The Itsukushima Shrine, Hatsukaichi, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. Photo by Andy Finley, Hanshi |
Some sensei at Juko Kai International teach these koryu arts. If you were to train in most of these samurai arts, such as sojutsu, you would most likely have to move to Japan, as few in the US teach these. Yari is a spear that was favored by some samurai and warrior monks in Japan's past. Yari is just one of a group of nihonto (Japanese blades) (日本刀) that include yari (槍), naginata (薙刀), katana (刀), wakizashi (脇差), seoidachi (also known as odachi - 大太刀), and tanto (短刀). When I was in the US Army, we trained with bayonets fixed to an M16, but of course, this was a modern martial art.
Some suggest yari
is simply a spear, others suggest to be a true yari, the blade must have a full tang and the tang must slide
inside a pole similar to the tang of a
katana (samurai sword). Even so, researchers separate Japanese spears into
categories to include: (1) hoko or
the early spears use by Japanese ancestors, (2) hoko yari or yari-like
spears that originated in China, and (3) yari
blades with a full tang that exhibit
unique metallurgy and swordsmith characteristics indigenous to Japan.
According to Japanese
folklore, a god named Izanagi no mikoto stood
at the Bridge of Heaven and thrust a hoko
into the ocean. As he withdrew the hoko,
shinny drops fell from the weapon and formed the Japan islands. This legend is
very old and Draeger and Smith (1980) suggest the use of spears on the
Japanese islands was older than the legend, and spears likely existed on Japan
as early as 200 BC. Others argue spears appeared later in Japanese history, but
this is likely an argument of semantics, which is why spears are separated into
three categories.
Kapp and others (2002) reported hoko yari originated in
China and was exported to Japan during the Nara
Period (710-794 AD). These Chinese spears typically consisted of
wavy-shaped blades mounted on 6-foot long poles. The side of these hoko yari often includes a kama (sickle) blade which was used for slicing and chopping. The base of the
primary blade had a hollow socket that slipped over a pole rather than into the pole – in other words, it did not have a tang.
Ben blocks sword (katana) attack by Amira using the pommel end of yari during a 2016 clinic at the Seiyo Hombu in Mesa. |
This happened to me (just the
part of losing the blade, not the latter). I purchased a modern
garden hoe (kuwa)
from a garden shop in Laramie, Wyoming that had a blade attached like a hoko yari. The blade simply slid over
the end of the handle. I took my new kuwa
to the evening class in the Education Building Gym on the University of Wyoming
campus and I’m sure some members of the club remember this event. Luckily, I was facing
the dojo shomen so no one was in
front of me when I swung the kuwa
down with full focus for atama uchi
(head strike) at my imaginary opponent: the kuwa
blade shot off the handle like a guided missile and struck the tatami (mats) on the shomen wall with a loud report that
echoed throughout the gym and down the halls of the Education Building. I
checked my garden hoko kuwa (made in China of course) to see if
it had any warning labels stating it should not be swung or used in
self-defense – there were no warnings.
I learned a valuable lesson: you cannot trust martial
arts practice weapons or garden tools purchased from any martial arts supply
house or local garden shop – most are junk and not made for kumite (sparring), kata, bunkai training let
alone everyday use, and we should all
consider wearing safety goggles because of this danger. As another example of the junk sold by these martial arts outlets, after the arrival of an eku I purchased from a well-known martial arts supply house, the very first time I swung the weapon in the air, it snapped in half!
Ben Moeur blocks sword attack by Amira Rodriguez using his yari during samurai arts clinic in 2016 in Mesa, AZ |
Martial arts practice weapons are a problem. A few years
ago I taught an expandable baton clinic in Casper, Wyoming
and Hanshi Andy Finley purchased new kioga
from the same, well-known, popular martial arts outlet. Before the clinic was over,
half of the batons had self-destructed.
At a martial arts demonstration at a University of Wyoming
basketball game we also had a weapon malfunction that other Wyoming martial
artists will remember. My uke and I
were demonstrating a fighting kata
between bo and tonfa. With the first
block of my tonfa, my uke’s bo broke in half - she ended the kata with a short hoko yari.
During the Heian
Period (794-1184 AD), Japanese sword smiths
progressed to a point that their blade work exceeded all others in the world. Japanese
smithing and metallurgy resulted in some of the strongest and enduring blades
in history. These sword smiths produced yari
and naginata blades using the same
methods for manufacture of katana blades. The naginata and yari blades were mounted on poles of varying lengths designed to
outreach their opponents’ sword. Some were very long.
Yari of the Heian Period
were unique in quality, sharpness, metallurgy, smithing and method for mounting
on a pole arm. They were also unique because the blades were like a
double-edged knife and good for slicing and thrusting.
The edges of most yari were razor
sharp. These had full tang to keep
young soldiers from losing blades and soiling pants. In addition to the blade,
the handle was used for thrusting and had a weighted pommel known as a hirumaki. The side of the pole was also
used for striking.
Some blades came with sharpened horns or cross blades known
as jumonji yari (also known as magari
yari). These looked like a cross and were similar in shape to the Japanese
number 10. Ten translates as ‘ju’,
thus the origin of the root of jumonji.
Some jumonji also had cross bars
similar to the Okinawan nunte bo
(aka nunti). The nunte bo was an Okinawan spear with
three prongs. The two shorter prongs were directed in opposite directions.
During the Heian Period, most yari were su-yari (straight blades). Later in the period, naginata were introduced with curved,
single-edged blades (Sinclair, 2001).
During Kamakura
times (1185-1333 AD), Japanese metallurgy progressed greatly. The bushi (samurai warrior) had grown
accustomed to their swords which were portable and fast. It is said that
excellent swordsmen could defeat a spearman (Draeger and Smith, 1980). The
sword was considered the soul of samurai and became the favored weapon of samurai. The so-hei (warrior priests of militant Buddhist sects) chose yari and naginata as weapons.
Both yari and naginata had an
advantage of reach over horse-mounted samurai.
Near the latter half of the 16th century, Japanese foot soldiers
known as ashigaru were armed with
long pikes (nagae yari) to defend
against cavalry charges. Sinclaire (2001) reports yari were as long as 18-feet while most were 10- and 12-feet-long.
Foot soldiers marched into battle with their nagae yari to stop the cavalry, while others carried shorter su yari, arquebusiers (muzzle-loaded firearms) and yumi (bow).
- Draeger,
D.E., and Smith, R.W., 1980, Comprehensive Asian Fighting Arts:Kodansha
International, 207 p.
- Kapp, L, Kapp, H., Yoshihara, Y, 2002, Modern Japanese swords and swordsmiths:Kodansha International, 95 p.
- Sinclaire, C., 2001. Samurai: The weapons and spirit of the Japanese warrior: The Lyons Press: 144 p.
Sojutsu at the Hombu in Arizona |