A few months ago I finished the second band of samurai (Bushi Buntai II) and it's time for another clan and another color scheme :)
And who do we have today?
Dismounted samurai with a characteristic "balloon" on his back.
A horo (母衣) was a type of cloak or garment attached to the back of the armour worn by samurai on the battlefields of feudal Japan.
A horo was around 1.8 m (6 ft) long and made from several strips of cloth sewn together with a fringe on the top and bottom edges.
The cloth strips were sewn together and formed into a sort of bag which would fill with air like a balloon when the wearer was riding a horse.
A light framework of wicker, bamboo or whale bone known as an oikago, similar to a crinoline, which is said to have been invented by Hatakeyama Masanaga during the Ōnin War (1467–1477), was sometimes used to keep the horo expanded.
Attaching the horo generally involved a combination of fastening cords and possibly a staff. The top cords were attached to either the helmet or cuirass of the wearer while the bottom cords were attached to the waist.
The family emblem (mon) of the wearer was marked on the horo.
Horo were used as far back as the Kamakura period (1185–1333).
When inflated the horo was said to protect the wearer from arrows shot from the side and from behind.
In particular, arrows shot from such bows from behind that hit a billowing horo probably would not be able to penetrate the lacquered iron or leather armor of a samurai warrior riding on horseback when his horo was billowing out backwards.
But this claim is only made for silk fabric with a diameter of some four to six feet that is billowing (as behind a rider on a horse going fast), not silk fabric that is not billowing or is lying flat against a surface.
Wearing a horo is also said to have marked the wearer as a messenger (tsukai-ban) or person of importance. According to the Hosokawa Yusai Oboegaki, the diary of Hosokawa Yusai (1534–1610) taking of an elite tsukai-ban messenger's head was a worthy prize.
"When taking the head of a horo warrior, wrap it in the silk of the horo. In the case of an ordinary warrior, wrap it in the silk of the sashimono"- Samurai: The Code of the Warrior, Thomas Louis, Tommy Ito, Sterling Publishing Company
https://gunbai-militaryhistory.blogspot.com/2018/02/horo-samurai-cape.html |
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/46/30/d8/4630d85e734c3b111ff6ad3ffb1e1aee.jpg |
A very handsome samurai figures, Michal! Love the two-tone horo with Takeda mon.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for a kind words Dean!
DeleteSublime... as usual.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much sir!
DeleteBest regards
Would not an arrow deflate the horo? Or have I watched too many cartoons...
ReplyDeleteI once watched a show on Discovery and it was so touchy. And the shots actually bounced off it :)
DeleteWow, another fantastic figure Michal, and interesting background on the Horo etc!
ReplyDeleteGlad you like it!
DeleteThank you very much.
Superb work Michal
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!
DeleteCzego te Nippońce nie wymyślą, przecież każdy wie, że do łapania strzał najlepszy jest goblin!
ReplyDeleteŚwietne malowanie!
I skaveński niewolnik :)
DeleteDziękuję:)
And another great job. 😀
ReplyDeleteThank you very much sir!
DeleteLekcja historii połączona z oglądaniem bardzo ładnych figurek - to Twój znak rozpoznawczy!
ReplyDeleteDziękuję bardzo za tak mile słowa;)
DeleteBeautiful job! Really pleasing
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot mate!
DeleteA nice combination of colors!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much!
Delete