Hirata Yukie | |
Native Name: | 平田 靭負 |
Birth Date: | September 10, 1704 |
Nationality: | Japanese |
was a Japanese karō and samurai retainer of the Satsuma Domain best known for his involvement in the 1754 Hōreki River incident. His familiar name was, and he later adopted the name "Kamon".
Hirata Yukie was born in 1704 to the family of Kagoshima samurai . In 1729, at the age of 24, he was commissioned as a general officer of ashigaru.
During the 1754 Hōreki River incident, Hirata was appointed by his domainal superiors as the bugyō overseeing engineering and construction work by Satsuma personnel across the numerous wajū. In the course of these labors, many Satsuma men died. Hirata himself died in 1755 after the project was terminated. According to official records he was one of the many victims of dysentery in the course of the incident, but a theory emerged in the late 19th century that he in fact performed seppuku to atone for his failure to protect his fellow Satsuma men from the malicious intentions of the shogunate.[1] He was buried at the in Fushimi, Kyoto.[1]
After his death, family leadership was taken over by his grandson .
There are a number of statues of Hirata Yukie, in, among other places, Yōrō, Gifu and at the in Kuwana.[2]
The 1977 semi-historical gekiga Satsuma Gishiden contains a sympathetic depiction of Hirata Yukie, including the folkloric incident of his killing a man with one of his own severed ribs.[3]