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Benkei

Saitō Musashibō Benkei (西塔武蔵坊弁慶, 1155–1189), popularly known as simply Benkei, was a Japanese warrior monk (sōhei) who lived in the latter years of the Heian Period (794–1185)[1]. Benkei led a varied life, first becoming a monk, then a mountain ascetic, and then a rogue warrior. He later came to respect and serve the famous warrior Minamoto no Yoshitsune, also known as Ushiwakamaru. He is commonly depicted as a man of great strength and loyalty, and a popular subject of Japanese folklore, showcased in many ancient and modern literature and productions.

Benkei by Kikuchi Yōsai

Early life

 
Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Yoshitsune and Benkei defending themselves in their boat during a storm created by the ghosts of conquered Taira warriors
 
Benkei and Yoshitsune

Stories about Benkei's birth vary considerably. One tells how his father was the head of a temple shrine who had raped his mother, the daughter of a blacksmith.[citation needed] Another sees him as the offspring of a temple god.[citation needed] Many give him the attributes of a demon, a monster child with wild hair and long teeth. In his youth, Benkei may have been[vague] called Oniwaka (鬼若)—"demon/ogre child", and there are many famous ukiyo-e works themed on Oniwakamaru and his adventures.[citation needed] He is said[by whom?] to have defeated 200 men in each battle he was personally involved in.

Benkei chose to join the monastic establishment at an early age and traveled widely among the Buddhist monasteries of Japan. During this period, monasteries were not only important centers of administration and culture, but also military powers in their own right, similar to the Roman Legions[citation needed]. Like many other monks, Benkei was likely[citation needed] trained in the use of the naginata, the half-moon spear.

At the age of seventeen, Benkei was said to have been 2 metres (6.6 ft) tall. At this point, he left the monasteries, and became a yamabushi, a member of a sect of mountain ascetics. Benkei was commonly depicted wearing a black cap that was a signature theme of such mountain ascetics.[1]

Seven weapons

Benkei armed himself with seven weapons, and is often depicted carrying these on his back. In addition to his sword, he carried a broad axe (masakari), a rake (kumade), a sickle (nagigama), a wooden mallet (hizuchi), a saw (nokogiri), an iron staff (tetsubō), and a Japanese glaive (naginata).[2]

Career

 
The moonlight fight between Yoshitsune and Benkei. Gojo Bridge, Kyoto

Benkei was said to have wandered around Kyoto every night on a personal quest to take 1000 swords from samurai warriors, who he believed were arrogant and unworthy. After collecting 999 swords through duels and looking for his final prize, he met a young man playing a flute at Gojotenjin Shrine in Kyoto. The much shorter man supposedly carried a gilded sword around his waist. Instead of dueling at the shrine itself, the two walked to Gojo Bridge in the city where the bigger Benkei ultimately lost to the smaller warrior, who happened to be Minamoto no Yoshitsune, a son of Minamoto no Yoshitomo. Some sources claim that the fight took place not at the Gojo Bridge, but instead at Matsubara Bridge.[3] Not long after the duel, Benkei, frustrated and looking for revenge, waited for Yoshitsune at the Buddhist temple of Kiyomizu, where he lost yet again.[4] Henceforth, he became Yoshitsune's retainer and fought with him in the Genpei War against the Taira clan.[5]

From 1185 until his death in 1189, Benkei accompanied Yoshitsune as an outlaw.[6]

Death

In the end, Benkei and Yoshitsune were encircled in the castle of Koromogawa no tate. As Yoshitsune retired to the inner keep of the castle to commit ritual suicide (seppuku) on his own, Benkei stood guard on the bridge in front of the main gate to protect Yoshitsune. It is said that the soldiers were afraid to cross the bridge to confront him, and that all who did met swift death at the hands of the gigantic man, who killed in excess of 300 trained soldiers.

Realizing that close combat would mean suicide, the warriors following Minamoto no Yoritomo decided to shoot and kill Benkei with arrows instead. Long after the battle should have been over, the soldiers noticed that the arrow-riddled, wound-covered Benkei was still standing. When the soldiers dared to cross the bridge and take a closer look, the giant man fell to the ground, having died standing upright.[7] This is known as the "Standing Death of Benkei" (弁慶の立往生, Benkei no Tachi Ōjō). Benkei died at the age of 34.

Atago-do, now called Benkei-do, features a statue of Benkei six feet two inches in height in the posture he stood in when he died at Koromogawa. It was built in the era of Shotoku (1711–1716), replacing an older monument. In olden times the Benkei-do was at the foot of Chusonji hill until it was demolished. The ruins and a single pine tree still remain.[8]

In popular culture

Tales of Benkei's loyalty and honour have made him a mainstay of Japanese folklore, as well as a popular subject for literature and entertainment.

One kabuki play places Benkei in a moral dilemma, caught between lying and protecting his lord in order to cross a bridge. The critical moment of the drama is its climax, where the monk realises his situation and vows to do what he must. In another play, Benkei slays his own child to save the daughter of a lord. In the Noh play Ataka, Benkei must beat his own master (disguised as a porter) in order to avoid breaking his disguise. Ataka was later adapted into the kabuki play Kanjinchō, which became one of the most popular and widely performed works in Japanese theatre.

Film and television

  • A silent, black and white film adaptation of Benkei's story, simply titled Benkei, was released in 1912.[9]
  • In the Getter Robo series, the characters of Musashi Tomoe and Benkei Kuruma are both modelled on Saitō Musashibō Benkei. Musashi is the toughest and most loyal member of the original team, and dies in a similar way to Benkei - fighting off an immense horde of enemies by himself while his teammates are incapacitated - after which Benkei Kuruma is recruited to take his place. The New Getter Robo anime condenses the roles of both characters into one, called simply Musashibō Benkei, who is a monk like his namesake.
  • In the tokusatsu series Choujinki Metalder, Ben-K is a human antagonist, one of the many "villain-of-the-week" characters that Metalder encounters throughout the series. Like the folkloric Benkei, Ben-K is torn between his loyalty to the main villain Neros, and the life with which he had previously become disillusioned.
  • In the manga and anime series One Piece, there is an Ushi-oni-themed warrior monk and highwayman named Gyukimaru who resides in the country of Wano, which is based on Feudal Japan. Like Benkei, he is depicted as an expert in using the naginata and steals weapons from samurai he believed arrogant and unworthy. The duel at the Gojo Bridge was also re-enacted between him and Roronoa Zoro, a member of the Straw Hat Pirates. Aside from Gyukimaru, there are also a number of other characters who share Benkei's attributes. These include Edward Newgate (Whitebeard) of the Whitebeard Pirates and the Four Emperors who wielded a naginata and died standing amid an onslaught of projectile weapons, in this case the series-trademark repeating flintlocks,[11] and Big Mom Pirates (also of the Four Emperors) commander Charlotte Katakuri, who never fell on his back prior to his battle against the protagonist Monkey D. Luffy.[12]
  • In a manga and anime murder case of Case Closed, a Benkei's wooden statue becomes a major hint for Conan Edogawa to figure out the trick the murder used for the murder.
  • Benkei is a secondary character in the manga and anime Kurozuka.
  • In Kamen Rider Ghost, the "Benkei Damashii" transformation is themed after the historical Benkei.
  • A story based on Benkei and Minamoto Yoshitsune was done by Osamu Tezuka.
  • In an episode of Lupin the 3rd Part 2 entitled "Lupin, Do You Like Chanel?", the antagonist is attempting to collect 100 famous guns. When she is trying for 99 & 100 -- the guns belonging to Jigen & Lupin -- Lupin tells her that she's not Benkei and that they're not at Gojo Bridge.
  • In the episode, "The Duelist and the Drifter", of the 2011 reboot of ThunderCats, the titular Duelist collects the swords of the opponents he has defeated, similar to Benkei.

Video games

  • In the video game Brave Fencer Musashi, one of the minor antagonists is named Ben, who is part of a trio named "Leader's Force", serving as the team's muscle. He is often seen alongside Ed. Musashi first meets the two at the bottom of the well, where they hid a church bell they themselves stole with the intention of selling it. When Musashi returns the bell to its rightful place, the duo vow revenge, burning the village. Ben is encountered again in the final chapter of the game, where he fights Musashi. When he is defeated, he appears to allow Musashi to pass, although his lack of response implies that he most likely died standing, much like Benkei.
  • Gilgamesh, named after and partially inspired by a mythical character of the same name, from the Final Fantasy video game series, is arguably one of the better known references to Benkei in video game form. He is usually encountered on and around bridges and is a weapon collector who is seeking the 'strongest of swords' who routinely steals weapons from the people he defeats.
  • Benkei is a playable character in the Warriors Orochi series of video games.
  • In the game Pokémon Black and White 2, an elderly trainer in Village Bridge stated he had 999 winning streak in Pokémon battle and challenges the player, referencing the historical Benkei's streak.
  • Benkei appears in the video game Nioh, as a phantom-boss that you fight on a bridge. The bridge references Benkei's last stand against enemy samurai.
  • Benkei appears again in the video game Nioh 2, where he fights the player and, upon being defeated, aids them in finding Yoshitsune. It is later revealed that this version of Benkei is also a Setodaishō, a fictional yokai originally featured in the third volume of Toriyama Sekien's Hyakki Tsurezure Bukuro.
  • Benkei appears in the video game Okami as a monk who initially protects the draw bridge in the capital and whose goal is to collect 1000 weapons from all over the country.
  • There is a tribute to Benkei in the video game Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice There is a boss called "Armored Warrior." He is found on the wooden bridge before Senpou Temple. He was tasked with collecting 1000 blades from samurai so his son Robert could receive the sacred waters. Corrupted Monk, another boss players face at the beginning of Fountainhead palace is also based on Benkei, and has a lot of similarities with his artistic depictions, so it's a strong guardian cleric armed with a naginata, with a kabuki attribute (an oni mask) and that is confronted in a bridge.
  • The Visual Novel/RPG Eiyuu Senki features a gender-swapped version of Benkei, along with versions of a large number of other significant historical figures.
  • The visual novel game Maji de Watashi ni Koi Shinasai S features gender-swapped version of Benkei as one of the romanceable characters.
  • The Medabot Gobenkei (known in English as Gobanko) is designed to resemble Benkei. It holds a naginata in its right hand, a tetsubo in its left hand and several weapons in its backpack
  • The visual novel/otome game Birushana: Rising Flower of Genpei features Benkei as a romanceable character (among other characters based on historical figures from the Genpei War), with the protagonist being a gender-swapped Yoshitsune.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Yoshikawa, Eiji (1956). The Heike Story: A Modern Translation of the Classic Tale of Love and War. New York: New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-8048-1376-1.
  2. ^ Ashkenazi, Michael (2003). Handbook of Japanese Mythology. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. pp. 124–125. ISBN 978-1576074671.
  3. ^ Matsumoto; Nasu, Kana; Satoku (June 29, 2012). "The Legend of Yoshitsune Minamoto". The Kyoto Project. The Kyoto university of Foreign Studies.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Matsumoto; Nasu, Kana; Satoko (June 29, 2012). "The Legend of Yoshitsune Minamoto". The Kyoto Project.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Kitagawa, Hiroshi et al. (1975). The Tale of the Heike, pp. 535, 540, 654, 656, 669.
  6. ^ Sansom, George (1958). A History of Japan to 1334. Stanford University Press. pp. 317, 326. ISBN 978-0804705233.
  7. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (1977). The Samurai, A Military History. MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc. p. 83. ISBN 978-0026205405.
  8. ^ De Benneville, James S (1910). Saito Musashi-bo Benkei : tales of the wars of the Gempei, being the story of the lives and adventures of Iyo-no-Kami Minamoto Kuro Yoshitsune and Saito Musashi-bo Benkei the warrior monk. Yokohama: Yokohama: J.S. De Benneville. p. 444.
  9. ^ Benkei, 1912, retrieved 2018-04-18
  10. ^ Kurosawa, Akira (1960-02-28), The Men Who Tread on the Tiger's Tail, Denjirô Ôkôchi, Susumu Fujita, Ken'ichi Enomoto, retrieved 2018-04-18
  11. ^ Oda, Eiichiro (2010). One Piece Vol. 59, Ch. 576. Japan, Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-870083-0
  12. ^ Oda, Eiichiro (2018). One Piece Vol. 89, Ch. 896. Japan, Shueisha. ISBN 978-4-08-881496-4

References

External links

  • Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, UCLA Hammer Museum: woodcut print – "Ushiwaka and Benki duelling on Gojo Bridge" or "Gojo Bridge, an episode from the Life of Yoshitsune, Chronicles of Yoshitsune" by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839–1892)

benkei, saitō, musashibō, 西塔武蔵坊弁慶, 1155, 1189, popularly, known, simply, japanese, warrior, monk, sōhei, lived, latter, years, heian, period, 1185, varied, life, first, becoming, monk, then, mountain, ascetic, then, rogue, warrior, later, came, respect, serve,. Saitō Musashibō Benkei 西塔武蔵坊弁慶 1155 1189 popularly known as simply Benkei was a Japanese warrior monk sōhei who lived in the latter years of the Heian Period 794 1185 1 Benkei led a varied life first becoming a monk then a mountain ascetic and then a rogue warrior He later came to respect and serve the famous warrior Minamoto no Yoshitsune also known as Ushiwakamaru He is commonly depicted as a man of great strength and loyalty and a popular subject of Japanese folklore showcased in many ancient and modern literature and productions Benkei by Kikuchi Yōsai For the Hungarian politician see Andras Benkei Contents 1 Early life 2 Seven weapons 3 Career 4 Death 5 In popular culture 5 1 Film and television 5 2 Video games 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life Edit Utagawa Kuniyoshi Yoshitsune and Benkei defending themselves in their boat during a storm created by the ghosts of conquered Taira warriors Benkei and Yoshitsune Stories about Benkei s birth vary considerably One tells how his father was the head of a temple shrine who had raped his mother the daughter of a blacksmith citation needed Another sees him as the offspring of a temple god citation needed Many give him the attributes of a demon a monster child with wild hair and long teeth In his youth Benkei may have been vague called Oniwaka 鬼若 demon ogre child and there are many famous ukiyo e works themed on Oniwakamaru and his adventures citation needed He is said by whom to have defeated 200 men in each battle he was personally involved in Benkei chose to join the monastic establishment at an early age and traveled widely among the Buddhist monasteries of Japan During this period monasteries were not only important centers of administration and culture but also military powers in their own right similar to the Roman Legions citation needed Like many other monks Benkei was likely citation needed trained in the use of the naginata the half moon spear At the age of seventeen Benkei was said to have been 2 metres 6 6 ft tall At this point he left the monasteries and became a yamabushi a member of a sect of mountain ascetics Benkei was commonly depicted wearing a black cap that was a signature theme of such mountain ascetics 1 Seven weapons EditBenkei armed himself with seven weapons and is often depicted carrying these on his back In addition to his sword he carried a broad axe masakari a rake kumade a sickle nagigama a wooden mallet hizuchi a saw nokogiri an iron staff tetsubō and a Japanese glaive naginata 2 Career Edit The moonlight fight between Yoshitsune and Benkei Gojo Bridge Kyoto Benkei was said to have wandered around Kyoto every night on a personal quest to take 1000 swords from samurai warriors who he believed were arrogant and unworthy After collecting 999 swords through duels and looking for his final prize he met a young man playing a flute at Gojotenjin Shrine in Kyoto The much shorter man supposedly carried a gilded sword around his waist Instead of dueling at the shrine itself the two walked to Gojo Bridge in the city where the bigger Benkei ultimately lost to the smaller warrior who happened to be Minamoto no Yoshitsune a son of Minamoto no Yoshitomo Some sources claim that the fight took place not at the Gojo Bridge but instead at Matsubara Bridge 3 Not long after the duel Benkei frustrated and looking for revenge waited for Yoshitsune at the Buddhist temple of Kiyomizu where he lost yet again 4 Henceforth he became Yoshitsune s retainer and fought with him in the Genpei War against the Taira clan 5 From 1185 until his death in 1189 Benkei accompanied Yoshitsune as an outlaw 6 Death EditIn the end Benkei and Yoshitsune were encircled in the castle of Koromogawa no tate As Yoshitsune retired to the inner keep of the castle to commit ritual suicide seppuku on his own Benkei stood guard on the bridge in front of the main gate to protect Yoshitsune It is said that the soldiers were afraid to cross the bridge to confront him and that all who did met swift death at the hands of the gigantic man who killed in excess of 300 trained soldiers Realizing that close combat would mean suicide the warriors following Minamoto no Yoritomo decided to shoot and kill Benkei with arrows instead Long after the battle should have been over the soldiers noticed that the arrow riddled wound covered Benkei was still standing When the soldiers dared to cross the bridge and take a closer look the giant man fell to the ground having died standing upright 7 This is known as the Standing Death of Benkei 弁慶の立往生 Benkei no Tachi Ōjō Benkei died at the age of 34 Atago do now called Benkei do features a statue of Benkei six feet two inches in height in the posture he stood in when he died at Koromogawa It was built in the era of Shotoku 1711 1716 replacing an older monument In olden times the Benkei do was at the foot of Chusonji hill until it was demolished The ruins and a single pine tree still remain 8 In popular culture EditThis article appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Tales of Benkei s loyalty and honour have made him a mainstay of Japanese folklore as well as a popular subject for literature and entertainment One kabuki play places Benkei in a moral dilemma caught between lying and protecting his lord in order to cross a bridge The critical moment of the drama is its climax where the monk realises his situation and vows to do what he must In another play Benkei slays his own child to save the daughter of a lord In the Noh play Ataka Benkei must beat his own master disguised as a porter in order to avoid breaking his disguise Ataka was later adapted into the kabuki play Kanjinchō which became one of the most popular and widely performed works in Japanese theatre Film and television Edit A silent black and white film adaptation of Benkei s story simply titled Benkei was released in 1912 9 Denjirō Ōkōchi portrays Benkei in Akira Kurosawa s 1945 film The Men Who Tread on the Tiger s Tail based on Kanjinchō 10 In the Getter Robo series the characters of Musashi Tomoe and Benkei Kuruma are both modelled on Saitō Musashibō Benkei Musashi is the toughest and most loyal member of the original team and dies in a similar way to Benkei fighting off an immense horde of enemies by himself while his teammates are incapacitated after which Benkei Kuruma is recruited to take his place The New Getter Robo anime condenses the roles of both characters into one called simply Musashibō Benkei who is a monk like his namesake In the tokusatsu series Choujinki Metalder Ben K is a human antagonist one of the many villain of the week characters that Metalder encounters throughout the series Like the folkloric Benkei Ben K is torn between his loyalty to the main villain Neros and the life with which he had previously become disillusioned Daisuke Ryu portrays Benkei in Sogo Ishii s 2001 historical fantasy film Gojoe Spirit War Chronicle Ken Matsudaira portrays Benkei in the 44th Taiga Drama Yoshitsune In the manga and anime series One Piece there is an Ushi oni themed warrior monk and highwayman named Gyukimaru who resides in the country of Wano which is based on Feudal Japan Like Benkei he is depicted as an expert in using the naginata and steals weapons from samurai he believed arrogant and unworthy The duel at the Gojo Bridge was also re enacted between him and Roronoa Zoro a member of the Straw Hat Pirates Aside from Gyukimaru there are also a number of other characters who share Benkei s attributes These include Edward Newgate Whitebeard of the Whitebeard Pirates and the Four Emperors who wielded a naginata and died standing amid an onslaught of projectile weapons in this case the series trademark repeating flintlocks 11 and Big Mom Pirates also of the Four Emperors commander Charlotte Katakuri who never fell on his back prior to his battle against the protagonist Monkey D Luffy 12 In a manga and anime murder case of Case Closed a Benkei s wooden statue becomes a major hint for Conan Edogawa to figure out the trick the murder used for the murder Benkei is a secondary character in the manga and anime Kurozuka In Kamen Rider Ghost the Benkei Damashii transformation is themed after the historical Benkei In Gridman the Hyper Agent Benkei appears in the 34th episode A Body Guard In Flint the Time Detective episode Monk Benke and Minamoto Yoshitsune appear A story based on Benkei and Minamoto Yoshitsune was done by Osamu Tezuka In an episode of Lupin the 3rd Part 2 entitled Lupin Do You Like Chanel the antagonist is attempting to collect 100 famous guns When she is trying for 99 amp 100 the guns belonging to Jigen amp Lupin Lupin tells her that she s not Benkei and that they re not at Gojo Bridge In the episode The Duelist and the Drifter of the 2011 reboot of ThunderCats the titular Duelist collects the swords of the opponents he has defeated similar to Benkei Sō Kaku portrays Benkei in the 61st Taiga Drama The 13 Lords of the Shogun Video games Edit Benkei appears in the Goemon video game series which are set in a parody of feudal Japan In Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon Benkei guards the Gojo Ohashi Bridge in Zazen Town He refuses to let you pass until he s defeated with the help of Ushiwaka a reference to his defeat by Minamoto no Yoshitsune In the video game Brave Fencer Musashi one of the minor antagonists is named Ben who is part of a trio named Leader s Force serving as the team s muscle He is often seen alongside Ed Musashi first meets the two at the bottom of the well where they hid a church bell they themselves stole with the intention of selling it When Musashi returns the bell to its rightful place the duo vow revenge burning the village Ben is encountered again in the final chapter of the game where he fights Musashi When he is defeated he appears to allow Musashi to pass although his lack of response implies that he most likely died standing much like Benkei Gilgamesh named after and partially inspired by a mythical character of the same name from the Final Fantasy video game series is arguably one of the better known references to Benkei in video game form He is usually encountered on and around bridges and is a weapon collector who is seeking the strongest of swords who routinely steals weapons from the people he defeats Benkei and Yoshitsune are the protagonists of the 2005 video game Genji Dawn of the Samurai and its 2006 sequel Genji Days of the Blade Benkei is a playable character in the Warriors Orochi series of video games In the game Pokemon Black and White 2 an elderly trainer in Village Bridge stated he had 999 winning streak in Pokemon battle and challenges the player referencing the historical Benkei s streak Benkei was meant to appear in Fate Apocrypha as a Lancer class Servant but later scrapped along with Sakata Kintoki Saint George and King David He and the other three were later properly introduced in Fate Grand Order Benkei appears in the video game Nioh as a phantom boss that you fight on a bridge The bridge references Benkei s last stand against enemy samurai Benkei appears again in the video game Nioh 2 where he fights the player and upon being defeated aids them in finding Yoshitsune It is later revealed that this version of Benkei is also a Setodaishō a fictional yokai originally featured in the third volume of Toriyama Sekien s Hyakki Tsurezure Bukuro Benkei appears in the video game Okami as a monk who initially protects the draw bridge in the capital and whose goal is to collect 1000 weapons from all over the country There is a tribute to Benkei in the video game Sekiro Shadows Die Twice There is a boss called Armored Warrior He is found on the wooden bridge before Senpou Temple He was tasked with collecting 1000 blades from samurai so his son Robert could receive the sacred waters Corrupted Monk another boss players face at the beginning of Fountainhead palace is also based on Benkei and has a lot of similarities with his artistic depictions so it s a strong guardian cleric armed with a naginata with a kabuki attribute an oni mask and that is confronted in a bridge The Visual Novel RPG Eiyuu Senki features a gender swapped version of Benkei along with versions of a large number of other significant historical figures The visual novel game Maji de Watashi ni Koi Shinasai S features gender swapped version of Benkei as one of the romanceable characters The Medabot Gobenkei known in English as Gobanko is designed to resemble Benkei It holds a naginata in its right hand a tetsubo in its left hand and several weapons in its backpackThe visual novel otome game Birushana Rising Flower of Genpei features Benkei as a romanceable character among other characters based on historical figures from the Genpei War with the protagonist being a gender swapped Yoshitsune See also EditBenkei on the Bridge Funa BenkeiNotes Edit Yoshikawa Eiji 1956 The Heike Story A Modern Translation of the Classic Tale of Love and War New York New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 8048 1376 1 Ashkenazi Michael 2003 Handbook of Japanese Mythology Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO pp 124 125 ISBN 978 1576074671 Matsumoto Nasu Kana Satoku June 29 2012 The Legend of Yoshitsune Minamoto The Kyoto Project The Kyoto university of Foreign Studies a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Matsumoto Nasu Kana Satoko June 29 2012 The Legend of Yoshitsune Minamoto The Kyoto Project a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kitagawa Hiroshi et al 1975 The Tale of the Heike pp 535 540 654 656 669 Sansom George 1958 A History of Japan to 1334 Stanford University Press pp 317 326 ISBN 978 0804705233 Turnbull Stephen 1977 The Samurai A Military History MacMillan Publishing Co Inc p 83 ISBN 978 0026205405 De Benneville James S 1910 Saito Musashi bo Benkei tales of the wars of the Gempei being the story of the lives and adventures of Iyo no Kami Minamoto Kuro Yoshitsune and Saito Musashi bo Benkei the warrior monk Yokohama Yokohama J S De Benneville p 444 Benkei 1912 retrieved 2018 04 18 Kurosawa Akira 1960 02 28 The Men Who Tread on the Tiger s Tail Denjiro Okochi Susumu Fujita Ken ichi Enomoto retrieved 2018 04 18 Oda Eiichiro 2010 One Piece Vol 59 Ch 576 Japan Shueisha ISBN 978 4 08 870083 0 Oda Eiichiro 2018 One Piece Vol 89 Ch 896 Japan Shueisha ISBN 978 4 08 881496 4References EditRibner Susan Richard Chin and Melanie Gaines Arwin 1978 The Martial Arts New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06 024999 4 Kitagawa Hiroshi and Bruce T Tsuchida 1975 The Tale of the Heike Tokyo University of Tokyo Press ISBN 0 86008 189 3 Yoshikawa Eiji 1956 The Heike Story A Modern Translation of the Classic Tale of Love and War New York Alfred A Knopf ASIN B0007BR0W8 cloth 1981 The Heike Story A Modern Translation of the Classic Tale of Love and War Tokyo Tuttle Publishing ISBN 0 8048 1376 0 paper 2002 The Heike Story A Modern Translation of the Classic Tale of Love and War Tokyo Tuttle Publishing ISBN 0 8048 3318 4 paper in Japanese 1989 Yoshikawa Eiji Rekishi Jidai Bunko Eiji Yoshikawa s Historical Fiction Vols 47 62 Shin Heike monogatari 新平家物語 Tokyo Kodansha ISBN 4 06 196577 8 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Benkei Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts UCLA Hammer Museum woodcut print Ushiwaka and Benki duelling on Gojo Bridge or Gojo Bridge an episode from the Life of Yoshitsune Chronicles of Yoshitsune by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 1839 1892 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Benkei amp oldid 1132108217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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