Firearms of Japan

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A rack of Japanese tanegashima (matchlocks) of the Edo period, Himeji Castle, Japan.

Firearms were introduced to Japan in the 13th century during the first Mongol invasion and were referred to as teppō.[1] Portuguese firearms were introduced in 1543,[2] and intense development followed, with strong local manufacture during the period of conflicts of the late 16th century. Hōjutsu, the art of gunnery, is the Japanese martial art dedicated to firearms usage.

Teppō

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Early Chinese hand cannon

Due to its proximity with China, Japan had long been familiar with gunpowder weaponry. Firearms appeared in Japan around 1270, as primitive metal tubes invented in China and called teppō (鉄砲 lit. "iron cannon").[3][1]

These weapons were very basic, as they had no trigger or sights, and could not be compared to the more advanced European weapons which were introduced in Japan more than 250 years later.[3]

Tanegashima (matchlock)

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The first documented introduction of the matchlock which became known as the tanegashima was through the Portuguese in 1543.[2] The tanegashima seems to have been based on snap matchlocks that were produced in the armory of Goa in Portuguese India, which was captured by Portugal in 1510.[4] The name tanegashima came from the island where a Chinese junk with Portuguese adventurers on board was driven to anchor by a storm. The lord of the Japanese island Tanegashima Tokitaka (1528–1579) purchased two matchlock muskets from the Portuguese and put a swordsmith to work in copying the matchlock barrel and firing mechanism. Within a few years the use of the tanegashima in battle forever changed the way war was fought in Japan.[5] From 1560, firearms were used in large battles in Japan.[6] In his memoirs published in 1614, the Portuguese adventurer turned author Fernão Mendes Pinto placed himself in that first landing party, although this claim has been roundly discredited and in fact contradicts his claims to be simultaneously in Burma at the time. However, Pinto does appear to have visited Tanegashima soon thereafter.[7]

History

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Sengoku period

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Ashigaru (foot soldiers) using matchlocks (tanegashima) from behind shields (tate).

Japan was at war during the Sengoku period between 1467 and 1600, as feudal lords vied for supremacy.[8] Matchlock guns were used extensively and had a decisive role in warfare. In 1549, Oda Nobunaga ordered 500 matchlocks to be made for his armies. The benefits of firearms were still relatively questionable however compared with other weapons. At the time, guns were still rather primitive and cumbersome. According to one estimate in 16th century Japan, an archer could fire 15 arrows in the time a gunner would take to load, charge, and shoot a firearm.[9] Effective range was only 80 to 100 meters. At that maximum distance, a bullet could easily bounce off armour. Furthermore, matchlocks were vulnerable to humid or rainy conditions as the powder would become damp.[9] However, firearms could be manned effectively by farmers or non-samurai low-ranking soldiers.[10]

The Japanese soon worked on various techniques to improve the effectiveness of their guns. They developed serial firing technique to create a continuous rain of bullets on the enemy.[11] They also developed bigger calibers to increase lethality.[11] Protective boxes in lacquerware were invented to be able to fire matchlocks in the rain,[12] as well as systems to accurately fire weapons at night by keeping fixed angles thanks to measured strings.[13]

As a result, in the year 1567, Takeda Shingen announced that "Hereafter, the guns will be the most important arms. Therefore, decrease the number of spears per unit, and have your most capable men carry guns".[14] At the Battle of Nagashino in 1575, 3,000 arquebusiers helped win the battle, firing by volleys of 1,000 at a time, and secured across a river and breastwork to effectively stop enemy infantry and cavalry charges while being protected.[15]

In the year 1584 Ikeda Sen led a troop of 200 women armed with firearms at the Battle of Komaki and Nagakute and in 1600 at the Battle of Sekigahara, a rare example of a teppō unit, or musketeer unit consisting only of women.[16]

Japan became so enthusiastic about the new weapons that it possibly overtook every European country in absolute numbers produced.[10] Japan also used the guns in the Japanese invasion of Korea in 1592, in which about a quarter of the invasion force of 160,000 were gunners.[17] They were extremely successful at first and managed to capture Seoul just 18 days after their landing at Busan.[18]

Edo period

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The internal war in Japan was won by Tokugawa Ieyasu, who established the Tokugawa shogunate, a powerful entity that would maintain peace and prosperity in Japan for the following 250 years. From the mid-17th century, Japan decided to close itself to interaction with the West through its policy of Sakoku. Guns were used less frequently because the Edo period did not have many large-scale conflicts in which a gun would be of use. Oftentimes the sword was simply the more practical weapon in the average small-scale Edo period conflicts; nevertheless, there were gunsmiths in Japan producing guns through the Edo period.

Isolation did not decrease the production of guns in Japan—on the contrary, there is evidence of around 200 gunsmiths in Japan by the end of the Edo period. But the social life of firearms had changed: as the historian David L. Howell has argued, for many in Japanese society, the gun had become less a weapon than a farm implement for scaring off animals.[19]

Late Edo period

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Japanese percussion pistol, 19th century, possibly converted from a matchlock.

A few Japanese started to study and experiment with recent Western firearms from the beginning of the 19th century especially as a means to ward off visits from foreign ships, such as the incursion by the Royal Navy frigate HMS Phaeton in 1808.[20] Through the process of rangaku (the studying of Western science through the Dutch), airguns were developed by Kunitomo Ikkansai c. 1820–1830. From 1828, experiments were made with flintlock mechanisms.[20]

The Nagasaki samurai Takashima Shūhan (高島秋帆) started to import flintlock guns from the Netherlands known as "geweer" from the 1840s.[21] He made the first modern Western military demonstration for the Tokugawa shogunate, in Tokumarugahara (north of Edo) on 27 June 1841.

With the arrival of Commodore Perry in 1854 and the inescapable opening of the country to trade, rapid efforts were made at reequipping Japan with modern firearms. Old matchlock weapons were recovered and converted to flintlock mechanisms.[22]

Boshin War

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The mounting civil war in Japan and the opposition of various feudal lords against the bakufu during the Late Tokugawa shogunate led to serious rearming until the 1867 Boshin War. At the same time, technological progress was extremely fast in the West, with the introduction of the rifle, breech-loading and even repeating firearms, so that Japanese armies were equipped with composite technologies, with weapons imported from countries as varied as France, Germany, the Indians, Britain and the United States, and coexisting with traditional Tanegashima guns.[23]

During the Boshin War, most shogunate vassal troops used "geweer"-style smoothbore guns. These guns were rather ancient and had limited capabilities, with an effective lethal range of about 50 meters, and a firing rate of about two rounds per minute. Much more effective Minié rifles were also used by the armies directly under the command of the shōgun, the bakufu troops. The Daimyō of Nagaoka, an ally of the shōgun, possessed two Gatling guns and several thousand modern rifles. The shogunate is known to have placed an order for 30,000 modern Dreyse needle guns in 1866.[24] In 1867, orders were placed for 40,000 state-of-the-art French Chassepot rifles, a part of which reached Edo by year's end.[23] Antiquated Tanegashima matchlock guns are also known to have been used by the bakufu however.[25]

Imperial troops mainly used Minié rifles, which were much more accurate, lethal, and had a much longer range than the smoothbore "geweer"-style guns, although, being also muzzle-loading, they were similarly limited to two shots per minute. Improved breech-loading mechanisms, such as the Snider, developing a rate of about ten shots a minute, are known to have been used by troops of the Tosa Domain against the shogunate's Shōgitai, at the Battle of Ueno in July 1868. In the second half of the conflict, in the northeast theater, Tosa Province troops are known to have used American-made Spencer repeating rifles.[25] American-made handguns were also popular, such as the 1863 Smith & Wesson Model No. 2 Army, which was imported to Japan by the Scottish trader Thomas Blake Glover and used by the Satsuma forces.[25]

Modern period

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For some time after the Meiji Restoration, Japan continued to use imported weapons. The newly created Imperial Japanese Army used firearms intensively against more traditional samurai rebellious forces during the Satsuma rebellion in 1877, with an average of 320,000 rounds of ammunition fired daily during the conflict.[26] After the Satsuma rebellion, Japan relied extensively on the French Chassepot.[27]

Japan finally developed its own model, the Murata rifle, derived from the French Fusil Gras mle 1874.[27] This was Japan's first locally made service rifle, and was used from 1880 to 1898. An industrial infrastructure, such as the Koishikawa Arsenal had to be established to produce such new weapons.

Later, Japan developed the very successful bolt action Arisaka series rifles, which was the Japanese service rifle until the end of World War II.[28] Japan produced relatively few submachine guns during World War II, the most numerous model was the Type 100 submachine gun of which 24,000–27,000 were produced, compared, for example, with the British Sten of which millions were produced. During the war, the Japanese worked on a copy of the American semi-automatic M1 Garand (the Type 5 rifle) but only a few hundred were made before the end of the war and it did not enter service.

After the end of the war, with the dissolution of the Imperial Japanese Army, and the establishment of the National Police Reserve in 1952 and the Japan Self-Defense Forces in 1954, Japan relied on M1 Garand rifles provided by the United States. In the mid-1950s however, Japan's Defense Agency started to develop battle rifles of its own, such as the Howa Type 64[29] and assault rifles like the Howa Type 89 which has been gradually replacing the former.[30] In 2019, the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force received the first Howa Type 20 rifles, which are set to replace earlier assault rifles.[31]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Brown, Delmer M. (1948). "The Impact of Firearms on Japanese Warfare, 1543-98". The Far Eastern Quarterly. 7 (3): 236–253. doi:10.2307/2048846. JSTOR 2048846. S2CID 162924328. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  2. ^ a b Olof G. Lidin (2002). Tanegashima: The Arrival of Europe in Japan. NIAS Press. pp. 1–14. ISBN 978-87-91114-12-0.
  3. ^ a b Perrin p.93
  4. ^ Daehnhardt, Rainer (1994). The Bewitched Gun- The Introduction of the Firearm in the Far East by the Portuguese; Espingarda Feiticeira: A Introducao Da Arma De Fogo Pelos Portugueses No Extremo-Oriente. Texto Editora. p. 26.
  5. ^ Noel Perrin (1979). Giving up the gun: Japan's reversion to the sword, 1543–1879. David R Godine. ISBN 978-0-87923-773-8.
  6. ^ Perrin p.8
  7. ^ Olof G. Lidin (2002). Tanegashima: The Arrival of Europe in Japan. NIAS Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-87-91114-12-0.
  8. ^ Perrin p.9
  9. ^ a b Perrin p.15
  10. ^ a b Perrin p.25
  11. ^ a b Perrin p.17
  12. ^ Perrin, p.18
  13. ^ Perrin, p.40
  14. ^ Perrin, p.17
  15. ^ Perrin p.19-20
  16. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (2012-01-20). Samurai Women 1184–1877. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-952-2.
  17. ^ Perrin p.27
  18. ^ Perrin p.28
  19. ^ Howell, David L. (1 May 2009). "The Social Life of Firearms in Tokugawa Japan". Japanese Studies. 29 (1): 65–80. doi:10.1080/10371390902780530. S2CID 144600972.
  20. ^ a b Perrin, p.72
  21. ^ Jansen, Marius B. (2002). The making of modern Japan. Harvard University Press. p. 287. ISBN 9780674039100.
  22. ^ Perrin, p.67
  23. ^ a b Totman, p.344
  24. ^ Feuss, Harald (2020). The Meiji Restoration. p. 96.
  25. ^ a b c Ryozen Museum of History exhibit
  26. ^ Perrin, p.76
  27. ^ a b Rifles of the World John Walter, p.88
  28. ^ Bolt Action Rifles Frank De Haas p.71
  29. ^ Rifles of the world by John Walter p.182
  30. ^ Rifles: an illustrated history of their impact by Dr. David Westwood p.369, Google Books
  31. ^ "Japanese military to receive new rifles for the first time since 1989". UPI. Retrieved 2023-01-25.

Further reading

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