Sanada Maru
真田丸
A 2016 NHK Taiga Drama written by Kōki Mitani, depicting the life of Sanada Nobushige (Yukimura) from his youth through the Siege of Osaka. One of the most-watched Taiga dramas of the modern era.
解說
Overview
Sanada Maru is a 2016 NHK Taiga Drama written by Kōki Mitani and starring Masato Sakai as Sanada Nobushige (Yukimura). It follows Nobushige from his youth during the wars of unification through his famous last stand at the Summer Siege of Osaka in 1615. It achieved an average audience rating of 16.6% — among the highest of any Taiga drama in the 2010s.
A Turning Point in Sword History
The period depicted — roughly 1590 to 1615 — marks the decisive turning point when the katana ceased to be primarily a battlefield weapon and became the samurai's symbolic soul object. The Battle of Sekigahara (1600) drastically reduced real combat, and the Summer Siege of Osaka (1615) closed the era of large-scale sword-bearing warfare. Sanada Maru depicts the last generation of men who wielded swords in actual mortal combat.
Nobushige and the Warrior's Sword
Nobushige's reputation as "Japan's greatest warrior" rests on his charge toward Tokugawa Ieyasu's headquarters at Osaka. The drama honors this with climactic battle scenes depicting the mixed weaponry of the late Sengoku — sword, spear, and musket — rendered with careful historical attention.
Ceremonial Sword Culture
Indoor scenes at Osaka Castle depict the elaborate etiquette surrounding swords in aristocratic warrior settings — the prohibition on drawing, the protocol for surrendering blades at audience — providing an unusually detailed portrait of how Japanese sword culture was lived day-to-day in the early Edo transition.
登場的真實刀劍
Sanada Family Swords (Sanada Treasure Museum)
The Sanada Treasure Museum in Ueda City, Nagano Prefecture, houses swords, armor, and weapons associated with the Sanada clan. Blades connected to Sanada Masayuki and Nobuyuki are valuable examples of the practical uchigatana of the Sekigahara era. While few direct relics of Nobushige survive (he died at Osaka), the collection provides a tangible connection to the world of Sanada Maru.
Keichō–Genna Uchigatana (Last Battle Swords)
The blades forged around the time of the Siege of Osaka (1615) represent the final generation of Japanese swords designed with actual combat in mind. Smiths such as Echizen Yasutsugu and Kaga Kiyomitsu worked for major daimyo households during this transition from practical war sword to ceremonial status symbol. Their work embodies the historical moment Sanada Maru depicts.
瀏覽真正的日本刀
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