Kura (saddle)

Summary

Kura () is the generic name for the Japanese saddle. The word "kura" is most commonly associated with the saddle used by the samurai class of feudal Japan. Over time the Japanese added elements of their own until the Japanese saddle became an identifiable style, also known as the samurai saddle.

Antique Japanese (Samurai) saddle (kura), from the "Samurai: Armor of the Warrior" exhibit 2011, Musée du Quai Branly, Paris, France

History and description edit

The Japanese were known to be using the Chinese style of saddle during the Nara period (AD 710 to 794), but during the Heian (794 to 1185), changes made to the Chinese saddle led to what we now call the kura or Japanese saddle. The Chinese style saddle is known as karagura while the Japanese style is known as yamatogura.[1]

In the fourth century AD, the Japanese started using horses in warfare.[2] Cavalry proved to be decisive in the Jinshin War of 672–73, in Fujiwara no Hirotsugu's rebellion in 740 and in the revolt of Fujiwara no Nakamaro in 756.[3]

Samurai warriors increasingly used horses,[4] and rode two types of kura: the suikangura or "aristocratic saddle", and the gunjingura, or war saddle. The main weapon of early samurai warfare was the yumi (bow) and the kura provided a rugged, stable, comfortable platform for shooting arrows. However, the design was not well suited for speed or distance. The introduction of firearms in Japan in 1543 eventually led to the development of the Japanese matchlock (tanegashima) which supplanted the yumi as the weapon of choice by the samurai. As a result, horse-mounted samurai were no longer the main military force. During the Edo period (1603 to 1868) horses were no longer needed for warfare and the samurai started using highly decorated kura with colored lacquers, and extensive intricate inlays and leather work. Mounted samurai became a ceremonial presence in the entourages of processions by their daimyō (feudal lord).[5][6]

Riding in a saddle was reserved for the samurai class until the end of the samurai era in 1868. Lower classes would ride on a pack saddle (ni-gura or konida-gura) or bareback.[7] Pack horses (ni-uma or konida-uma) carried a variety of merchandise and the baggage of travelers using a pack saddle that ranged from a basic wooden frame to the elaborate pack saddles used for the semi-annual processions (sankin-kōtai) of daimyōs.[8] Pack horses also carried the equipment and food for samurai warriors during military campaigns.[9] With the end of the samurai era and beginning of the Meiji period (1868–1912), non-samurai were allowed to openly ride horses and eventually the Japanese adopted saddles of styles seen in the occidental world. Saddles used by Japanese officers during the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905) are described as being based on civilian English saddles.[10]

Kura-no-baju (Japanese saddle and related parts) edit

Types of kura edit

Yamato gura (Japanese style kura) edit

Kara gura (Chinese style kura) edit

Ni-gura or konida-gura (Kura for pack horses (ni-uma or konida-uma)) edit

Kurabane edit

Kurabane is the wooden tree of the Japanese saddle which was made from red oak (kashi), the parts are connected to each other by joints and cords allowing the kurabane to flex, it has four parts, the maewa (pommel) the arched front plate, the shizuwa (cantle) the arched rear plate, these are connected by two igi (contoured side bands) which connect the maewa to the shizuwa, the igi rest on either side of the horse's spine and serve as the under frame for the leather seat (basen or kura tsubo), the igi are slotted for the stirrup straps (chikara-gawa or gekiso) to pass through.[11]

Basin or kura tsubo edit

The basin/kura tsubo (the thin leather saddle seat), has slots on either side for the stirrup straps (Chikara-gawa or gekiso) to pass through.

Aori edit

Aori (saddle flaps), a pair of large leather pieces that would hang from either side of the saddle (kura) and protect the sides of the horse from the abumi (stirrups) and from the branches of trees and shrubs.

Shita-kura or hadazuke edit

Shita-kura or hadazuke, the twin set of double leather pads attached to the bottom of a Japanese saddle tree (kurabane). The shita-kura (hadazuke) protects the back of the horse from the kurabane.

Abumi edit

Abumi (stirrups), the abumi are attached to the saddle (kura) by a pair of leather stirrup straps (chikara-gawa or gekiso).

Chikara-gawa or gekiso edit

Chikara-gawa or gekiso (stirrup straps), leather straps that the stirrups (abumi) are attached to, they pass through slots on the saddle seat (basin or kura tsubo).[6]

Shiode edit

Shiode, tie-downs attached to the kura (saddle) at four points. Various ropes and straps are attached to the shiode.

Uma agemaki edit

Uma agemaki, decorative tassels that are attached to a Japanese saddle (kura), other equipment may be attached to the uma agemaki.

Bakin edit

Bakin, a padded cover that sits behind the kura (saddle) and covers the shirigai (crupper).

Shirigai edit

Shirigai, a type of crupper which connected to the kura (saddle) on one end and looped under the horse's tail on the other to keep the saddle from slipping forward.

Kutsuwa (bit) edit

Kiritsuke (saddle blanket) edit

Sanjakugawa edit

Sanjakugawa, two leather straps that wrapped around each side of the neck, attached to the bridle and the bit. The sanjakugawa prevented the bridle from slipping over the ears.

Muchi (whip) edit

Munagai (breast strap) edit

Omogai (bridle) edit

Tazuna (reins) edit

Obukuro (tail cover) edit

See also edit

  • Yabusame (Japanese archery on horseback)

References edit

  1. ^ Handbook to Life in Medieval and Early Modern Japan, Author William E. Deal, Publisher Oxford University Press, 2007, ISBN 9780195331264, P.156
  2. ^ Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). "Horses" in Japan Encyclopedia, pp. 354–355;, p. 354, at Google Books citing the Kojiki and Nihon shoki.
  3. ^ Friday, Karl F. (1996). Hired Swords: The Rise of Private Warrior Power in Early Japan, p. 37, p. 37, at Google Books
  4. ^ Turnbull, Stephen R. (2002). War in Japan 1467–1615, pp. 15–20., p. 15, at Google Books
  5. ^ Samurai, warfare and the state in early medieval Japan (Google eBook), Karl Friday, Psychology Press, 2004 P.97
  6. ^ a b Handbook to life in medieval and early modern Japan, William E. Deal, Oxford University Press US, 2007 P.155
  7. ^ Honda the samurai: a story of modern Japan, Author William Elliot Griffis, Publisher Congregational Sunday-school and publishing society, 1890, Original from Harvard University P.146
  8. ^ A History of Japan 1582–1941: Internal and External Worlds, Author Louis M. Cullen, Publisher Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN 978-0-521-52918-1, P.88
  9. ^ Samurai – The World of the Warrior, Author Stephen Turnbull, Publisher Osprey Publishing, 2006, ISBN 978-1-84176-951-6, P.121
  10. ^ Reports of Military Observers Attached to the Armies in Manchuria During the Russo-Japanese War ...: Reports of W. S. Schuyler, J. F. Morrison, Carl Reichmann P. C. March, Govt. Print. Off., 1907 P.107
  11. ^ Art of Armor: Samurai Armor from the Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Collection, Authors L. John Anderson, Sachiko Hori, Morihiro Ogawa, John Stevenson, Stephen Turnbull, Publisher Yale University Press, 2011, ISBN 978-0-300-17636-0, P.81

External links edit

  • Visual glossary of Japanese saddle related parts