Black Belt Communications, Nov 1, 1989P.22 ↑ Lore of the Shinobi Warrior, Stephen Hayes.↑ Black Belt Magazine November 1973, p.Photo of ninja sword display in the Iga-Ueno Ninja Museum. ↑ Black Belt Magazine December 1966, p.
Stage combat: fisticuffs, stunts, and swordplay for theater and film. One theory on the ninjatō tsuba size and shape is that it was used as a tool, the sword would be leaned against a wall and ninja would use the tsuba as a step to extend his normal reach, the sword would then be retrieved by pulling it up by the sageo (saya cord). The tsuba (hand guard) of the ninjato is often described as being larger than average and square instead of the much more common round tsuba. The scabbard is also said to have been longer than the blade of the ninjatō in order to hide various objects such as chemicals used to blind pursuers. The saya (scabbard) of the ninjatō were often said to have been used for various purposes such as a respiration pipe (snorkel) in underwater activities or for secretly overhearing conversations and as a club. His second possible reason for ninjatō being described as a staight bladed, rather short sword could be that the ninja were emulating one of the patron Buddhist deities of ninja families, Fudo Myo-oh, who is depicted brandishing a straight bladed short sword similar to a chokutō. Hayes suggests that the typical description of the ninjatō could be due to ninja having to forge their own blades from slabs of steel or iron with the cutting edge being ground on a stone, with straight blades being easier to form than the much more refined curved traditional Japanese sword. Usually of a length "less than 60 cm", the rest of the sword is comparatively "thick, heavy and straight". The ninjatō is typically depicted as being a short sword, often portrayed as having a straight blade (similar to that of a shikomizue ) with a square guard. Appearance Įntertainers wielding ninjatō in Edo Wonderland 1984 The first American television production to feature these swords, The Master, is broadcast on NBC. 1983 The first Hollywood film to feature the ninjatō, Revenge of the Ninja, is released in theaters. Hayes, an American who studied under Hatsumi in 1975, are published. 1981 Books containing references to the sword written by Masaaki Hatsumi, the founder of the Bujinkan, and Stephen K.
1973 Ads selling newly manufactured and imported ninja swords appear in the American magazine Black Belt.
That same year, the swords appeared in Shinobi no Mono Kirigakure Saizō (忍びの者 霧隠才蔵) and Shinobi no Mono Zoku Kirigakure Saizō (忍びの者 続・霧隠才蔵), the 4th and 5th entries in the Japanese jidaigeki movie series Shinobi no Mono, released in theaters in Japan. īecause of the lack of any physical evidence or antique swords from the Sengoku period to the Edo period (16th to 19th century) matching the description of the ninjatō, the history of the weapon can only be reliably chronicled from the 20th century onwards.ġ964 The Iga-ryū Ninja Museum in Japan, which houses replicas of the sword, is established. This was the standard Japanese fighting sword or katana.for convenience the ninja would choose a blade that was shorter and straighter than usual". Stephen Turnbull, a historian specializing in the military history of Japan indicates of historical ninja: "The most important ninja weapon was his sword. Historically, there is no physical evidence for the existence of this " katana like sword legendarily used by ninja", though it is believed that they are based on the design of the wakizashi or chokutō type swords or the swords used by the Ashigaru. Replicas of this weapon are also prominently on display in both the Koka Ninja Village Museum in Kōka, Shiga and the Iga-ryū Ninja Museum in Iga, Mie. The Ninjato ( 忍者刀, ninjatō ?), also known as ninjaken ( 忍者剣 ?) or shinobigatana ( 忍刀 ?), is the most common name for the sword that the ninja of feudal Japan are portrayed to have carried in movies, on television, and in numerous books written by modern ninjutsu practitioners including Masaaki Hatsumi and Stephen K. A rendered picture depiction of a ninjatō