西南戦争期
Satsuma Rebellion Period
The Satsuma Rebellion of 1877 was the final war in which Japanese swords were used in actual combat. This clash between Satsuma samurai with their traditional blades and the modern rifle-equipped imperial army marked the definitive end of the sword as a battlefield weapon — and paradoxically ignited the impulse to preserve and institutionalize it as the military sword.
Description
The Satsuma Rebellion of 1877 was the final war in Japanese history in which traditional swords were used in actual battlefield combat. When Saigō Takamori led approximately 40,000 Satsuma warriors in revolt against Meiji government policies — particularly the Haitōrei (sword-prohibition edict of March 1876), the conscription system, and the abolition of samurai stipends — the result was an extraordinary collision between two military eras. At the Battle of Tabaruzaka and other engagements, sword-wielding Satsuma warriors charged modern rifle-equipped conscript troops in close combat that briefly demonstrated the terrifying effectiveness of skilled swordsmen in melee — but also the ultimate futility of cold steel against firearms at the scale of modern warfare. The government's formation of the Keishi Battōtai (police unsheathed-sword unit) from skilled swordsmen to counter Satsuma's blade charges was itself significant, providing practical justification for retaining the sword in modern military context and directly influencing the establishment of the Army sword-wearing regulations (1885). Saigō's death at Shiroyama on September 24, 1877, surrounded by sword-bearing retainers, became the defining mythological image of the end of samurai civilization — and paradoxically, the founding moment of the Japanese sword's cultural sacralization. The years immediately following were the most devastating in sword-world history:廃刀令 enforcement collapsed daily maintenance demand, forcing most remaining smiths out of business. Surviving smiths pivoted to shrine votive swords, imperial presentations, military sword commissions, and the nascent 'art sword' market emerging through the Naikoku Kangyō Hakurankai exhibitions. The Satsuma Rebellion thus simultaneously killed the sword as a weapon and began its rebirth as a national cultural treasure.
Characteristics of This Era
- Last actual battlefield use of Japanese swords; Tabaruzaka and other engagements simultaneously demonstrated sword effectiveness in melee and its ultimate futility against modern firearms
- Definitive enforcement of Haitōrei after Satsuma's defeat permanently abolished samurai sword-wearing culture
- Battōtai formation provided practical justification for swords in modern military context, directly leading to Army sword regulations (1885)
- Devastating blow to the sword trade; mass business closures forced pivots to shrine votive swords, imperial presentations, military commissions, and the nascent art-sword market
- Saigō's death at Shiroyama accelerated the cultural mythologization of the Japanese sword as the embodiment of Bushidō and the Japanese national spirit