The Story of Japan: Samurai, Isolation, and Modern Superpower — Fexingo History

Japan's Samurai Women: Onna-Bugeisha and the Battle of Aizu

7 min · 23. juni 2026
episode Japan's Samurai Women: Onna-Bugeisha and the Battle of Aizu cover

Beskrivelse

When we think of samurai, we usually picture armored men with katana. But women were also trained in combat, leading armies and defending castles. This episode explores the onna-bugeisha — female warriors of Japan's warrior class. We focus on one of their most famous figures: Nakano Takeko, who fought in the Boshin War (1868–1869). Takeko led a unit of women at the Battle of Aizu, wielding a naginata and charging into modern rifle fire. We discuss her training, the Battle of Aizu, her death in combat, and the legacy of the onna-bugeisha. We also touch on other historical warrior women like Tomoe Gozen from the Genpei War, and how the Meiji Restoration's modernization sidelined these martial women. The episode covers specific sword techniques, armor differences, and the social roles of samurai women in peacetime. A distinct look at a lesser-known samurai tradition. #OnnaBugeisha #NakanoTakeko #BattleOfAizu #BoshinWar #TomoeGozen #SamuraiWomen #Naginata #AizuDomain #MeijiRestoration #JapaneseHistory #Samurai #FexingoHistory #History #EdoPeriod #Sengoku #Japan #WomenInHistory #WarriorWomen Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

169 episoder

episode Japan's Hidden Christians: The Kakure Kirishitan Underground cover

Japan's Hidden Christians: The Kakure Kirishitan Underground

When Christianity was outlawed in 17th-century Japan, tens of thousands of converts did not simply abandon their faith. They went underground. This episode explores the hidden world of the Kakure Kirishitan—Japan's secret Christians who preserved their religion for over 250 years without priests, churches, or Bibles. We look at how they adapted Catholic rituals into a uniquely Japanese practice, blending them with Buddhist and Shinto elements to escape detection. We follow the brutal persecution under the Tokugawa shogunate, including the infamous 'fumi-e' ceremony where suspected Christians were forced to trample on holy images. We discuss key figures like the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier, who first brought Christianity to Japan, and the daimyo Dom Justo Takayama, who chose exile over apostasy. We also examine the dramatic rediscovery of these hidden Christians in the 19th century after Japan reopened to the West, and the complex decisions they faced about whether to rejoin the Catholic Church or maintain their centuries-old traditions. This is a story of resilience, adaptation, and the lengths people will go to protect what they believe. #KakureKirishitan #HiddenChristians #Japan #ChristianityInJapan #Tokugawa #Sakoku #Fumi-e #FrancisXavier #DomJustoTakayama #Kirishitan #Nagasaki #Dejima #ShimabaraRebellion #EdoPeriod #Persecution #ReligiousHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juli 20267 min
episode Sakoku and the Dutch: How Japan's Isolation Shaped a Hidden Window to the West cover

Sakoku and the Dutch: How Japan's Isolation Shaped a Hidden Window to the West

When Japan closed its doors to the outside world in the 1630s, only a tiny Dutch trading post on Dejima island in Nagasaki Bay remained as a lifeline to the West. For over two centuries, Dutch merchants were confined to this man-made island, subjected to strict controls, annual pilgrimages to Edo, and the constant threat of expulsion. Yet from this cramped, liminal space, European science, medicine, and learning—Rangaku, or Dutch Studies—trickled into Japan, influencing everything from botany to military technology. This episode traces the paradoxical history of sakoku, Japan's period of national seclusion: how the Tokugawa shogunate enforced isolation, why the Dutch were allowed to stay while other Europeans were expelled, and how the Dutch East India Company (VOC) navigated the delicate politics of serving a shogun who distrusted them. We meet interpreters, spies, and scholars who bridged two worlds—figures like the physician Engelbert Kaempfer, whose detailed observations later shaped European views of Japan. And we ask: was sakoku truly isolation, or a carefully managed form of connection that allowed Japan to selectively absorb the West on its own terms? #Sakoku #Dejima #Rangaku #DutchEastIndiaCompany #VOC #TokugawaShogunate #EngelbertKaempfer #Nagasaki #JapanHistory #EarlyModernJapan #EdoPeriod #Kinsei #DutchStudies #NationalSeclusion #Isolation #History #FexingoHistory #EastAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode Tokugawa Ieyasu: The Unifier Who Built Edo and a 250-Year Peace cover

Tokugawa Ieyasu: The Unifier Who Built Edo and a 250-Year Peace

While many episodes have covered Japan's great unifiers, the final shogun and architect of the Tokugawa bakufu often gets overshadowed by Nobunaga and Hideyoshi. In this episode, Lucas and Luna follow Tokugawa Ieyasu from his childhood as a hostage of the Imagawa clan, through his brilliant survival at Sekigahara, to the siege of Osaka Castle that extinguished the Toyotomi line. They explore Ieyasu's strategic patience, his transformation of the swampy fishing village of Edo into a metropolis of a million people, and the intricate sankin kōtai system that kept daimyo in line for two and a half centuries. The conversation also touches on the Shimabara Rebellion's aftermath, the isolationist sakoku edicts, and how Ieyasu's posthumous deification as Tōshō Daigongen shaped Shinto-Buddhist syncretism. Specific details include the Battle of Mikatagahara (1572), Ieyasu's alliance with the ninja of Iga, the design of Nijō Castle, and the 1615 Laws for the Military Houses (Buke Shohatto). This episode offers a nuanced look at a shogun who was neither the flashiest nor the most beloved, but arguably the most consequential for Japan's early modern period. #TokugawaIeyasu #Sekigahara #EdoPeriod #SankinKotai #OsakaCastle #BukeShohatto #ToshoDaigongen #Sakoku #NijoCastle #JapaneseHistory #Samurai #SengokuPeriod #TokugawaShogunate #Mikatagahara #IgaNinja #Shimotsuma #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går8 min
episode Tokugawa Tsunayoshi and the Dog Shogun of Genroku Japan cover

Tokugawa Tsunayoshi and the Dog Shogun of Genroku Japan

In this episode of The Story of Japan, we look at the strange and fascinating reign of Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, the fifth shogun of the Tokugawa dynasty. Known as the Dog Shogun, Tsunayoshi issued the Laws of Compassion which made killing stray dogs a capital offense, and his Edo castle housed tens of thousands of feral canines at public expense. But beyond the animal obsession, we explore his patronage of Confucian scholarship, his brutal suppression of vendettas like the Akō incident, and his role in sparking the Genroku cultural flowering—a golden age of kabuki, ukiyo-e, and merchant prosperity. We also examine the fiscal chaos left by his extravagance, and how his rigid moralism clashed with the realities of samurai governance. This is a portrait of a ruler often caricatured as mad, but whose policies shaped Japan's early modern state. #TokugawaTsunayoshi #DogShogun #EdoPeriod #Genroku #LawsOfCompassion #AkōIncident #47Ronin #Chushingura #Shogun #Bakufu #EdoCastle #Confucianism #Kabuki #UkiyoE #MatsudairaSadamasa #Japan #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går9 min
episode The Rice That Built Japan: Tax, Revolt, and the Shogun's Economy cover

The Rice That Built Japan: Tax, Revolt, and the Shogun's Economy

This episode digs into the economic backbone of feudal Japan: rice. Lucas and Luna explore how the kokudaka system — a unit of measurement based on rice yield — came to define samurai wealth, daimyo power, and peasant burden. They trace its roots from Hideyoshi's land surveys through Tokugawa-era tax collection, and into the devastating Tenmei Famine of the 1780s, when mismanagement of the rice economy led to mass starvation and the Great Tenmei Fire. The conversation also covers peasant revolts like the Yonezawa Uprising, where farmers demanded fair distribution, and the curious story of the rice brokers of Osaka's Dojima market, who invented futures trading centuries before Wall Street. Along the way, they unpack the social contract of the Edo period: in exchange for peace and stability, the samurai class extracted rice taxes that left rural Japan perpetually on the brink. It's a story of a single grain that shaped an entire civilization. #Kokudaka #RiceTax #EdoPeriod #TenmeiFamine #DojimaRiceMarket #PeasantRevolts #YonezawaUprising #ToyotomiHideyoshi #TokugawaIeyasu #Daimyo #Samurai #FeudalEconomics #History #FexingoHistory #Japan #Osaka #FuturesTrading #TenmeiFire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. juli 20267 min