Yagyū clan explained

Surname Nihongo:柳生氏
Home Province:Yamato
Parent House:Sugawara clan
Titles:Various
Dissolution:Still extant

The were a family of daimyōs (feudal lords) with lands just outside Nara, who became the heads of one of Japan's greatest schools of swordsmanship, Yagyū Shinkage-ryū. The Yagyū were also Kenjutsu teachers to the Tokugawa shōguns and descendant of the famous Taira clan, hailing from prestigious Imperial Lineage with the Kabane rank of Ason.

Yagyū Muneyoshi (1527-1606), the first famous Yagyū swordsman, fought for a number of different lords before meeting Tokugawa Ieyasu, the first Tokugawa shōgun. In 1563, he was defeated by the swordsman Kamiizumi Nobutsuna, praised as one of the very few Kensei throughout Japan. Humbled by his defeat, Muneyoshi became Nobutsuna's disciple, and was later named his successor, founding the Yagyū Shinkage-ryū school of swordsmanship.

In 1594, Muneyoshi was invited to Tokugawa Ieyasu's mansion in Kyoto, where he provided such an impressive display of sword skills that Ieyasu asked that the Yagyū become sword instructors to the Tokugawa clan. Among other things, Muneyoshi demonstrated Shinkage-ryū techniques of sword catching on Ieyasu himself. Muneyoshi suggested that his son Munenori be Ieyasu's teacher; Muneyoshi then retired from swordsmanship, and died in 1606, by which time Ieyasu had become shōgun. It was at this time also that the Yagyū swordsmanship school split in two, with Munenori and his nephew Toshiyoshi each becoming the hereditary heads of the Owari and Edo schools of Yagyū Shinkage-ryū.

The Nara area bears many memorials to the Yagyū family, and their family graveyard lies on the grounds of the Hōtoku-ji where the clan's main bastion Yagyū Castle was.[1] On the grounds is a rock called Ittō-seki, which Muneyoshi is supposed to have cut in half with his sword (but was probably split by lightning).

The mon (crest) of the Yagyū family was a wide-brimmed black kasa with ties, called a yagyūgasa.

Notable members of the Yagyū family

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 日本の城がわかる事典「柳生城」の解説. kotobank. 14 November 2021.