Cover art for Shinsengumi
Published
Tuttle, June 2011
ISBN
9784805311196
Format
Softcover, 256 pages
Dimensions
20.3cm × 13cm

Shinsengumi The Shogun's Last Samurai Corps

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The true story of the notorious samurai corps formed in 1863 to

arrest or kill the enemies of the Tokugawa Shogun.

The only book in English to explore the Shinsengumi focuses on the

corps' two charismatic leaders, Kondo Isami and Hijikata Toshizo, both

impeccable swordsmen. Shinsengumi is a history-in-brief of the final years of the

Bakufu, which collapsed in 1867 with the restoration of Imperial rule. In

writing Shinsengumi, Hillsborough referred mostly to Japanese-language primary

sources, including letters, memoirs, journals, interviews, and eyewitness

accounts, as well as definitive biographies.

The fall of the shogun's government (Tokugawa Bakufu, or simply

Bakufu) in 1868, which had ruled Japan for over two and a half centuries, was

the greatest event in modern Japanese history. The revolution, known as the

Meiji Restoration, began with the violent reaction of samurai to the Bakufu's decision in 1854 to open the theretofore isolated country to "Western barbarians". Though opening the country was unavoidable, it was seen as a sign of weakness by the samurai who clamored to "expel the barbarians".

Those samurai plotted to overthrow the shogun and restore the holy

emperor to his ancient seat of power. Screaming "heaven's revenge", they wielded their swords with a vengeance upon those loyal to the shogun. They

unleashed a wave of terror at the centre of the revolution-the emperor's capital

of Kyoto. Murder and assassination were rampant. By the end of 1862, hordes of

renegade samurai, called ronin, had transformed the streets of the Imperial

Capital into a "sea of blood".

The shogun's administrators were desperate to stop the terror. A

band of expert swordsmen was formed. It was given the name Shinsengumi

("Newly Selected Corps"), and commissioned to eliminate the ronin and

other enemies of the Bakufu. With unrestrained brutality bolstered by an

official sanction to kill, the Shinsengumi soon became the shogun's most

dreaded security force.

In this vivid historical narrative of the Shinsengumi, author Romulus Hillsborough paints a provocative

and thrilling picture of this most fascinating period in Japanese history.

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