The 47 Ronin
The story of the 47
Ronin is one of the most celebrated in the history of the samurai. This was
perhaps all the more so because it occurred at a time when the samurai class
was struggling to maintain a sense of itself - warriors with no war, a social
class without a function.
The tale could be said
to have begun with the teachings of Yamaga Soko (1622-1685), an influential
theorist who wrote a number of important works on the warrior spirit and what
it meant to be samurai. His writings inspired a certain Ôishi Kuranosuke
Yoshio, a samurai and retainer of Asano Takumi no kami Naganori (1667-1701),
who led a branch of the powerful Asano family.
It happened that Lord
Asano was chosen by the shogun, Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, to be one of a number of
daimyo tasked with entertaining envoys from the Imperial family. To assist him
in this new duty, the Bakufu's highest ranking master of protocol, Kira
Kozukenosuke Yoshinaka (1641-1702), was assigned to instruct him in matters of
etiquette. Kira, it seems, was a somewhat difficult character and expected
Asano to compensate him monetarily for the trouble, which Asano held was simply
his duty. The two grew to dislike one another intensely, and Kira made every
effort to embarrass his student. Finally, in April of 1702, the situation
exploded within the shogun's palace - Kira insulted Asano once again, prompting
the latter to draw his sword and swing at him. Kira was only wounded in the
attack and Asano was promptly placed under confinement.
Striking another man in
anger was against the law - doing so within the shogun's palace was
unthinkable. Asano made little effort to defend himself during questioning
except to say that he bore the shogun no ill will and only regretted that he
had failed to kill Kira.
After the o-metsuke (inspector-generals)
had completed their investigation of the matter, the shogunate passed down a
sentence of death on Asano, ordering him to slit his belly at once. The shogun
also decreed that his 50,000-koku fief at Akô in Harima was to be confiscated and
his brother Daigaku placed under house arrest.
When the news of the
unfortunate event reached Asano's castle, his retainers were thrown into an
uproar and argued heatedly over what to do next. Some favored accepting their
lot quietly and dispersing as ronin, while another group called for a defense
of the castle and an actual battle with the government. Ôishi Kuranosuke, who
urged the retainers to give up the castle peacefully and struggle to
rehabilitate the Asano family while at the same time preparing to take revenge
on Kira, sounded the view that prevailed.
Accordingly, a band of
Asano retainers - now ronin - set out on a carefully planned road to revenge.
Kira was no fool, and expecting some sort of attempt on his life by the Asano
men increased his personal guard. Ôishi's scheme was therefore to lull their
quarry into complacency, biding their time while they waited for the right
moment. To this end the ronin hid away a cache of weapons and armor before
ostensibly dispersing, some taking up menial jobs while others, like Ôishi
himself, let it seem that they had lost any concern for their futures. Ôishi
left his wife and began frequenting all of Edo's houses of ill repute,
carousing with prostitutes and engaging in drunken brawls. On one occasion, a samurai
from Satsuma is supposed to have come across Ôishi drunk in the street and spat
upon him, saying that he was no real samurai.
Needless to say, Kira
began to doubt that he was in any real danger, and within a year had relaxed
his guard. It was at that point that the ronin struck. 47 of them gathered on
14 December 1702 and, after donning the armor and taking up the weapons from
the cache, they set out on their revenge on that same snowy night. Once at
Kira's Edo mansion, they divided into two groups and attacked, with one group
entering through the rear of the compound while the rest forced their way
through the front, battering the gate down with a mallet. Kira's men, many of
whom were killed or wounded, were taken completely by surprise but did put up a
spirited resistance (one of the ronin was killed in the attack), though
ultimately to no avail: Kira was found in an outhouse and presented to Ôishi,
who offered him the chance to commit suicide. When Kira made no reply, Ôishi
struck off his head with the same dagger that Asano had used to kill himself
with. Kira's head was then put in a bucket and carried to the Sengakuji, where
Asano was buried. After Ôishi and the others had given the bloody trophy to the
spirit of Asano, they turned themselves in.
The assassination of
Kira placed the government in a difficult situation. After all, the 46
survivors now awaiting their fate had lived up to the standards of loyalty
expected of true samurai and the ideals propounded by such men as Yamaga Soko.
Additionally, the decision to order Asano to commit suicide and confiscate his
domain while taking no action against Kira had not been popular (at least one
of the inspectors at the time had been demoted for protesting the verdict).
Nonetheless, the Bakufu decided that the maintenance of order would once again
have to prevail, and so the ronin were ordered to commit suicide - a sentence
suggested by the famous Confucian scholar Ogyû Sorai (1666-1728). They were at
this time divided up into four groups under guard by four different daimyo, yet
once they had all died, their bodies were buried together at the Sengakuji.1
Legend has it that the Satsuma samurai who had spit upon Ôishi in the street
came to the temple and slit his own belly to atone for his insults.
The Revenge of the 47
Ronin continued to spark controversy throughout the Edo Period. One view had it
that Ôishi and his men had in fact erred in waiting as long as they had, that
in so doing they risked Kira dying (he was, after all, over 60) and their efforts
coming to naught. This was, for example, the view of Yamamoto Tsunetomo (author
of the famed Hagakure).2 The Confucian scholar Sato Naotaka (1650-1719)
criticized the ronin for taking action at all, as the shogun's decision to
order Asano to commit suicide should have ended the matter there and then. He
also shared Tsunetomo's belief that the ronin ought to have commited suicide at
the Sengakuji once their deed was done. In giving themselves up to be judged,
they appeared to have hoped to receive a light sentence and therefore continue
living -a shameful objective, given their crimes. At the same time, Naotaka
reserved his harshest words for Kira, whom he called a coward and whose
precipitation of the whole affair had led to so many deaths.
Other writers did not
share those views. Men like Asami Yasuda (1652-1711) defended the actions of
the ronin as being appropriate (if not actually challenging the Bakufu's
decisions) and Chikamatsu wrote a favorable play (Chushin-gura) that became an
instant and timeless classic. In the end, the Ôishi Kuranosuke and his ronin
became the stuff of legend, and continue to spawn books, movies, and television
shows at a prodigious rate. The Sengakuji is still a popular spot in Tokyo and
a place for modern admirers of what many feel were the finest examples of
samurai loyalty to emerge from the Edo Period.
1. The daimyo who had
guarded them were Hisamatsu (Matsudaira) Sadanao, Hosokawa Tsunatoshi, Mizuno
Kenmotsu, and Mori Tsunemoto.
2. See Hagakure
(transl. William Scott Wilson, Kodansha), pg. 27
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