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    Categories: Japanology

Samurai Kamon: Seven Notable Samurai Family Crests

Japanese warlords are known to have many family crests. They carry them for different occasions, and they often represent their bloodlines. However, many cases show that they are given by superiors or taken away from enemies by defeating them on the battlefield. They used their Kamon with their beliefs and strategies. Here, we focus on seven military commanders.

Japanese Family Crest: List of the Lineage Symbols

Table of Contents
  1. Oda Nobunaga
  2. Toyotomi Hideyoshi
  3. Tokugawa Ieyasu
  4. Sanada Yukimura
  5. Takeda Shingen
  6. Date Masamune
  7. Uesugi Kenshin

1. ODA NOBUNAGA (1534-1582): Samurai Kamon

Oda Nobunaga was a man who nearly unified the country in a lifetime.

Nobunaga’s uniqueness lies in his unified samurai society and in breaking the balance among the samurai, court nobles, and Buddhist powers. He attempted to establish a genuinely unified government.

Nobunaga also pioneered the separation of temples and state and the symbolic monarchy.

There are few contemporary records of Nobunaga’s family crest. We can rely on the records in the “Kansei Choshu Shokafu” submitted to the Edo shogunate by the lineage of Nobunaga’s second son, Nobukatsu.

Oda Nobunaga Crest, Oda Mokko-mon

The famous Oda Mokko is said to have been given to Nobunaga’s father, Nobuhide, by the retainer of his lord, the Shiba clan of Owari. The Mokko crest itself has a long history.

However, the Oda Mokko has a unique flower-like appearance compared to other Mokko crests.

Agehacho – swallowtail butterfly

The butterfly’s crest is recognized as the crest of the Taira clan, so we assume Nobunaga began using it when he called himself from the Taira clan.

Gosan-kiri – Paulownia crest
Maru-ni Futatsu-hiki – Two Horizontal Lines in a Circle

Gosan-kiri and Maru ni Futa-hikiryo were given by Ashikaga Yoshiaki. Ashikaga Yoshiaki gave them to Nobunaga because of his success in the battle in Kyoto. Since these were the crests of the Ashikaga clan, people recognized them as high-rank crests.

Jurokuyogiku_sixteen-petals chrysanthemum

People assume Nobunaga received The 16-leaf chrysanthemum from the Emperor’s family. It is one of the honorary crests.

Eiraku Tsuho

Eiraku Tsuho is a flag crest. At that time, most of the coins in circulation in Japan were imported from China, and the Eiraku Tsuho was one of them.

Mumoji crest

People consider the Mumoji (no character) derived from Zen Buddhism. Uesugi Kenshin and Katakura Kagetsuna also used it as a banner crest.

2. TOYOTOMI HIDEYOSHI (1537-1598): Samurai Kamon

Hideyoshi’s father was a foot soldier of the Oda family. Although his lord Nobunaga appreciated him without discrimination, Hideyoshi was isolated from his fellow warriors of the Oda family even much later because of his status.

The circumstances made him a master of caring so much that he was called “Hitotarashi,” good at getting in someone’s pocket. The tyranny he became after becoming a naturalized ruler came from this situation.

His attachment to authority, which is characteristic of a man who has had to work hard and rise to power, can also be seen in the use of his family crest.

Taiko-giri

The famous crest of Hideyoshi is the Taiko-giri (paulownia). However, there is no fixed form. In fact, the total number of crests called “Taiko-giri” is not even known.

The influence of the gorgeous Momoyama culture can be felt.

Fukushima Omodaka crest

Nobunaga and Shogun Ashikaga Yoshiaki initially gave Hideyoshi’s paulownia crest. Before that, people assumed he used the Fukushima Omodaka (three-leaf arrowhead). Many generals were given this crest, but Fukushima Masanori was the last to use it, so people now call it Fukushima Omodaka.

hidari-mitsudomoe

He also had family crests such as Tomoe and Chrysanthemums, which Hideyoshi received from the Emperor’s family. However, there is almost no evidence that they were used.

Hideyoshi continued to use the paulownia crest because it was the shogunate Ashikaga family’s crest, which controlled the samurai families at the time. It shows how much he wanted to be a ‘samurai family.’

3. TOKUGAWA IEYASU (1542-1616): Samurai Kamon

The Tokugawa family were originally minor lords of Mikawa, and they were called Matsudaira. In a struggle with the neighboring Oda clan of Owari, Ieyasu’s father, Hirotada, head of the Tokugawa family, chose to receive support from the great Imagawa family.

He abandoned his position as an independent lord and became a vassal of significant power to keep the family name alive. Therefore, his son Ieyasu spent his childhood as a hostage in the castle of the Imagawa family.

However, the Imagawa army, which advanced to Owari with a horde of several tens of thousands, was defeated by the Oda army of several thousand. The head of the Imagawa family, Yoshimoto Imagawa, also died in battle. This is the battle of Okehazama.

Taking this opportunity, Ieyasu became independent from the Imagawa family. He changed his family name from Matsudaira to Tokugawa. He joined hands with Nobunaga, the head of the Oda family, who had been his archenemy since his father’s time.

He maintained the alliance with Nobunaga and built the foundation for becoming the ruler of Japan.

Mitsuba Aoi (three hollyhock leaves), Tokugawa Ieyasu Crest

The Tokugawa family’s family crest is the crest of the hollyhock. However, the depiction of leaves is different at different times. It was more realistic and detailed in Ieyasu’s time, and it became simpler after the middle of the Edo period.

Oonakaguro

The Oonakakuro is a type of Ichibiki-ryo and was the exclusive crest of the Nitta clan, a venerable family of the Minamoto clan. Ieyasu owned this crest because he claimed descent from the Nitta clan to obtain the shogun’s post.

Kenichou

Ieyasu owned this family crest of ginkgo with swords. However, it is unknown whether he actually used it.

As for the three-leaf hollyhock is said to have been given to Ieyasu by his vassals Sakai or Honda.

4. SANADA YUKIMURA (1567- 1615) actual name, NOBUSHIGE (信繁): Samurai Kamon

Yukimura played a spectacular role in the Osaka battle and threatened Ieyasu’s main camp. His skillful mercenaries and death-defying spear handling were so impressive that even the enemy generals were in awe.

Therefore, he was praised as the best samurai in Japan.

However, in a letter he left behind, he referred to himself as a middle-aged warlord who did not look good, was weak, and asked for money.

But he was strong.

Rokurensen

Yukimura’s family crest was a six-linked coin, also known as Rikudosen. In Buddhism, the Six Realms are hell, hungry ghosts, animals, Shura, mankind, and heaven (the Way).

It is Rikudosen that people carry so that they do not have to wander around after death, and it is connected to the Jizo beliefs.

suhama crest

The second is a small island seen on the waterfront, and the one reproduced artificially on the tray is called Suhama.

Since it was decorated on festive occasions, it became a symbol of celebration and was converted into a family crest.

musubi-karigane

The knotted geese (musubi-karigane) crest is a type of geese crest. Because of its elegant shape, the samurai adopted it as a family crest.

Like Rikudosen, this crest was also used by the Shigeno and Umino clans, the main line of the Sanada clan.

Although Yukimura was defeated in battle and died, the name of the Sanada family and the Rikudosen is still handed down to this day because of his successes.

5. TAKEDA SHINGEN (1521- 1573): Samurai Kamon

The Takeda clan was a member of the Minamoto clan of Kai Province, known as the Kai Minamoto clan. Being from a branch of the Minamoto clan, which people assume the “Warrior Lords,” they were looked upon with awe.

During Shingen’s reign, the Takeda clan consolidated its power in Kai and began a full-scale advance into Shinano. This led to five battles with Uesugi Kenshin of Echigo, but the Takeda clan eventually annexed Shinano.

The Takeda family conquered the western Kozuke region and successfully expanded its territory. Finally, he faced a decisive battle with Nobunaga and his ally, Ieyasu.

Takeda-bishi

The Takeda family crest was the Takeda-bishi (diamond-shaped crest). According to legend, the family adopted the Kamon from a pattern on armor and received it as a reward for victory in battle. This crest is limited to the Takeda clan and its lineage.

Hanabishi, diamond-shaped flower crest

The second type of Hanabishi crest is also the main crest. The Takeda clan seemed to use it on items other than an armory.

Kage-hanabishi

The third, the Kage Hanabishi, was another main crest. We assume people collectively called them the Takeda-bishi.

The Takeda clan used only this crest, which should be a sign of the Kai Minamoto clan’s pride and confidence.

6. DATE MASAMUNE (1567- 1636): Samurai Kamon

The Date clan is famous for its many crests, many of which are derived from the Fujiwara clan.

sendaizasa

According to records from the middle Edo period, the crest of Sendai bamboo is usually used as the regular crest.

Maru-ni Tate-sanhikiryo
Kuyo crest
Yukiwa-ni Susuki
Sixteen-petals Chrysanthemum
Goshichi-no Kiri
Yatsu-nazuna

The following crests are used as alternative crests: Maru-ni Tate-Sanhikiryo, Kuyo, Yukiwa-ni Susuki, Sixteen-petals Chrysanthemum, Goshichi-Kiri (paulownia), and Yatsu-Nazuna (eight-flowered shepherd’s purse) as alternative crests.

Minamoto no Yoritomo gave Maru-ni Tate-Sanhikiryo to Tomomune, the first head of the Date family. It was long and the official crest of the Date family. We assume Yatsu-Nazuna (shepherd’s purse crest) is also from the same period.

Yukiwa-ni Susuki is an exclusive kamon of the Date clan, which Masamune’s father, Terumune, used. Masamune’s generation used the Kuyo crest.

Chrysanthemum and Paulownia crests are crests that Masamune received from Toyotomi Hideyoshi.

In addition, there is a record that in Masamune’s father’s generation, when the sparrow crest was used on Sendaizasa with the same shape as that of the Date family of Shigezane, the sparrow was changed to a persimmon color.

7. UESUGI KENSHIN (1530-1578): Samurai Kamon

Uesugi Kenshin was a typical military commander who followed the existing order. However, he was a genius in warfare.

While Nobunaga and Hideyoshi believed that a drastic new order was necessary to end the warring states, Kenshin aimed to bring the warring states together by restoring the order of the Muromachi shogunate as before.

Kuyo-tomoe

The family crest Kenshin used when he called himself Nagao Kagetora was the Kuyo-Tomoe. This is the Kamon of his birth family, the Nagao clan.

The Nagao clan had served the Uesugi clan since the Kamakura period (1185-1333). After the Uesugi clan was appointed as the Echigo governor, the Nagao clan became the military deputy governor.

In addition to his role as governor, the Uesugi clan also held the shogunal deputy Kanto governor’s position, effectively making him the ruler of the Kanto region.

The Kuyo-Tomoe was originally a Kuyo crest. It seems that samurai combined it with the Hachiman faith, which was widely popular among them. Then, the “Tomoe” crest of the Hachiman deity was combined with the Kuyo.

Uesugizasa (bamboo crest)

Kenshin, who became the head of the Nagao clan, later inherited the fallen Uesugi clan. At this time, he inherited the Uesugi family name, the Kanto Regency. He also received the Uesugi banner (the flag received from the Imperial family) along with the Uesugi bamboo grass crest.

The Uesugi clan was descended from the Kajuji clan of the Fujiwara Hokke (the Northern Fujiwara family). For this reason, they passed down the “bamboo with a sparrow” crest, the crest of the Kajuji branch.

Gradually, the crest changed its shape, so several of them.

As the official crest of the shogunal deputy of the Kanto governor, samurai in eastern provinces admired it with exceptional value. 

Sixteen-petals Chrysanthemum
Uesugi-kiri

Additionally, during Kenshin’s reign, he received chrysanthemum and paulownia crests. Although people believe it was initially the usual five-seven paulownia, it later changed to Uesugi paulownia.

Hiroko Matsuyama:

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