Angolmois: Record of Mongol Invasion
アンゴルモア 元寇合戦記
A manga (from 2013) and anime (2018) depicting the 1274 Mongol invasion of Tsushima Island. Praised for its historical rigor and visceral swordfighting, it shows how Japanese warriors actually fought against the world's largest military force.
Beschreibung
The Mongol Invasion and the Japanese Sword
Angolmois: Record of Mongol Invasion (manga by Takagi Nanahiko, from 2013; anime 2018) depicts the 1274 Battle of Tsushima — the opening engagement of the first Mongol invasion of Japan. The Yuan-Goryeo combined force of approximately 30,000 troops landed on Tsushima, defended by roughly 80 warriors under deputy governor So Sukekuni, who died with his entire force in a desperate last stand.
Swordsmanship Against the World's Greatest Army
The Mongol invasions forced Japanese warriors to confront organized mass infantry and cavalry tactics, poisoned arrows, and explosive projectiles ("tetsuhau") for the first time. The Moko Shurai Ekotoba scrolls document this clash in vivid detail. Angolmois accurately depicts the asymmetry: Japanese sword technique was devastatingly effective in close combat, but Japanese warriors were outmatched at range. The historical and strategic accuracy of this portrayal is one of the manga's most praised qualities.
Kamakura-era Swords in Combat
The swords used in the 1274 battle were Kamakura-period blades — primarily tachi from the great schools of Bizen, Yamashiro, and the emerging Soshu tradition. These swords were designed for mounted warfare, worn edge-down in the slung tachi style. The collision between these blades and Mongol armor — heavier and differently constructed than Japanese armor — is part of what makes the Angolmois period so fascinating for sword historians.
DATEKATANA Connection
DATEKATANA carries genuine Kamakura and Nanbokucho period swords — the exact types carried by the warriors in Angolmois. Holding a Kamakura tachi is the most direct connection to the world this manga depicts: the weight, curvature, and geometry of these blades were shaped by the same era of total warfare.
Vorgestellte echte Schwerter
Kamakura Tachi (Combat Blades of the Mongol Era)
The Kamakura tachi — slender, deeply curved, worn edge-down for mounted use — was the standard weapon of the warriors who fought at Tsushima in 1274. Optimized for downward slashing cuts from horseback, these blades represent a pinnacle of functional beauty in Japanese sword history. Surviving Kamakura tachi are National Treasures and Important Cultural Properties; they are among the most elegant and battle-tested swords Japan ever produced.
Bizen Osafune Kanemitsu (Post-Mongol Masterwork)
Kanemitsu was a leading Bizen smith of the Nanbokucho period (immediately following the Mongol invasions), whose powerfully built, elaborate blades reflected Japan's new appreciation for military strength after confronting the Yuan Empire. His swords represent the Japanese sword's evolution in direct response to the threat Angolmois depicts — longer, more robustly constructed, and ferociously practical.
Tsuba of the Kamakura-Nanbokucho Period
Authentische japanische Schwerter ansehen
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