YAIBA
YAIBA
A sword-action comedy manga by Gosho Aoyama (1988–1993) that won both the Kodansha Manga Award and the Shogakukan Manga Award. Young Yaiba Kurogane fights with a katana against famous rivals including Miyamoto Musashi, inspiring generations of children with the coolness of the Japanese sword.
Description
Gosho Aoyama and His Love of Swords
YAIBA is a sword-action comedy manga by Gosho Aoyama — later world-famous for Detective Conan — serialized in Weekly Shonen Sunday from 1988 to 1993. Protagonist Yaiba Kurogane, raised as a wild child by his samurai father, bursts into civilization and proves his sword skills against a series of increasingly powerful opponents. The series won both the Kodansha Manga Award and the Shogakukan Manga Award — a rare double achievement — and its role in teaching a generation of children to love the Japanese sword is immeasurable.
The Battle with Miyamoto Musashi
One of YAIBA's greatest hooks is the appearance of Miyamoto Musashi as a major character. Whether as a time-traveling legend or a descendant, Musashi's two-sword style, the philosophy of the Gorin no Sho, and the legendary duel at Ganryujima all reach child readers through this manga. Many readers cite YAIBA as their first encounter with Musashi's historical legacy.
Kendo Spirit in Shonen Manga
At its core, YAIBA embodies kendo values: courtesy, honest competition, and relentless training. Yaiba's growth through increasingly powerful opponents mirrors the kendo experience of earning rank through facing stronger opponents, making it especially beloved among young kendo practitioners.
Discovering the 'Coolness' of the Japanese Sword
YAIBA's most important contribution was delivering the pure visual coolness of the katana — the draw, the flash of steel, the single decisive cut — directly to children. Its natural portrayal of sword quality, forging, and the desire for a better blade quietly cultivated curiosity about real Japanese swords.
Sabres réels présentés
Uchigatana — The Young Swordsman's Blade
Yaiba's katana introduced the standard form of the Japanese uchigatana — approximately 70–75 cm, worn edge-upward — to a generation of young readers. This is the same form that became the basis for modern kendo's shinai practice sword. Many readers were inspired by YAIBA to begin kendo training, making it an important gateway to Japanese sword practice culture.
Miyamoto Musashi's Two Swords (Daisho)
Musashi's two-sword style depicted in YAIBA is rooted in his real Niten Ichi-ryu school, which simultaneously wields a long sword (uchigatana) and a short sword (wakizashi). This is the most famous sword style in Japanese martial history. Niten Ichi-ryu two-sword technique is officially recognized in modern kendo competition, maintaining the living tradition of Musashi's approach.
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.