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  •  Japan: Lady Hangaku (Hangaku Gozen) was a female samurai, or onna-bugeisha, in the 13th century.
    1990年12月31日
    Japan: Lady Hangaku (Hangaku Gozen) was a female samurai, or onna-bugeisha, in the 13th century.

    Lady Hangaku (Hangaku Gozen) was a female warrior samurai, one of the relatively few Japanese warrior women commonly known in history or classical literature. She lived at the end of the Heian and the beginning of the Kamakura periods. Daughter of a warrior named Jo Sukekuni, she was sister of Sukenaga and Sukemoto. The Jo were warriors, allies of the Taira clan, in Echigo Province (present-day Niigata Prefecture). They were defeated in the Genpei Wars, and lost most of their power. In 1201, together with her nephew Jo Sukemori, she raised an army in response to Sukemoto‘s attempt (the Kennin Uprising) to overthrow the Kamakura Shogunate. Hangaku and Sukenaga took a defensive position at a fort at Torisakayama under attack from Sasaki Moritsuna. Hangaku commanded 3,000 soldiers to defend against an army of 10,000 soldiers loyal to the Hojo clan. Ultimately she was wounded by an arrow and captured、クレジット:ニューズコム/共同通信イメージズ ※エディトリアル使用のみ。広告、プロモーション、商業目的での利用はできません。

    商品コード: 2021051011559

  •  The female warrior Hangaku
    2012年05月08日
    The female warrior Hangaku

    The female warrior Hangaku. Han Gaku, historical woman warrior, armed and armored, seated on a rearing horse. Date ca. 1885.、クレジット:Mary Evans/Library of Congress/共同通信イメージズ ※エディトリアル使用のみ。表紙、広告、プロモーション、商業目的での利用はお問合せください。クレジットは必ず表記してください。

    商品コード: 2019080610821

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