Hyouge Mono (The Warring States Comedy)
へうげもの
A manga and anime following Furuta Oribe, real-life tea master and samurai of the Sengoku era, who navigates the ambitions of Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Ieyasu through the lens of aesthetic obsession. Unique for treating the Japanese sword as an art object alongside ceramics and tea implements.
Description
Hyouge Mono and the Aesthetic Samurai
Hyouge Mono (manga by Yamada Yoshihiro, 2005–2017; NHK anime 2011–2012) follows Furuta Oribe — real-life samurai, tea master, and founder of the Oribe-yaki ceramic tradition — through the Sengoku era under Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Ieyasu. Winner of the 35th Kodansha Manga Award, it is the only major manga to treat the Japanese sword primarily as an art object alongside ceramics and tea utensils, rather than as a weapon.
The Sword as Art Object
The series' most original contribution is its "suki" (aesthetic obsession) framing: Oribe evaluates swords, tea bowls, and ceramics with the same intense appreciative gaze. This reflects historical reality: in the Sengoku period, a named sword was understood to have aesthetic, spiritual, and political dimensions equivalent to the finest tea utensils. Nobunaga and Hideyoshi used the gift of famous swords (meibutsu) as political currency in exactly the same way as famous tea bowls. Hyouge Mono captures this cultural context with unusual accuracy.
Sen no Rikyu and the Aesthetics of Death
The manga's portrayal of Sen no Rikyu's forced seppuku (1591) as a confrontation between two irreconcilable aesthetic worldviews is one of Japanese historical fiction's most original interpretive acts. The scene directly parallels the way swords were used in final acts of samurai dignity — the sword as the instrument of a beautiful death, which is both its most terrible and most elevated function.
DATEKATANA Connection
DATEKATANA's approach to the Japanese sword aligns precisely with Hyouge Mono's philosophy: every blade in our collection is simultaneously a martial instrument and an art object, deserving the same attentive appreciation Oribe gives to a prized tea bowl. The jihada, hamon, and nakago of a fine sword reward exactly the kind of sustained aesthetic attention this series celebrates.
Real Swords Featured
Heshikiri Hasebe (Nobunaga's Sword)
Nobunaga's famous blade — used in the violent legend that gives it its name — embodies the dual nature Hyouge Mono explores: the sword as both an instrument of sudden, absolute violence and a named art object with spiritual and aesthetic dimensions. Now a National Treasure at Fukuoka City Museum, it is the ideal physical artifact for understanding the world Hyouge Mono depicts.
Furuta Oribe's Koshirae (Sword Fittings)
Historical records indicate that Furuta Oribe applied his distinctive aesthetic — the Oribe-yaki sensibility of asymmetry and deliberate imperfection — to sword fittings as well as ceramics. Momoyama-period sword fittings are an independent major category of Japanese art history, and Oribe's influence extended to tsuba and koshirae design. Hyouge Mono captures this aesthetic dimension of the sword.
Masamune (The Supreme Name-Object)
Okizaki Goro Nyudo Masamune of Sagami Province is historically Japan's most celebrated sword smith. Toyotomi Hideyoshi's obsessive collecting of Masamune tanto is historical fact — he treated them exactly as he treated the finest tea bowls, as supreme 'meibutsu' (famous objects) with aesthetic, political, and spiritual power. This is the historical reality behind Hyouge Mono's central thesis: the sword and the tea bowl occupy the same plane of aesthetic meaning in Japanese culture.
See authentic Japanese swords
Related Content
This page is intended to introduce Japanese sword culture and is not affiliated with any of the works mentioned.