Peacemaker Kurogane
PEACE MAKER 鐵
A manga and anime series by Nanae Chrono (2002–) following a boy who joins the Shinsengumi in Bakumatsu-era Kyoto. Notable for its emotionally nuanced depiction of real Shinsengumi figures and the moral weight of the sword.
Description
Peacemaker Kurogane and the Weight of the Sword
Peacemaker Kurogane (manga by Nanae Chrono, from 2002; anime by GONZO, 2003) follows the real historical figure Ichimura Tetsunosuke, who joined the Shinsengumi as a page and witnessed the final years of the corps firsthand. The story is set in 1865 Kyoto, after the pivotal Ikeda-ya Incident (1864), and follows Tetsunosuke's journey from a boy seeking revenge to a young man grappling with the true meaning of carrying a sword.
The Sword as Moral Question
The series is distinguished by its unflinching examination of violence: what does it mean to become strong with a sword? What does it mean to actually cut a person? Tetsunosuke's arc embodies the classical Japanese sword philosophy transition from "killing sword" to "life-giving sword" — the idea that true mastery is not about technical killing ability but about what one is willing to protect and die for.
Okita Soji and the Tragic Swordsman
The series' portrayal of Okita Soji — simultaneously the deadliest swordsman in the Shinsengumi and a young man dying of tuberculosis — is one of its most celebrated elements. The tragic contrast between consummate sword mastery and mortal fragility speaks directly to the Japanese sword's dual nature as both the highest art form and the ultimate instrument of death.
DATEKATANA Connection
The Bakumatsu-era swords carried by Shinsengumi members — Izumi no Kami Kanesada (Hijikata's sword), Kashu Kiyomitsu (Okita's sword), Nagasone Kotetsu (Kondo's sword) — are real blades that DATEKATANA carries from the same traditions. Holding one of these swords connects directly to the world Peacemaker Kurogane depicts.
Sabres réels présentés
Izumi no Kami Kanesada (Hijikata's Sword)
The eleventh-generation Izumi no Kami Kanesada of Aizu is historically documented as the maker of Vice-Commander Hijikata Toshizo's personal sword. In Peacemaker Kurogane, Hijikata's character is defined by the cold ruthlessness and unbreakable will embodied in this blade. Kanesada's robust, practical geometry made it ideal for the brutal combat the Shinsengumi actually engaged in.
Kashu Kiyomitsu (Okita's Sword)
Kashu Kiyomitsu of Kaga Province is associated with Shinsengumi first-unit captain Okita Soji, whose legendary sandanzuki (three-stage thrust) made him the deadliest swordsman in the corps. Peacemaker Kurogane's Okita is one of the most nuanced portrayals in Bakumatsu fiction — brilliant, gentle, and fatally ill — and Kiyomitsu's blade is inseparable from that portrayal.
Nagasone Kotetsu (Kondo's Claimed Sword)
Shinsengumi Commander Kondo Isami famously claimed to carry a genuine Nagasone Kotetsu — one of the most prestigious Edo-period swords. Whether authentic or not, this claim reflects the enormous cultural weight Kotetsu blades carried in Bakumatsu sword culture. Peacemaker Kurogane's Kondo is portrayed as a man who embodies the aspirations of commoner-born warriors reaching the pinnacle of the warrior class — Kotetsu is the perfect symbol for that ambition.
Voir les sabres japonais authentiques
Contenu connexe
Cette page a pour but de présenter la culture du sabre japonais et n'est affiliée à aucune des œuvres mentionnées.