Samurai Warships

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024
  • today Antony tells you about the complexity of samurai warships and how hard it is to understand all the names which are involved. Why not look at the other videos in this series.
    • Samurai 👺 who can be a...
    #ships #warships #navalbattles

КОМЕНТАРІ • 55

  • @AntonyCummins
    @AntonyCummins  Рік тому +4

    Please remember to check out the other channels and the playlist. If you would like a copy of the Book of Samurai, click here
    www.amazon.com/Book-Samurai-One-Fundamental-Teachings/dp/1780288883/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2Z0DSA5H6UGQ3&keywords=book+of+samurai&qid=1680697447&sprefix=book+of+samurai%2Caps%2C246&sr=8-1

  • @AhnkoCheeOutdoors
    @AhnkoCheeOutdoors Рік тому +9

    My mother is 100% Samurai blood descended from the Heike who ruled Western Japan in the 12th century. They were on the losing side of their arch rival clan the Genji at the great sea battle of Shimonoseki. I would love to know what design, and size boats they used in that battle. After their defeat the Heike survivors escaped east into what is today Tochigi Prefecture. This is where my mother and her ancestors for generations came from. My Dad a WWII US Army veteran landed on Honshu Japan direct from Manila right after the surrender. He fell in love with the place, and never went back to New England where he was from. He met my mom, fell in love, got married, and had 6 kids. He being a New Englander loved the sea, and boats. He had two rowing dories, and a diesel powered Sea Bright Skiff built while there by a boatwright in Yokohama, and he was always amazed at the skill, and quality of materials and workmanship of this craftsman. I would like to get a copy of that Japanese book on Samurai boats. Do you have a name of the book, and the author? Thank you for this video, very interesting.

  • @dojocho1894
    @dojocho1894 Рік тому +15

    One of the few military history aspects practically not known in the west...I searched for Info on this about 10 yrs ago and was very frustrated by such little info in the west....great job.

  • @GallowglassAxe
    @GallowglassAxe Рік тому +18

    I don't think your quality has gone down personally. Having videos with a mix of complexity is rather important in teaching. Japan and naval warfare should be extremely important being that its an island chain. Love to see more on this subject.
    I think naval warfare before the 1600's is highly under represented in general. In Europe you don't see anything on Galley warfare that dominated the high medieval and early renaissance period. In the early medieval period you talk about the viking longship but nearly all that is mention is them landing on the shore. Very little is talked about with ship to ship combat.

  • @KLINGONASSASSIN
    @KLINGONASSASSIN Рік тому +5

    Perhaps it's the fanbase that has become more educated.... Keep it up

  • @woola7895
    @woola7895 Рік тому +1

    This randomly showed up in my feed, very interesting and cool!

  • @mdsnoob6278
    @mdsnoob6278 Рік тому +1

    Currently I am taking an AP world history class in high school. This video feels like something I would learn in class. It’s very interesting!

  • @JakerTheSnake
    @JakerTheSnake Рік тому +3

    I’ve always thought of your videos to be quite informative and quite high quality. I enjoy your books as well!

  • @snakeeyes007
    @snakeeyes007 Рік тому +2

    Excellent!

  • @chrisvaughn7158
    @chrisvaughn7158 Рік тому +2

    Very interesting video sensei!!

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro6902 Рік тому +2

    Thank you very much, the whole thing is very interesting and it makes you want to build a ship model.

  • @iceburn5349
    @iceburn5349 Рік тому +4

    Would like to see more stuff like this

  • @radoslavkosil7450
    @radoslavkosil7450 Рік тому +2

    Awsome ! It is indeed better without simplify.

  • @oxvendivil442
    @oxvendivil442 Рік тому +1

    To make a better comparative study, Japanese ship technology should be discussed along side Korean, Chinese and even European naval technologies; the Koreans adopted well in that war and innovated a lot while Chinese ships were the pinnacle of navies especially the treasure fleet of the Ming where the ships were floating cities compared to everyone else's floating fortresses and even after they scuttled their fleet, their remaining vessels were still shoulders above most and are on par with the best of Europe's.

  • @littlejimmy7402
    @littlejimmy7402 Рік тому +2

    I'm really happy to have found your excellent channel, you are filling in gaps of knowledge that many people have wondered about. That said, occasionally when you read Japanese I get a Mike Myers flashback(s) and I can't help but laugh. No disrespect meant.

  • @ashina2146
    @ashina2146 Рік тому +1

    Now I wonder about Genpei War Ships, before the Mongol Invasion where I often heard the Japanese doesn't really have a navy, but more of Samurai and Attendants on whatever boats they can find where they would board Mongol Ships and take it over.

  • @TheShogunate
    @TheShogunate Рік тому +1

    Great and informative video!

  • @AntonyCummins
    @AntonyCummins  Рік тому +2

    Click Like if you LIKE this playlist
    ua-cam.com/video/eZWTGSjsZ5Y/v-deo.html

  • @SengokuStudies
    @SengokuStudies Рік тому +1

    Our videos seem to be surprising people. It seems like not too many have heard about this part of premodern Japanese military history.

  • @KamiSeiTo
    @KamiSeiTo Рік тому +1

    Yes to more technical and less "dumbed down"! ^^

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Рік тому +1

    Personally I get confused with the names cuz I don't speak Japanese only a few words. But let me say it's very interesting hoy semi ancient cultures created things. Thank you for the information

  • @Tharaldsen89
    @Tharaldsen89 Рік тому +1

    While I found it informative, I thought this would tell me more about the specific types of ships used by the samurai during the Sengoku Jidai. The ones which CA drew most of their inspiration for the naval units used in Shogun 2. That's why I found the video title a little misleading and felt it didn't really give me the information I was looking for.

  • @alexkudzin4980
    @alexkudzin4980 Рік тому +1

    You need to do a more technical video 😅 go through each part, it's perpous and why! I'd watch an hour + video like that
    Also can you cover the construction techniques used for Sengoku era boats as well as both the timber properties & sizes typically available.
    You've already got the sectional drawings, like those from the ship construction book Yamato, but after comparing timber properties & typical available sizes and shapes with western equivalents please start discussing boat construction with a transverse cross-section near the 筒/筒鋏/帆柱 and another near the stern & prow, going part by part explaining the reason why it's so and stating hypotheses as to why Japanese boat ribbing is the way it is (cut from a single wide strait timber and not a curved timber), as well as, why the planking is so wide and why it is what a western shipwright might call “carvel planking”
    Next a longitudinal section along the mid hull shows the prow & stern construction as they also are quite unique, again going part by part, it's name, purpose, and the reason why it's as it is
    Finally, please cover rigging, oars & rudders in the same detail
    After you have done this for the major ship types of the Sengoku era could you please do so for the Japanese ships build to Western designs, like the Sant Juan Bautista, covering the tradeoffs & issues that had to be made to accommodate the available Japanese timber properties & sizes
    To me a Seppings style construction makes more sense than how they achieved the result they did with the materials they could get

    • @AntonyCummins
      @AntonyCummins  Рік тому

      Haha that would be a major complicated video

    • @alexkudzin4980
      @alexkudzin4980 Рік тому

      @@AntonyCummins If it’s too complex for a video break it down into ship types and do a series
      Like an episode on typical currents around the Japanese coast, some of the fastest in the world, and vessel draught, shallow so there’s less surface area for the current to push against
      Also shallow as most of the ships are also riverine vessels and would sail strait up to Kyoto, from the Sea of Japan, stopping around Chushojima to offload heavy cargo
      This use case and the way they were “docked” by drawing them up onto beaches or on flat areas at high tide is why the keel is so wide (sometimes has keel width extensions also) to prevent it sinking into soft sands/silt, whilst the base is not flat and starts high on the keel to reduce the surface area on the sand/silt, reducing friction, when pulling a boat up or pushing it into the water
      Also lots of shallows, sandbars, rocks and islands to navigate around, a long scratch in the keel is better than a hole in the planking
      The currents & typical uses of the ship combined with the weather and geography feed into why the mast is collapsible, if you're constantly rowing against the wind or the wind is insufficient as the river is in a valley or in the wind shadow of mountains...
      You don't want the drag of all that rigging
      Also all the low bridges...
      However, the wind is mostly just not very strong, certainly not enough to overcome a lot of the currents if you had a deep-draught ship, getting the boat up to any speed let alone planing is quite a challenge
      Beaufort scale 1-4 is typical, usually on the lower end, I've only seen 5-7 a hand full of times outside of typhoons
      A big ship wants a 5/6 to get moving at any speed, 3+ at a minimum
      Talking about Japanese ships going upriver, they would sail straight up to Yamagata castle from Sakata... All the way up the Mogami River... We're they fighting for bragging rights with a Viking longship?

  • @TheRinzler2
    @TheRinzler2 Рік тому +1

    I didn’t even realize that samurai has naval vessels

  • @shawnlewis1867
    @shawnlewis1867 Рік тому +3

    Are there any fullsize replica ships around? I think your channel is doing just fine. You be you!

  • @R.Merkhet
    @R.Merkhet Рік тому +1

    Thanks again Anthony. This may seem pedantic, but I'll go ahead. Did these ships use nails or did they utilize the perfect fitting wood joint fittings that they used in architecture?

  • @christopherrasberry9629
    @christopherrasberry9629 Рік тому +2

    Are there any unique weapons or armor for naval samurai?

    • @AntonyCummins
      @AntonyCummins  Рік тому

      Lots of hooking and throwing over the side

  • @gawainethefirst
    @gawainethefirst Рік тому +1

    You would think that people who lived on islands would be better shipwrights.

  • @thfkmnIII
    @thfkmnIII Рік тому +1

    ".. quick guide through samurai boats and how samurai fought at war."
    Shows picture of a korean ship💀

    • @AntonyCummins
      @AntonyCummins  Рік тому

      You mean the thumbnail. That is I believe the invasion of Korea by the Japanese

    • @thfkmnIII
      @thfkmnIII Рік тому

      @@AntonyCummins nope.
      0:06

  • @666onfire100101
    @666onfire100101 Рік тому +1

    Speeking of the Book of the Samurai series when is the 3rd one going to be published or is that the one you said you needed to get a new publisher for?

    • @666onfire100101
      @666onfire100101 Рік тому

      i see i asked too soon

    • @AntonyCummins
      @AntonyCummins  Рік тому +1

      It’s just a case of more sales needed people want less complex stuff

    • @666onfire100101
      @666onfire100101 Рік тому

      thats understandable sad but understandable

  • @stepbruv8780
    @stepbruv8780 Рік тому +1

    weebs warship?