近藤勇
Kondō Isami
Commander of the Shinsengumi
Description
Kondō Isami was the commander of the Shinsengumi who dominated Bakumatsu-era Kyoto as a master swordsman. Born to a farming family in Musashi Province, he inherited the fourth-generation headship of Tennen Rishin-ryū and led the Shinsengumi with extraordinary courage and skill. His beloved sword was a Nagasone Kotetsu, attributed to the celebrated Edo-period smith Nagasone Okisato (Kotetsu), though a persistent theory holds it was actually a forgery by Minamoto Kiyomaro. Regardless, Kondō wielded this blade in the Ikedaya Incident and countless other engagements, placing absolute trust in its cutting edge. In his letters, he wrote 'Tonight, my Kotetsu thirsts for blood' — testament to his fierce attachment to the sword. After the Battle of Toba-Fushimi, he surrendered at Nagareyama and was beheaded at Itabashi. Kondō's life — rising from peasant origins to the pinnacle of the warrior class, only to fall — perfectly symbolizes the turbulent Bakumatsu era.
Sabres célèbres
- Nagasone Kotetsu (authenticity debated)
- Yamato-no-Kami Yasusada