Samurai Assassins: A Brief Synopsis

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With my forthcoming Samurai Assassins: “Dark Murder” and the Meiji Restoration, 1853 – 1868 expected to be published sometime between spring and summer, 2017, I thought readers would benefit from the following brief synopsis:

The Japanese word for assassination is ansatsu, “dark murder,” and its significance in the samurai-led revolution which was the “dawn of modern Japan”—when the shogun’s military government was abolished and Imperial rule restored—forms the substance of Samurai Assassins.

For all the impact of “dark murder” on the revolution, most of the assassinations covered in Samurai Assassins have thus far received only cursory, if any, attention by Western writers, though the assassins and their deeds are an indelible part of the popular Japanese literary genre that focuses on the final years of the shogun’s government.

The shogun’s government, known as the Tokugawa Bakufu (or simply Bakufu), was controlled by the Tokugawa family, whose head held the title of seiitaishogun—commander in chief of the expeditionary forces against the barbarians (“shogun” for short)—conferred by the Emperor. The shogun ruled the isolated island nation peacefully for two and a half centuries on the Emperor’s behalf from his castle at Edo (modern-day Tokyo) in the east, while the powerless Emperor was sequestered in his palace at Kyoto in the west. But the era of peace ended when the Bakufu could no longer enforce isolationism against the industrial and technological advances of Europe and America. While Hong Kong was ceded to Great Britain in 1842, the specter of Western imperialism reared its ugly head off Japanese shores. When a squadron of warships commanded by Matthew Perry of the United States Navy entered the bay near Edo in the summer of 1853, that specter hit home. The modern era had reached Japan. It was the onset of fifteen years of chaos and turmoil and violence, which would not subside until the collapse of the Bakufu and the restoration of Imperial rule—the series of events collectively called the Meiji Restoration.

During the decade after Perry’s arrival Japan was divided into two schools of thought. “Revere the Emperor and Expel the Barbarians” was embraced by samurai who called themselves “Imperial Loyalists” (“Loyalists,” for short). Meanwhile, the Bakufu and its allies advocated “Open the Country.” The Loyalists rejected the shogun as the legitimate ruler of Japan because he had failed in his most fundamental purpose of keeping the foreigners out, while the Bakufu and its allies believed that expelling the foreigners would be impossible without first modernizing the country militarily and industrially, which required opening up to foreign trade, technology, and ideas.

The Emperor had been a powerless figurehead for centuries until the early 1860s, when Loyalists from samurai clans of western Japan, most notably Satsuma, Choshu, and Tosa, gathered in Kyoto to rally around the Imperial Court. Those samurai colluded with noblemen of the Court to orchestrate a renaissance of Imperial power, while the Bakufu and its allies believed that the reins of government must remain with the tried-and-true military regime at Edo. Restoring rule to the politically inept Court, they said, would jeopardize the sovereignty of the country. The two sides headed toward a final showdown, while the most farsighted among them realized the imperative for the samurai clans to unite as one powerful nation to fend off Western imperialism.

Samurai Assassins will be the only thorough presentation and analysis in English of “dark murder” and the assassins who committed it, without which the Meiji Restoration as we know it could not have happened. On a deeper level, the book is a study of the ideology behind the revolution. My previous book, Samurai Revolution (Tuttle 2014), is a comprehensive history of the Meiji Restoration and the first ten years of Imperial rule. Samurai Assassins provides an in-depth overview of the Meiji Restoration while focusing on significant men and events, and ideology, not expatiated in my previous book. The following breakdown does not include the twenty-two chapters, or the front or back matter:

• Introduction: On “Dark Murder”—and the Existential Crisis and Rediscovered Purpose of the Samurai Class

• Part I: The Assassination of Ii Naosuke and the Beginning of the End of the Tokugawa Bakufu

• Part II: The Rise and Fall of Takechi Hanpeita and the Tosa Loyalist Party

• Part III: The Assassination of Sakamoto Ryoma

• Epilogue: The Second Existential Crisis of the Samurai Class

Samurai Assassins is based mostly on primary sources and definitive secondary sources in Japanese. Among the primary sources are letters from Takechi Hanpeita, the stoic samurai par excellence who is the focus of Part II. Takechi composed the letters in his squalid prison cell, to converse with his wife and sisters, and to communicate with his cohorts on the outside who had been able to avoid arrest. His letters to his cohorts, written in formal language and tone befitting a samurai, provide an insight into his thinking, including his stoic philosophy, which is not seen in any other documents. His letters to his wife and sisters, on the other hand, overflow with the tender feelings of a husband and brother, and include self-effacing humor, complaints, despondency, and melancholy absent in the other letters. To the best of my knowledge, Takechi’s letters have rarely, if ever, been used by non-Japanese writers.

I will report more in this blog on Samurai Assassins as the publication date approaches. Look for updates, including publication date, on Facebook.


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The Ryōma Phenomenon (6) – Katsu Kaishū and Sakamoto Ryōma: The Meeting That Changed Japan

I have been speaking and writing about “The Ryōma Phenomenon” for most of this summer. But it seems certain that there would not have been a “Ryōma Phenomenon” at all without Katsu Kaishū, “the shogun’s last samurai” of my book, Samurai Revolution: The Dawn of Modern Japan Seen Through the Eyes of the Shogun’s Last Samurai.

When Ryōma fled his native domain of Tosa in the spring of 1862, thus becoming a ronin, he was still very much a man of the sword: i.e., determined to bring down the Bakufu my military force. And he still had strong anti-foreign leanings. In the future, of course, he would devise a plan for the bloodless overthrow of the Bakufu to avoid dangerous civil war and preserve national sovereignty against Western imperialism to usher in the modern age. This vision began to take shape in Ryōma’s mind around the end of 1862, under the Katsu Kaishū’s tutelage. Kaishū was a high-ranking naval officer in the Bakufu. He was a founder of the Japanese Navy who had sailed to San Francisco as captain of the Kanrin Maru, the first Japanese vessel to reach the United States in March 1860. Ryōma, meanwhile, was a political outlaw for having fled Tosa, and a known anti-Bakufu activist.

ryoma with Kaishu (museum)

Assassination was rampant at the time. According to Kaishū’s recollection of his first meeting with Ryōma, which took place at Kaishū’s home in Edo, Ryōma intended to kill him. (This depiction of the meeting is from the Ryōma History Museum in Kochi. It is one of a series of depictions of Ryōma’s life using wax figures.)

Of course, Ryōma did not kill Kaishū. Instead, he listened closely as Kaishū spoke of the futility of trying to defend against Western imperialism without a navy, for which Japan needed Western technology. He said that the navy must recruit capable young men from all over Japan, regardless of social class, and not only the privileged elite – radical ideas coming from an elite government official. This naturally would include Ryōma and his friends. Years later Kaishū wrote, “It was around midnight. After I had spoken incessantly about the reasons why we must have a [national] navy, [Ryōma], as if having understood, told me this: ‘I was resolved to kill you this evening, depending on what you had to say. But having heard you out, I am ashamed of myself.’”

Ryōma asked Kaishū to accept him as his student, which Kaishū did. Soon Ryōma recruited several friends from Tosa and elsewhere to work with him under Kaishū. During the following two years, Kaishū would not only change Ryōma’s life, but he would change Japanese history by providing Ryōma with the practical means to bring about the revolution.


Samurai Swordsmen: The Definitive History of the Shinsengumi (Helion, 2026) is now in production.
For professional guidance on Bakumatsu–Meiji Restoration history, see Historical Consulting.
Explore my books at Books at a Glance.

The Ryoma Phenomenon (5) – “You Gotta Have Big Dreams!”

“You gotta have big dreams!” でっかい夢を持たなきゃいかんぜよ。

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If you travel to Sakamoto Ryoma’s hometown of Kochi you will find all kinds of “Ryoma goods,” such as this toy that says four “Ryoma-isms,” splendidly pronounced in the Tosa dialect. Its repertoire includes the above quote, along with the following three, translated by me:

“Your heart must always be as big as the Pacific Ocean.” (心はいつも太平洋ぜよ。)

“Don’t’ worry about little things.” (小さな事にこだわってちゃいかんぜよ。)

“Cheer up!” (クヨクヨしてちゃいかんぜよ。)

This toy was a gift from my Japanese teacher, Mrs. Tae Moriyama, a native of Kochi, years ago while I was writing my novel Ryoma: Life of a Renaissance Samurai. I can’t say that I’ve actually ever come across any of these Ryoma-isms in my research (lol), but I think that whoever produced this toy captured Ryoma’s personality quite well.



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The Ryoma Phenomenon (4) – A Nation Still Inspired

yonago ryoma 2002 (1)
There are around 170 societies and clubs of “Ryoma fans” – tens if not hundreds of thousands of them – in cities throughout Japan. Ryoma fans gather each year to celebrate Ryoma’s life and legacy. These events are held alternately in Ryoma’s hometown of Kochi, and another Japanese city where a Ryoma Society resides.
Other Ryoma events are also frequently held around Japan, including symposiums featuring panel discussions with and lectures by historians and writers. The poster shown here is from a symposium on the theme of internationalism and Sakamoto Ryoma, held in Yonago, Tottori Prefecture, facing the Sea of Japan, in 2002. This was three years after the publication of my novel, Ryoma: Life of a Renaissance Samurai. I was honored to be included in the panel discussion.
yonago ryoma 2002 (2)

The Ryōma Phenomenon (3) – The Statue at Katsurahama

ryoma bronze
In 1928, fourteen years after the publication of Chikami’s biography mentioned in Part 2 of this series, this famous statue was unveiled at Katsurahama beach in Ryoma’s hometown of Kochi, further strengthening the foundation of “The Ryōma Phenomenon” in the 21st century. Looking out at the Pacific Ocean that he had intended to sail with his Kaientai (“Naval Auxiliary Corps”), precursor to the Mitsubishi, Ryōma, wearing boots, has his right hand inside his kimono. The boots and the pose were inspired by the famous standing photograph taken in Nagasaki in 1866, the year before his death.
Sakamoto Ryoma

Samurai Swordsmen: The Definitive History of the Shinsengumi (Helion, 2026) is now in production.
For professional guidance on Bakumatsu–Meiji Restoration history, see Historical Consulting.
Explore my books at Books at a Glance.