Authors: John Man
Tateoka D
o
shun, 137
Tatsuro:
The Minami Organ,
205
n
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
(comics, etc.), 240â41
Teishitsu, 66
n
Temmu (Emperor), 14
temples, ninja, 135â36
Tendai sect, 24, 98â99, 124
Oda Nobunaga and, 136, 144
tengu,
18â19, 21
Terra-cotta Army, 9
Terry, Charles: and Onoda Hiroo, 266, 270
Thailand, Fujiwara Kikan, 198â99
Thirty Comrades (Burma), 207â8
throwing stars.
See shuriken
Times, The London,
232
Timorese people: and Australia reconnoiter, 208â11
Tininenko, Bob, 258, 260
T
o
d
o
Takatora, 153, 167, 169
Tofuku-ji temple (Kyoto), 129
Togakure, 236â37
T
o
kaid
o
(Eastern Sea Road), 86, 87â88, 160, 165
Tokitaka, 102
Tokugawa government, 166
and Hara stronghold, 170â73
Tokugawa Ieyasu, 104â6, 111â14, 116
doubles, 162
escape after Nobunaga's death, 157â63, 174
in fiction, 238â39
and
Gunpu Jiyoshu,
177
and Hattori Hanz
o
, 158â63, 174
and Iga and K
o
ga, 160â63, 174â76
and Iga refugees, 152â53, 159
and Kant
o
region, 165
ninja employment, 174â76
and
O
saka Castle, 168
and Sekigahara battle, 165â66
shogun, 166â73
Tokugawa Jikki,
118
Tokyo, Yasukuni Shrine, 202
Tomimori Kazuya, 149â53
Tomioka, Nakano School at, 218, 223
Tomo Sukesada, 106
Torii Sune'emon, 111â13
Toshinobu Watanabe, 19, 97, 144, 145, 178â79
Toyonobu Utagawa, 186
trade guilds, 79â80
trials by ordeal, 92
True Pure Land (J
o
do Shinsh
u
) sect, rebellion, 83â84
Tsuge, 160
Tsukii Katsuya, 159â60
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, 186
Turnbull, Stephen: works cited, 90
n,
105
n,
116, 137
n,
140
n,
142, 147, 171
n,
172
n,
186
n
Ueda Masao, Colonel, 203â5
Ueda Masaru, 1â4, 139â40, 153
Ueno village.
See
Iga Ueno
Uesugi Kenshin, 114â18
Ukifune Jinnai, 115â16
Ukifune Kenpachi, 115â16
Vladivostok, Suzuki and, 206
volley fire, 108
Wakasa, 102â3
Wakasa no Kami, 138
Wakayama Point, 267â68
wandering world, 53â54, 135
warlords, 84â85
Warring States, Age of, 85â99
warrior monks, 55, 56, 66, 72, 83
and Nobunaga, 84, 107, 108â9, 113
Watanabe, Toshinobu, 131, 132â35
water spiders (rafts), 126â27
Western powers (WWII), Japan and, 193, 195â225
Wikipedia, 22, 129, 236
Wo-usu.
See
Yamato the Brave (Prince)
World War II, 193, 195â225
ninja ethos in, 4â5
Wright, Frank Lloyd, 191
Wuzong (Tang emperor), 107
Yagawa shrine, 98â99
Yaita (gunsmith), 102â3
yamabushi
(“mountain ascetics”), 18â27, 135â36
certification, 23
families, 124
Iga/K
o
ga, 88â89
rituals, 19â21, 25â26, 75
Yamada F
u
taro:
K
o
ga Ninp
o
ch
o
,
237â39
Yamada K
o
z
o
, 121â29
Yamamoto Hayashi, Major General, 222
Yamamoto Masayoshi: and Australia reconnoiter, 208â11
Yamamoto Shigeichi, 216
Yamashiro
ikki,
82
Yamashiro provincial commune, 82â83
Yamashita Tomoyuki, General, 203
n,
267
surrender order, 246
Yamato the Brave (Prince), 15â17
Yamato military, 96
Yamato province, 59â60
Yamato, villager self-defense, 82
Yashima Unit, 219
Yashino, Southern Court, 60, 70â71
Yodo, Lady, 168
Yokoi Shoichi, 269
Yokoyama, Lt-General, 215, 266
Yoshihiko Amino, 54
Yoshikane, 28â29
Yoshimasa shogun, 81, 90
Yoshino Castle, 66â69
Yoshinori, Yoshihisa, 87, 162
Yoshitsune, Genghis Khan folklore, 186â88
Young, Colin, 42
Yumiya Hanjo
tax, 96
Zen gardens, 55
Zen'ami, 55
Zheng King of Qin.
See
first emperor
Zoughari, Kacem:
The Ninja,
90
n,
105
n,
137
n,
154
n
JOHN MAN
is a British historian and travel writer with a special interest in Asia. A graduate of Oxford who also studied at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies, Man has written acclaimed biographies, including
Genghis Khan
,
Attila the Hun
, and
Kublai Khan
, as well as
Alpha Beta
, on the history of the alphabet, and
The Gutenberg Revolution
, on the invention of printing. He lives in England.
Visit
www.AuthorTracker.com
for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.
Gobi
Atlas of the Year 1000
Alpha Beta
The Gutenberg Revolution
Genghis Khan
Attila
Kublai Khan
The Terracotta Army
The Great Wall
The Leadership Secrets of Genghis Khan
Xanadu
Samurai
Cover design by Adam Johnson
Cover illustration © by The Library of Congress
Author photograph © by Franck Pelagatti
NINJA
. Copyright © 2012, 2013 by John Man. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
Originally published in slightly different form in the United Kingdom in 2012 by Transworld Publishers.
FIRST
U
.
S
.
EDITION
__________________________________________________
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Man, John, 1941â
Ninja: 1,000 years of the shadow warrior / John Man.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-06-222202-2
1. NinjaâHistory. 2. NinjutsuâHistory. I. Title.
II. Title: Ninja, one thousand years of the shadow warrior.
UB271.J3M36 2013
355.5'48âdc23
Â
2012031912
__________________________________________________
Â
Epub Edition © FEBRUARY 2013 ISBN: 9780062202666
13Â Â Â Â 14Â Â Â Â 15Â Â Â Â 16Â Â Â Â 17Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
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FOOTNOTES
INTRODUCTION
1
As he is known in Japan, with his given name following his family name. In the West, the names are reversed.
CHAPTER 1
1
Yamabushi
is sometimes translated as “mountain warrior,” because
bushi
means “warrior.” In this case, not so. This
bushi
has a different sign, and derives from a word meaning “to prostrate oneself.” A
yamabushi
is “one who prostrates himself on a mountain.”
2
Hitoshi,
Mandala of the Mountain
, pp. 67â68.
CHAPTER 3
1
Samurai, Warfare and the State in Early Medieval Japan
, p. 10.
2
Both these examples are quoted by Conlan in
State of War,
p. 18.
3
McCullough,
Taiheiki
, p. 269.
CHAPTER 4
1
I had never heard of moxa, but it's common in Oriental medicine, which explains this long footnote. The word comes from the Japanese for “mugwort.”
Artemisia moxa
or
vulgaris
, an herb with a soft, downy skin, is ground up and compressed into little cones or cigar-shaped cylinders, which are burned on the skin, usually as a companion to acupuncture. The treatment is known as moxibustion. The moxa may be removed before it hurts or left on until it scars the skin. The purpose is to strengthen the blood and stimulate the flow of qi. It acts as an emmenagogueâan agent that increases blood circulation to the pelvic area and uterus. For this reason, it has been associated, amazingly, with the correction of breech births. A paper in the
Journal of the American Medical Association
(November 1998) found that up to 75 percent of women suffering from breech presentations before childbirth had fetuses that rotated to the normal position after receiving moxibustion thirty minutes a day, with an intensity “just below the individual tolerability threshold.” The really astonishing thing is that the moxa was placed on traditional Chinese acupuncture point BL 67 (known as
zhiyin
), which is
beside the outer corner of the fifth toenail.
CHAPTER 5
1
Souyri,
World Turned Upside Down
, p. 106. Souyri's excellent and well-translated book is the source of much of this chapter.
2
Sansom,
A History of Japan to 1334
, p. 223. The emperor was Shirakawa (1053â1129), who entered a monastery in 1096 but remained in control for the rest of his life as a “cloistered emperor.” These words, though widely quoted, appeared only two centuries after Shirakawa's death. They may well be apocryphal, but most scholars agree they summarize a widely held view about the warrior monks, who in the words of the British historian George Sansom “failed miserably to provide the moral force the times demanded . . . spreading disorder, corruption and bloodshed.”
3
McCullough,
Taiheiki
, chapter 2.
4
McCullough,
Taiheiki
, p. 77.
5
This is Ivan Morris's down-to-earth translation, which in this case I prefer to Helen Craig McCullough's more poetic style.
6
McCullough,
Taiheiki
, p. 172.
7
It is also a place of many shrines and pilgrimage routes, now protected as a UNESCO World Heritage site.
8
By Teishitsu (1610â73), Kyoto paper merchant and musician.
9
McCullough,
Taiheiki
, p. 177.
10
McCullough,
Taiheiki
, p. 179.
CHAPTER 7
1
Japanese peasants were far readier to stand up for themselves than their Chinese counterparts. Pierre Souyri suggests this was in part because they were healthier, with better cultivation producing higher yields, and partly because their holdings were not on plains watered by huge, erratic rivers but in valleys with streams, which did not require large-scale irrigation projects, based on forced labor and oppression.
2
The Japanese divide their history into “reign eras.” The year 1467 was the first of the short
O
nin Era (1467â9).
3
This incident is from the Muromachi
bakufu
's
Nochi Kagami
, retold by both Zoughari (
The Ninja
, p. 40) and Turnbull (
Ninja
, p. 30â32).