小早川秀秋
Kobayakawa Hideaki
The Defector of Sekigahara — The Man Who Decided Japan's Fate
Description
Kobayakawa Hideaki (1582–1602) is one of the most fateful figures in Japanese history: the young general whose decision to defect to the Tokugawa side during the Battle of Sekigahara on September 15, 1600, caused the collapse of the western coalition and determined that the Tokugawa would rule Japan for the next two and a half centuries. He was Toyotomi Hideyoshi's nephew, raised as the adopted heir of the distinguished Kobayakawa clan, and held over 500,000 koku as a major western daimyo. When Ieyasu fired warning shots at his position on Mount Matsuo to force him to choose sides, Hideaki committed — and led 15,000 troops in a devastating attack on Ōtani Yoshitsugu, who had reportedly predicted this betrayal. Hideaki died just two years later at twenty-one, reportedly haunted by hallucinations of Yoshitsugu's ghost. His name became a byword for treachery, but the reality was that of a young man trapped between conflicting loyalties, personal grievances against Mitsunari, and the overwhelming pressure of Ieyasu's will. As lord of Bizen-Okayama — the heartland of Japanese sword production — his connection to the Osafune tradition is undeniable, even if his short and troubled life left little room for the cultivation of collecting.
Sabres célèbres
- Bizen Osafune tachi — a blade from the tradition of smiths working in Hideaki's own domain; the Bizen school's characteristic combination of brilliant surface beauty and battlefield effectiveness mirrors the tension between the image Hideaki wanted to project and the reality of his choices
- Toyotomi gift sword — a blade from Hideyoshi's collection given to his nephew, an heirloom that would have made the moment of betrayal on September 15, 1600, all the more charged with impossible meaning