The Samurai Era: Japan's Warrior Civilization Explained — Fexingo History

The Shimotsuma Incident: Samurai vs. Buddhist Warriors

7 min · 18. juli 2026
episode The Shimotsuma Incident: Samurai vs. Buddhist Warriors cover

Description

In 1571, Oda Nobunaga destroyed a fortress that wasn't held by rival samurai but by warrior monks of the Ikkō-ikki sect from the Ishiyama Hongan-ji temple in Osaka. But before that siege, a smaller but bloodier confrontation in Shimotsuma, Hitachi Province, erupted when the Ikkō-ikki rose against a local daimyo. Lucas and Luna delve into the Shimotsuma Incident, a 1571 clash that pitted mobilized peasant devotees against mounted samurai in a brutal, little-known battle that reveals the social tensions beneath Japan's unification wars. They explore the Ikkō-ikki's origins in Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism, their network of fortified temples, and how their defeat marked a turning point as Nobunaga and later Hideyoshi moved to crush religious autonomy. This episode covers the siege of Shimotsuma Castle, the role of abbot Kennyo, and the eventual massacre at Ishiyama Hongan-ji that ended the warrior monk era. #Ikkō-ikki #ShimotsumaIncident #OdaNobunaga #Kennyo #JodoShinshu #WarriorMonks #SengokuPeriod #IshiyamaHonganji #Hitachi #BuddhistUprising #Siege #Samurai #PeasantRevolt #History #FexingoHistory #JapaneseHistory #EastAsia #ReligiousWar Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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167 episodes

episode The Shimotsuma Incident: Samurai vs. Buddhist Warriors artwork

The Shimotsuma Incident: Samurai vs. Buddhist Warriors

In 1571, Oda Nobunaga destroyed a fortress that wasn't held by rival samurai but by warrior monks of the Ikkō-ikki sect from the Ishiyama Hongan-ji temple in Osaka. But before that siege, a smaller but bloodier confrontation in Shimotsuma, Hitachi Province, erupted when the Ikkō-ikki rose against a local daimyo. Lucas and Luna delve into the Shimotsuma Incident, a 1571 clash that pitted mobilized peasant devotees against mounted samurai in a brutal, little-known battle that reveals the social tensions beneath Japan's unification wars. They explore the Ikkō-ikki's origins in Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism, their network of fortified temples, and how their defeat marked a turning point as Nobunaga and later Hideyoshi moved to crush religious autonomy. This episode covers the siege of Shimotsuma Castle, the role of abbot Kennyo, and the eventual massacre at Ishiyama Hongan-ji that ended the warrior monk era. #Ikkō-ikki #ShimotsumaIncident #OdaNobunaga #Kennyo #JodoShinshu #WarriorMonks #SengokuPeriod #IshiyamaHonganji #Hitachi #BuddhistUprising #Siege #Samurai #PeasantRevolt #History #FexingoHistory #JapaneseHistory #EastAsia #ReligiousWar Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. juli 20267 min
episode The Samurai Who Would Be King: Taira no Masakado's Rebellion artwork

The Samurai Who Would Be King: Taira no Masakado's Rebellion

Before the Genpei War, before Minamoto no Yoritomo established the first shogunate, a rogue samurai named Taira no Masakado tried to crown himself emperor of a breakaway state in the Kantō region. This episode explores his 939 CE rebellion — the first serious attempt by a warrior aristocrat to challenge the imperial court in Kyoto. We trace Masakado's family grievances, his lightning conquest of eight provinces, his brief reign as the 'New Emperor' (Shinnō), and his brutal end just months later when his head was paraded through the capital. Along the way, we examine the fragile power balance of Heian Japan, the rise of provincial warrior bands, and how Masakado's legend — and his restless ghost — haunted samurai culture for centuries. Drawing on official chronicles and the popular Masakado-ki tale, we separate fact from folklore: Was he an ambitious rebel or a tragic victim of court politics? And why does Tokyo's Ōtemachi district still hold an annual festival to appease his vengeful spirit? #TairaNoMasakado #HeianPeriod #SamuraiRebellion #Shinnō #Kantō #MasakadoRebellion #Ōtemachi #MasakadoKi #JapaneseHistory #WarriorAristocracy #ImperialCourt #HeianJapan #ProvincialWarriors #VengefulSpirit #SamuraiHistory #HistoryPodcast #FexingoHistory #EastAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode The Sword Hunt: How Hideyoshi Disarmed Japan's Samurai artwork

The Sword Hunt: How Hideyoshi Disarmed Japan's Samurai

In 1588, Toyotomi Hideyoshi issued a nationwide edict that ordered every peasant, monk, and samurai to surrender their swords — a sweeping disarmament that reshaped Japanese society. Known as the katana-gari, or sword hunt, this policy stripped weapons from the common people while reinforcing samurai privilege. But why did Hideyoshi do it? How did local daimyo enforce it? And what happened to the thousands of blades collected? This episode follows the sword hunt from its origins in the chaos of the Sengoku period to its lasting impact on the Tokugawa peace. We talk about the infamous Tenka no Katanagari, the role of village headmen in confiscating weapons, the melting down of blades into a statue of the Buddha, and how this policy paved the way for the strict class system of Edo Japan. Along the way, we meet the sword hunters — inspectors who traveled the countryside, sometimes violently, to ensure compliance — and we consider the rebellion of 1588 in Higo province, where peasants fought back against disarmament. If you've ever wondered why Japanese swords became symbols of a warrior elite rather than everyday tools, this episode is for you. #Katanagari #SwordHunt #ToyotomiHideyoshi #Sengoku #Samurai #Japan #EdoPeriod #Disarmament #TenkaNoKatanagari #HigoRebellion #Daimyo #Bushi #Sword Ban #History #FexingoHistory #JapaneseHistory #SocialControl #Hideyoshi Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Samurai and the Sword: The Katana's Secret History artwork

Samurai and the Sword: The Katana's Secret History

We've talked about samurai armor, siegecraft, and firearms, but what about the weapon that defined them: the katana? This episode traces the katana from its origins alongside the curved tachi of the Heian period to its rise as a symbol of the warrior class. We explore the practical realities of sword-fighting, the myth of the 'samurai sword' as an invincible weapon, and how the Edo period transformed the katana from battlefield tool to status symbol. Featuring the infamous 'cutting tests' (tameshigiri), the lost art of the Japanese swordsmith, and the story of how a 20th-century revival turned the katana into a global icon. No scripted hype, just the real history of Japan's most famous blade. #Katana #Samurai #JapaneseSword #Tameshigiri #Tachi #Masamune #Muramasa #EdoPeriod #HeianPeriod #Swordsmith #Bushido #MeijiRestoration #WWII #JapanHistory #SamuraiWeapons #SwordMyths #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. juli 20269 min
episode Samurai in Kyoto: The Sword Ban That Changed Everything artwork

Samurai in Kyoto: The Sword Ban That Changed Everything

In 1588, Toyotomi Hideyoshi issued an extraordinary decree across Japan. Farmers were ordered to surrender all swords, spears, bows, and guns to the authorities. The metal would be melted down and used to construct a giant statue of the Buddha. But the so-called Sword Hunt — Katanagari — was about far more than religious piety. It was a radical social engineering project designed to freeze the class system, disarm potential rebels, and concentrate military power in the hands of the samurai class. Over the following decades, the policy was extended and refined under Tokugawa Ieyasu, creating a strict division between the warrior elite and the peasantry. Lucas and Luna explore how the Katanagari reshaped Japan: the confiscation of weapons, the symbolic meaning of the Buddha statue, regional resistance from daimyo and monasteries, the later policing of swords in Edo through the "three-foot rule" and its role in solidifying the samurai's monopoly on violence. They also consider the long-term consequences — how disarming a nation contributed to two and a half centuries of peace under the Tokugawa shogunate, and what it meant for the status of the sword itself in Japanese culture. #Katanagari #SwordHunt #ToyotomiHideyoshi #TokugawaIeyasu #Samurai #Bushi #JapanHistory #AzuchiMomoyama #EdoPeriod #Daimyo #Seppuku #Wakizashi #Katana #SocialEngineering #Disarmament #History #EastAsia #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. juli 20268 min