10 Amazing Legends Of Ninjas From History by Eric C Riley
Ninjas: those silent, stealthy spies and assassins of Japan’s Sengoku
era have captured the minds of people all over the globe. So much of
them has been romanticized and idealized, but one mustn’t forget that
ninjas once truly did exist. Due to the rather secretive nature of
ninjas, very few official records of them were kept, and a lot of them
are steeped in myth and legend (we’ve told you about those myths before).
Although this is a list of “real life” ninjas, it is very much
debatable whether or not some of them truly were ninjas and, in some
cases, whether they actually existed at all.
10 Kido Yazaemon
Kido Yazaemon was an Iga ninja born around 1539. He was apparently a
master with the Tanegashima arquebus, a type of matchlock rifle: The
fact that the arquebus was his weapon of choice would suggest that
Yazaemon was an expert with explosives and specialized in teppo-jutsu, a sub category of katon-nojutsu, or fire techniques. Contrary to popular portrayal, firearms such as the arquebus were a favorite weapon of the ninja and were in fact employed regularly by them in their assassination attempts.
Yazaemon’s true claim to fame, however, would be how he attempted to
assassinate Oda Nobunaga in 1579. This attempt, although ending up in
failure, was still noteworthy enough to be recorded in the Iranki,
a historical document on the Iga ninjas. As part of the operation,
Yazaemon and two other ninjas fired at Nobunaga while he was inspecting
the aftermath of his invasion. They missed Nobunaga and ended up killing
seven of his companions instead.
9 Kirigakure Saizo
Kirigakure Saizo is most well known for the fictional ninja he was the
inspiration for: Kirigakure Saizo, second-in-command of the Sanada Ten
Braves under rival and friend Sarutobi Sasuke. As for the historical
Kirigakure, according to historical records, an Iga ninja called
“Kirigakure Saizo” (believed to be an alias used by another man named
Kirigakure Shikaemon) once attempted an assassination against Toyotomi
Hideyoshi by thrusting a spear through the floor beneath him.
The attempt failed and Kirigakure’s life was spared on condition that
he swore loyalty to the Toyotomi clan. In fact, there are some sources
that suggest that Saizo was a “careless ninja”
who was merely spying on Hideyoshi when he was caught. And yet, as a
result of getting caught, he ended up thwarting an actual assassination
attempt on Hideyoshi by double agent Yusuke Takiguchi. This was the
reason his life was spared on condition of declaring loyalty to
Hideyoshi.
8 Tomo Sukesada
Tomo Sukesada was a jonin (master ninja) of the Koga and the
head of the Tomo Ryu tradition. In 1562, Tokugawa Ieyasu, working for
Oda Nobunaga, was mopping up the remainders of the Imagawa clan
following their defeat at the Battle of Okehazama two years earlier. Not
willing to give up yet, the Imagawa clan had holed up at Kaminogou
castle—located at a highly strategic location over a precipice—under the
command of Udono Nagamochi, a general of the Imagawa.
Taking the castle was going to be difficult for Ieyasu, especially
since the Imagawa had taken some of his family as hostages. To that end,
Ieyasu hired 80 Koga ninjas
led by Sukesada to infiltrate the Imagawa’s castle. Working together
with Hattori Hanzo, Sukesada and his 80 Koga ninjas infiltrated the
castle, set its towers on fire, and killed 200 of the garrison,
including the general. This incident is narrated in detail in the Mikawa Go Fudoki.
7 Fujibayashi Nagato
According to legend, Fujibayashi Nagato was one of the three greatest jonin
of the Iga, along with Momochi Sandayu and Hattori Hanzo. He was also
the co-head of the Iga ninjas, along with Momochi Sandayu. Other than
that, not much is known about him. In 1581, Oda Nobunaga launched a
vicious invasion of the Iga province known as the Tensho Iga War, which
decimated the Iga and Koga ninja clans. Survivors went into the service
of Tokugawa Ieyasu, and Nagato was killed in the invasion.
Despite how little we know about his life, however, Nagato did in
fact leave behind an important legacy: His descendants would eventually
compile the ninjutsu knowledge he left behind to create the Bansenshukai. The Bansenshukai is a multi-volume compilation of the “secrets” and techniques of the ninja as written by the Fujibayashi clan—a lot of the information we have about ninjas today come from this compilation.
6 Mochizuki Chiyome
Mochizuki Chiyome is quite possibly the most famous kunoichi
(female ninja) of all. She was a noblewoman, the wife of samurai
warlord Mochizuki Nobumasa, and rumored to be originally from the Koga
ninja clan. Sometime during the 16th century,
her husband was away at war and Chiyome was left in the care of her
husband’s uncle, famed daimyo Takeda Shingen. Shingen approached Chiyome
and gave her a mission to recruit women and train them as an
underground network of female espionage operatives.
Chiyome set up headquarters at Nazu village in the Shinshu region and
recruited up to 300 young women—mostly orphans, former prostitutes, and
war victims. While most locals believed that Chiyome was running an
unofficial orphanage for victimized girls, Chiyome was in truth training
them to be part of her elaborate espionage network.
Trained to utilize disguises such as miko (Shinto shrine priestess),
prostitutes, or geisha for purposes of espionage or assassination,
Chiyome’s kunoichi network served Shingen for years until his mysterious death in 1573.
5 Ishikawa Goemon
Although neither the Iga nor the Koga would accept him as one of them,
no list of real-life ninjas would ever be complete without Ishikawa
Goemon. Born in 1558, Ishikawa Goemon was an outlaw who stole from the
rich and gave to the poor—Japan’s version of Robin Hood. Although there is no factual verification, according to legend, Goemon was originally a genin (ninja apprentice) of the Iga under Sandayu Mochizuki before becoming a nukenin (runaway ninja).
He became the leader of a group of bandits in Kansai and continuously
robbed rich feudal lords, clerics, and merchants and would share that
wealth with oppressed peasants. Supposedly he was caught after a failed assassination attempt
on Toyotomi Hideyoshi and was publicly boiled alive in 1594. Legend
tells how he held his young son over his head while being boiled,
although there are conflicting accounts on whether his son survived or
not.
4 Momochi Sandayu
Ishikawa Goemon, from the previous entry, was allegedly the student of Momochi Sandayu before going nukenin. Momochi Sandayu was one of the founders of Iga Ryu Ninjutsu, and is considered to be one of the three greatest Iga jonin,
the other two being Hattori Hanzo and Fujibayashi Nagato. Sandayu’s
real name was Momchi Tanbe Yasumitsu, though some sources suggest they
were separate people. Other sources claim that Sandayu and Fujibayashi
Nagato were actually one and the same person.
No matter who Momochi really was, he was believed to have been killed
in 1581 when Oda Nobunaga invaded the Iga province in the Tensho Iga
War, which almost completely wiped out the Iga and Koga ninjas. One of
the ways Sandayu operated was to maintain three different houses,
with a different wife and family at each one. When things would get
difficult for him, he would just move to another of his houses and
assume a different identity.
3 Fuma Kotaro
The Fuma clan is unique among ninjas in that it developed independently
from the Iga and Koga in service to the Hojo clan in Odawara. Jonin Fuma Kotaro was the clan’s fifth generation leader and their most famous. At that time, the Fuma was a band of 200 rappa
(battle disrupters) working as brigands, pirates, and thieves in
service of the Hojo. In 1580, Takeda Shigen’s son Katsuyori attacked the
Hojo at Odawara Castle.
During the night, Kotaro and his men covertly infiltrated the Takeda
camp and caused so much disruption and chaos that Takeda men started
killing each other in the confusion. In 1590, the Hojo were defeated by
Toyotomi Hideyoshi and the Fuma were reduced to common bandits.
A popular (though most likely false) story is that in 1596, Kotaro
assassinated Hattori Hanzo but was then betrayed by former Takeda ninja
Kosaka Jinnai, and finally beheaded by order of Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1603.
2 Kato Danzo
In many ways, Kato Danzo was the ninja who popularized the notion that
ninjas held supernatural powers. Danzo was an illusionist who many
believed was an actual sorcerer. His tricks included swallowing a bull
in front of crowds, causing seeds to sprout and flower the instant they
were thrown, and even flying—giving him the nickname Tobi Kato
(flying Kato). Today. researchers believe that he must’ve been a master
of hypnosis, even though there is nothing to verify this.
Either way, Kato’s reputation eventually caught the attention of
Uesugi Kenshin, who decided to test the ninja’s abilities. He challenged
Danzo to steal a prized naginata
(sword) from one of his vassals, Naoe Kanetsugu. Not only did Danzo
successfully infiltrate the heavily guarded castle and retrieve the
blade, but he also captured a servant girl as well. Impressed, Kenshin
brought Danzo into his service, but Danzo eventually became unwelcome,
either because Kanetsugu was plotting against him or because Kenshin had
grown suspicious of him. Ultimately, Danzo defected to Kenshin’s rival,
Takeda Shingen, but this proved to be costly when Shingen suspected
that he was a double agent and ordered that he be killed. Danzo was
beheaded in 1569.
1 Hattori Hanzo
Hattori Hanzo is probably the most famous ninja
of all. He was a vassal and samurai in the service of Tokugawa Ieyasu,
and was a major driving force in Ieyasu becoming the shogun and ruler of
all Japan. Growing up in Inga, Hanzo first distinguished himself in
battles throughout the 1570s. His most famous act came in 1582: When Oda
Nobunaga was killed following the betrayal by one of his vassals,
Akechi Mitsuhide, Tokugawa Ieyasu was suddenly thrust into a highly
dangerous position in close proximity to Mitsuhide. To facilitate
Ieyasu’s passage through the Iga province to the safety of the Mikawa
province, Hanzo brought together his fellow Iga ninjas—along with their
former rivals, the Koga clan—to escort Ieyasu to safety.
There are also some sources that say that Hanzo helped rescue
Ieyasu’s captured family. A master spear-fighter and tactician, Hanzo
served the Tokugawas loyally all of his life. Under his leadership, the
Iga ninjas became the palace guard of the Tokugawa shogunate at Edo
castle, eventually becoming the shogunate’s covert agency under the name
Oniwabanshu. After Hanzo’s death in 1596, his successor would
take the name “Hattori Hanzo” for himself, a practice which became a
tradition of the Iga leaders and perpetuated a myth that Hattori Hanzo
was immortal.
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