enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tanegashima (gun) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanegashima_(gun)

    Japanese ashigaru firing hinawajū.Night-shooting practice, using ropes to maintain proper firing elevation. Tanegashima (), most often called in Japanese and sometimes in English hinawajū (火縄銃, "matchlock gun"), was a type of matchlock-configured [1] arquebus [2] firearm introduced to Japan through the Portuguese Empire in 1543. [3]

  3. Firearms of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firearms_of_Japan

    Isolation did not decrease the production of guns in Japan—on the contrary, there is evidence of around 200 gunsmiths in Japan by the end of the Edo period. But the social life of firearms had changed: as the historian David L. Howell has argued, for many in Japanese society, the gun had become less a weapon than a farm implement for scaring ...

  4. Ashigaru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashigaru

    Ashigaru wearing armor and jingasa firing tanegashima (Japanese matchlocks). Ashigaru (足軽, "light of foot") were infantry employed by the samurai class of feudal Japan.The first known reference to ashigaru was in the 14th century, [1] but it was during the Ashikaga shogunate (Muromachi period) that the use of ashigaru became prevalent by various warring factions.

  5. Hōjutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hōjutsu

    Recently the general media has come to view the samurai as warriors who were armed only with close combat weapons such as the katana. However, the Japanese were arguably using guns more effectively than their European counterparts by the sixteenth century, as well as producing more accurate, durable varieties. [citation needed]

  6. Ninjatō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninjatō

    The ninjatō (忍者刀), ninjaken (忍者剣), or shinobigatana (忍刀), [2] is alleged to be the preferred weapon of the shinobi of feudal Japan, described in one 21st-century portrayal as carried on the person's back, specifically horizontally at a height of around that of the person's waist.

  7. Bugei jūhappan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugei_jūhappan

    The Bugei jūhappan (武芸十八般 "Eighteen Kinds Of Martial Arts") is a selection of combat techniques and martial arts used by the samurai of Tokugawa-era Japan. [1] Established by Hirayama Gyozo , the concept is based on earlier Chinese traditions, such as Eighteen Arms of Wushu.

  8. Kabutowari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabutowari

    It would appear, according to Serge Mol, that tales of samurai breaking open a kabuto (helmet) are more folklore than anything else. [6] The hachi (helmet bowl) is the central component of a kabuto; it is made of triangular plates of steel or iron riveted together at the sides and at the top to a large, thick grommet of sorts (called a tehen-no-kanamono), and at the bottom to a metal strip ...

  9. Haitō Edict - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitō_edict

    The hereditary stipends provided to the samurai by their formal feudal lords (and assumed by the central government in 1871) were likewise abolished in 1873. The prohibition on wearing swords was controversial with the Meiji oligarchy but the argument, that it was an anachronism not in keeping with the westernization of Japan, won out.