Japanese Brotherhood of Assassins
The Japanese Assassins were the Brotherhood of Assassins in Japan, formed during the 16th century.
During the Sengoku period, the Assassins worked to prevent the spread of the Templar influence in Japan, spread by Jesuit missionaries. While the Templars recruited people such as Mochizuki Chiyome and Uesugi Kenshin, the Assassins recruited individuals from the ranks of the ninja and samurai, such as Hattori Hanzō and Yamauchi Taka. Over the years, the Japanese Assassins supported the ascension of the daimyo Tokugawa Ieyasu, eliminating his rivals along the way.[1]
Following the Great Purge of 2000, the remaining Japanese Assassins were present in Osaka. In 2013, their headquarters was attacked by the yakuza faction known as Onmoraki-Gumi, resulting in the death of the Assassin leader Kenichi Mochizuki. His wife, Saeko Mochizuki, led an attack on the Onmoraki-Gumi in retalition, and took over the organization, sbusequently using it as a front for the Assassin activities.[2]
Members
- Hattori Hanzō
- Hattori Masanari
- Kenichi Mochizuki
- Saeko Mochizuki
- Mogami Yoshiaki
- Kiyoshi Takakura
- Yamauchi Kazutoyo
- Yamauchi Taka
Allies
- Chaya Shirōjirō Kiyonobu
- Honda Tadakatsu
- Ii Naomasa
- Tokugawa Ieyasu