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Hattori Hanzō was born the son of Hattori Yasunaga (服部 保長), the First Hanzō, a minor samurai in the service of the Matsudaira (later Tokugawa) clan. [7] [2] His real name was Hattori Masanari (服部 正成). Despite being born in Mikawa Province (now Iga-chō, Okazaki, Aichi), he often paid visits to Iga Province, home of the Hattori ...
Hattori Hanzō Masanari I (Masashige I) (服部 半蔵 正成) (1542-1596), son of Hattori Yasunaga, the second Hattori Hanzō Hattori Hanzō Masanari II (服部 半蔵 正就) (1565-1615), eldest son of the second Hattori Hanzō, the third Hattori Hanzō
A relative of Shimo-no-Hanzō Hattori, this Hanzou is the historical (Hattori Hanzō) and is from the Hattori clan of Okazaki in Upper Iga, hence his being referred to as Kami-no-Hanzō (上の半蔵 "Upper-(Iga)-Hanzō") to distinguish him from the other ninja also named "Hanzō Hattori" (including his father Yasunaga).
Path of the Assassin is the story of Hattori Hanzō, the master ninja whose duty it was to protect Tokugawa Ieyasu, who would grow up to become shōgun and unify Japan. The creators poetically describe the story as "Lifelong Friends, with the Same Dreams, Striving to Grow into a Rising River".
Hattori Masanari (服部 正就, 1565 – June 3, 1615) was the third Hattori Hanzō and a retainer under the Tokugawa clan during the late Sengoku period of Japanese history. He was the eldest son of the famous Hattori Hanzō. Masanari began to fight alongside his father by the mid 1590s, succeeding him in 1596 at age 31.
Hattori Masashige (服部 正重, 1580–1652) was an Edo period Ninja and the fourth Hattori Hanzō. His older brother was Hattori Masanari and his younger brother was the monk Hattori Masahiro . His wife was the daughter of Ōkubo Nagayasu .
Shig Yasunaga, the clerk of the court, administered the oath by which the newest citizens renounced allegiance and fidelity to any state or sovereignty and pledged to support and defend the ...
Judging by the fact that Hattori Hanzo's father's name was Hattori Yasunaga, I'm guessing that Hattori is his family name. Isn't there some kind of policy about Japanese names having to be in the western naming order? Ziiv 21:05, 16 September 2006 (UTC) You're quite right that Hattori is the family name.