tasked another Assassin, the monk Yamauchi Taka, to travel to Honnō-ji and retrieve the Sword from Nobunaga. Taka killed Nobunaga during Mitsuhide's attack and brought the Sword to the Chinese Assassin Liu Yan, who took it with her to China.[9]

Later life

"I bemoan the fact that our relation has come to an end, just when it was becoming profitable for me. Enjoy what little remains of your life, ninja."
―Kiyonobu to Hanzō, 1590s.[src]-[m]

After Nobunaga's death, his vassal Toyotomi Hideyoshi became his master's successor. Hideyoshi later defeated Ieyasu, who then pledged loyalty to the Toyotomi. Kiyonobu tried to secretly set up a trade route to bring supplies to Ieyasu, a task which Hanzō aided by eliminating one of the patrolling Toyotomi kashira.[10]

In the 1590s, Hanzō was tasked with assassinating the Japanese Templar Mochizuki Chiyome, a female ninja who had formerly worked for Shingen. Based on intel retrieved from Kiyonobu, Hanzō tracked her down to her residence in Shinano, where he assassinated her.[11]

He was ultimately killed in a fire[12] by his rival Fūma Kotarō in 1596[1] in the Tokugawa capital of Edo.[13]

Behind the scenes

Hanzō, 半蔵, is a Japanese name combining the characters 半 (han, meaning "half, middle, odd number, part-, semi-") with 蔵 (zou, meaning "own, possess, storehouse"). Hattori, 服部, is a common Japanese surname meaning "clothing guild".

Although the cards in Assassin's Creed: Memories say Hanzō died in 1596, historically, he succumbed to an unspecified illness on 2 January 1597. The discrepancy may arise from the fact that the 22-volume Kansei Chōshū Shokafu (寛政重修諸家譜), a genealogical record of important samurai commissioned by the Tokugawa clan in 1812, records his death date as 4 November 1596, which differs from what is written on his gravestone at the Buddhist temple Sainen-ji and accepted by the Hattori clan, as the contemporary lunar calendar used then notes his death was on the 14th day of the 11th month of the Keichō era, or, 2 January 1597 CE using the Gregorian calendar.[13]

Gallery

Appearances

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Assassin's Creed: MemoriesCards: Hattori Hanzo
  2. Assassin's Creed: Shadows – Kuji-kiri
  3. Echoes of History – Shadows – Episode 6: The Tensho Iga War
  4. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesCards: Hattori Masanari
  5. Assassin's Creed: Memories – History of the Assassins in Japan
  6. 6.0 6.1 Assassin's Creed: MemoriesMōri Motonari
  7. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesCards: Mochizuki Chiyome
  8. Uesugi Kenshin on Wikipedia
  9. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesOda Nobunaga
  10. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesAshigaru Kashira
  11. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesMochizuki Chiyome
  12. Assassin's Creed: MemoriesLast Days of the Taikō
  13. 13.0 13.1 Hattori Hanzō on Wikipedia

es:Hattori Hanzō fr:Hattori Hanzō it:Hattori Hanzō pt-br:Hattori Hanzo ru:Хаттори Хандзо zh:服部半藏