平家水軍と海戦の刀剣
Taira Naval Forces and Sea-Battle Swords
The naval campaigns of the Taira clan, culminating in the Battle of Dan-no-ura (1185), shaped how swords were used in close-quarters sea combat and left a legacy of celebrated Taira-associated blades that resonated through later Japanese culture.
Description
The Genpei War and Naval Combat
The Jishō-Juei War (1180–1185) between the Taira and Minamoto clans was Japan's first large-scale civil conflict to feature major fleet-on-fleet naval engagements. At the battles of Yashima and Dan-no-ura (both 1185), the Taira navy leveraged its mastery of the Inland Sea against the Minamoto forces. The unique close-quarters environment of ship-to-ship combat imposed distinct constraints and demands on sword use.
The Role of Swords in Naval Battle
On shipboard, shorter blades—tantō and koshi-gatana—proved more practical than long tachi for maneuvering on wet decks, climbing over gunwales, and thrusting in cramped holds. The degradation of armor in seawater (rust, added weight) also influenced weapon choices. At Dan-no-ura, vast quantities of arms sank to the seafloor; some were later salvaged and treasured as 'sea-floor swords.'
Celebrated Taira-Associated Blades
Taira no Kiyomori, Munemori, and Tomomori owned and bestowed many fine swords as leaders of the military class. Some passed to the Minamoto upon defeat and became prized Kamakura heirlooms. The Ko-garasu-maru (attributed to Taira lineage, now in the Imperial Household collection) preserves an archaic low-curvature tachi form emblematic of the Heian sword aesthetic.
Dan-no-ura and the Loss of Swords
On the twenty-fourth day of the third month of Bunji 1 (1185), the Taira clan perished at Dan-no-ura (present-day Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi), taking the child emperor Antoku with them into the sea. The sacred Kusanagi-no-Tsurugi, one of the Three Imperial Treasures, reportedly sank at this time and has never been recovered—the most dramatic illustration of a sword as a divine national symbol in all of Japanese history.
Swords Recovered from the Deep
Ancient blades dating to the late Heian and Kamakura periods are occasionally dredged from the Seto Inland Sea and Kanmon Strait. Corroded by brine and abraded by sea sand yet sometimes retaining structural integrity, these 'sea-floor swords' provide valuable data for connoisseurship and conservation science.
The Tale of the Heike and Sword Culture
The Heike Monogatari is rich in dramatic sword moments—Atsumori, Nasu no Yoichi, Benkei, Yoshitsune. These narratives shaped the medieval samurai ideal and elevated the sword from mere weapon to 'the soul of the warrior,' a cultural foundation that continued to influence the art of sword appraisal for centuries.
Caracteristiques de cette epoque
- Rise of shorter blades: Cramped shipboard conditions made long tachi unwieldy; tantō and ko-tachi gained practical prominence, presaging the great age of tantō in the Kamakura period.
- Saltwater countermeasures: Sea exposure accelerated rusting, raising the premium on dense hardening and oil treatment; koshirae featured heavy lacquering and leather to resist moisture.
- Survival of archaic tachi forms: Many swords active at Dan-no-ura retained the old koshi-zori profile of the Heian period, preserving a transitional form between old and new styles.
- Consecration of battlefield relics: Surviving Taira blades donated to Tsurugaoka Hachimangū and Itsukushima Shrine became sacred cultural artifacts charged with both victory and memorial significance.
- The 'sea-floor sword' category: Salvaged blades carry distinctive corrosion layers unique to marine immersion, making them a special sub-category in connoisseurship and conservation research.
- Link to the Three Imperial Treasures: The legend of Kusanagi sinking at Dan-no-ura definitively elevated the sword to supreme symbol of divine national authority.
- Cultural amplification via the Heike Monogatari: Narrative accounts attached legendary provenance to real blades, establishing a tradition in which a sword's story became as valued as its metallurgy.