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    nobunaga

    Explore "nobunaga" with insightful episodes like "Episode 16: Mobile Romance Bishounen on the Go-nen How Did I End Up Romancing This Ultra Hot Guy on My Phone? Ikemen Sengoku Pt. 2", "Sengoku Jidai Part 2: Fall of the Demon Daimyo", "QUICKISODE: Samurai and Guns", "32 Chatting About Shinobi Mysteries w. Susan Spann" and "28 Final de Oda Nobunaga, Viaje a Nagoya, Japón 2018 Pt5" from podcasts like ""Otome Shimai", "Attack the Facts", "Attack the Facts", "Japan Station: A Podcast About Japan by JapanKyo.com" and "Cápsulas Del Bit a la Orquesta (2016-18)"" and more!

    Episodes (51)

    Episode 16: Mobile Romance Bishounen on the Go-nen How Did I End Up Romancing This Ultra Hot Guy on My Phone? Ikemen Sengoku Pt. 2

    Episode 16: Mobile Romance Bishounen on the Go-nen How Did I End Up Romancing This Ultra Hot Guy on My Phone? Ikemen Sengoku Pt. 2

    A continuation of last week's episode where we finish introducing the Season 1 datable warlords from IkeSen AND talk a little about Ikemen Sengoku: BROMANCES Across Time (the anime, this is the actual name of the anime).

    Join us on a journey of fondue, Monty Python references, and angry Disney Princesses as we do our best to discuss the actual game and not just how much we want to make Cybird's localization team cookies in the continuation of our review of Ikemen Sengoku: Romances Across Time.

    Games discussed: Nekopara Catboys Paradise, Fashioning Little Miss Lonesome, Ikemen Sengoku

    Ikemen Sengoku: Romances Across Time | Otome Game Ikemen Series (ikemen-series.com)
    Ikemen Sengoku: Bromances Across Time | Anime-Planet
    None of the games or characters discussed belong to us.

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    Sengoku Jidai Part 2: Fall of the Demon Daimyo

    Sengoku Jidai Part 2: Fall of the Demon Daimyo

    In the second part of our samurai series, we explore a lot more battles during the warring states period and the many victories of Oda Nobunaga. Can the Demon Daimyo unify Japan? 

    Follow us on Instagram: @attackthefacts

    Support Jack's game!

    @silentprotagonistgames

    http://silentprotagonist.games/

    Read some comics!

    misterfez.com

    Music:

    "Floating Cities", "River Fire", "Spirit of Girl", "Lotus", "Medusa"
    Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

    Aviators - Infinity Awaits Us - A Royalty Free OST
    "Village Theme"

    QUICKISODE: Samurai and Guns

    QUICKISODE: Samurai and Guns

    If you didn't get enough samurai talk last week, you're in luck! In this week's quickisode, we elaborate on the use of gun warfare during the warring states period of Japan. 

    Follow us on Instagram: @attackthefacts

    Support Jack's game!

    @silentprotagonistgames

    http://silentprotagonist.games/

    Read some comics!

    misterfez.com

    Music:

    "Floating Cities", "River Fire", "Spirit of Girl", "Industrious Ferret"
    Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

    Aviators - Infinity Awaits Us - A Royalty Free OST
    "Village Theme"

    32 Chatting About Shinobi Mysteries w. Susan Spann

    32 Chatting About Shinobi Mysteries w. Susan Spann

    On this episode of the Japan Station podcast, we're talking about ninjas, the judicial system of 16th century Japan, and more with Susan Spann, author of the Hiro Hattori "shinobi mystery" series of books.

    About Susan Spann

    Susan Spann is the award-winning author of the Hiro Hattori series of mystery books. The novels follow the adventures of Hiro Hattori, a ninja from the famous Iga clan, and Father Mateo Avila da Silva, a Portuguese Jesuit priest, as they travel through 16th century Japan solving murders and avoiding danger. Though originally from the U.S., Spann now lives in Japan. She practices traditional Japanese calligraphy and used to raise seahorses.

    Topics Discussed

    • How Susan Spann got the idea to write books about a ninja detective
    • What Susan Spann likes about writing the Hiro Hattori books
    • The evolving relationship between Hiro Hattori and Father Mateo
    • The judicial system of 16th century Japan
    • The social caste system of 16th century Japan
    • The different types of police seen in 16th century Japan
    • The difference between a yoriki and dōshin
    • Whether there were lawyers in 1500s Japan
    • Jails in 16th century Japan
    • Oda Nobunaga and when he will appear in the Hiro Hattori books
    • Where actors stood in the social hierarchy of 16th century Japan
    • How difficult it is to verify information about ninja
    • Whether shuriken were mainly used as "throwing stars" or not
    • The city of Iga in Mie Prfecture
    • Susan Spann's experience climbing 100 mountains in one year and her upcoming book Climb
    • Places in Japan Susan Spann would like to visit in Japan
    • The challenges of raising seahorses
    • Why male seahorses can seem to be shier than female seahorses
    • And much more!

    Special Thanks

    Opening/Closing song: Oedo Controller (大江戸コントローラー) by Yunomi featuring Toriena (Used with permission from Yunomi)
    To listen to more of Yunomi's music, check out his Soundcloud page or YouTube channel.

    Japan Station cover art: Provided by Erik R.

    Images: Courtesy of Susan Spann

    Follow Japankyo on Social Media

    Check out Ichimon Japan

    The two latest episodes of the Ichimon Japan podcast can be accessed via the links below.

     

    28 Final de Oda Nobunaga, Viaje a Nagoya, Japón 2018 Pt5

    28 Final de Oda Nobunaga, Viaje a Nagoya, Japón 2018 Pt5
    Terminamos nuestro viaje a Japón, y hacemos reseña sobre el Incidente de Honnoji, evento histórico sobre la muerte de Nobunaga, con esto damos fin a nuestro recorrido por algunos de los lugares más emblemáticos de las batallas por la unificación de Japón, donde tratamos de seguir los pasos de los compositores de los diversos lugares que también ellos recorrieron para recoger la inspiración para componer la música de éstos videojuegos.

    26 Batalla de Okehazama, Viaje a Nagoya, Japón 2018 Pt3

    26 Batalla de Okehazama, Viaje a Nagoya,  Japón 2018 Pt3
    En nuestra tercer cápsula de nuestro recorrido por Japón, siguiendo el rastro de la compositora de la música del videojuego Nobunaga´s Ambition, Yoko Kanno, les compartimos un tema inspirado en el campo de batalla de Okehazama, situado al sur de Nagoya en la provincia de Aichi, donde combatió Nobunaga contra Imagawa y que actualmente se convierte en un parque publico y un cementerio budista.

    25 El Castillo de Kyosu, Viaje a Nagoya, Japón 2018 Pt2

    25 El Castillo de Kyosu, Viaje a Nagoya,  Japón 2018 Pt2
    En nuestra segunda cápsula hacemos una reseña del castillo de Kyosu, lugar que fue el centro de operaciones del Daymiyo Nobunaga, y que ha sido la inspiración principal de su programador y fundador de la desarrolladora de Software KOEI, el tema musical compuesto por Yoko Kanno, está inspirado en el suceso histórico de la batalla de Okehazama, lugar donde pelearon Nobunaga e Imagawa.

    Episode 280 - The Fool of Owari, Part 1

    Episode 280 - The Fool of Owari, Part 1

    Apologies for the delayed publication, all! Slight technical hiccup on my end.

    This week, we turn to the life and legacy of the first of Japan's three unifiers: the warlord Oda Nobunaga, who expanded his domains from part of a backwater province to 1/3rd of all Japan in just a few decades. Who were the Oda? Where did they come from? And how did Nobunaga go from a nobody to a major force in Japanese politics in just a few years?

    EP112 "What If" and Japanese History - BONUS EPISODE 9

    EP112 "What If" and Japanese History - BONUS EPISODE 9

    In this episode, Chris and Forest look at the utility of asking "What If...?" about events in Japanese history. Some people love it, some people hate it, but can one find value in the intellectual enterprise of asking "what if"?  

    In an attempt to see if there is value to the historian in asking what if, they look at Nobunaga's death and ask, "What if Oda Nobunaga hadn't died? What would have changed, what would have stayed the same?"

    Mentioned in this podcast:

    Ferguson, Niall. The Pitty of War Basic Books; New edition edition (March 3, 2000) http://amzn.to/1C0lsLP

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcasthttp://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstorehttp://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

    Samurai Archives Japanese History Forum: http://forums.samurai-archives.com

    EP105 Sengoku Samurai Inheritance and Succession - BONUS EPISODE 8

    EP105 Sengoku Samurai Inheritance and Succession - BONUS EPISODE 8

    When a sengoku daimyo died, even the best laid plans for succession often went awry.  Chris and Forest talk about Samurai inheritance and succession issues in the Sengoku period - how it worked, succession order, and inheritance disputes, in the cases of Oda Nobunaga, Mori Motonari, Uesugi Kenshin, and the complexities surrounding Takeda Katsuyori's succession to the head of the Takeda clan.

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcast: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstore: http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

    EP99 Castle Towns

    EP99 Castle Towns

    In this episode we talk about the development of castle towns during the medieval period of Japanese history, the whys and hows, and how the structure of castle towns affected urban planning through to the modern era.

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcast: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstore: http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

    EP88 Bad Decisions of the Sengoku Daimyo - BONUS EPISODE 5 - P2

    EP88 Bad Decisions of the Sengoku Daimyo - BONUS EPISODE 5 - P2

    Welcome to part two of our discussion on some of the bad decisions made by the Sengoku Daimyo.  Some Daimyo were skilled strategists, others lucky, staying ahead of the game with wits and cunning.  However, the battlefields of the Sengoku period are littered with the bones of men who were not so lucky.  Many Sengoku Daimyo were done in by dumb decisions, others made decisions that seemed reasonable at the time but would lead to disastrous results.  From Imagawa Yoshimoto's decision to invade Owari province, to Asai Nagamasa deciding to turn on Oda Nobunaga, we look at some decisions that not only shaped the history of the Sengoku period, but may leave you wondering just what the heck they were thinking. 

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcast: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstore: http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

    EP87 Bad Decisions of the Sengoku Daimyo - BONUS EPISODE 5 - P1

    EP87 Bad Decisions of the Sengoku Daimyo - BONUS EPISODE 5 - P1

    Welcome to our next bonus episode.  Some Daimyo were skilled strategists, others lucky, staying ahead of the game with wits and cunning.  However, the battlefields of the Sengoku period are littered with the bones of men who were not so lucky.  Many Sengoku Daimyo were done in by dumb decisions, others made decisions that seemed reasonable at the time but would lead to disastrous results.  From Imagawa Yoshimoto's decision to invade Owari province, to Asai Nagamasa deciding to turn on Oda Nobunaga, we look at some decisions that not only shaped the history of the Sengoku period, but may leave you wondering just what the heck they were thinking.  This episode is part one of two.

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Mentioned in this Podcast:

    Morris, Ivan. The Nobility of Failure: Tragic Heroes in the History of Japan Farrar, Straus and Giroux (September 1, 1988) http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20/detail/0374521204

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcast: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstore: http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

    EP84 WTF Do We Know About History? - BONUS EPISODE 4

    EP84 WTF Do We Know About History? - BONUS EPISODE 4

    Probably more appropriately titled "What do Chris and Forest philosophize about what can really be known about history", here is our 4th bonus episode of what was originally meant to be a stand-alone podcast on the Samurai Archives podcast network.  In this heavily opinionated episode, things get touchy as Chris and Forest get in a philosophical discussion about what can really be known about history. As always with our bonus episodes, the opinions expressed are solely those of Chris and Forest, and do not in any way reflect the opinions of any other hosts or guest to this point or going forward.

    Japanese history can be particularly questionable in the situations where the only sources available are select pieces of contemporary correspondences and writings compiled 100 years or more after the events they describe, and often the only sources available are war tales, fictionalizations, and hagiography. Your hosts look at various events in Japanese history, including the 4th battle of Kawanakajima, the death of Nobunaga, and the questionable existence of Yamamoto Kansuke to discuss what we know, what we think we know, and what we really don't know about Japanese history, and ask, "What can anyone really know about history?"  

    Mentioned in this podcast:

    The Sengoku Field Manual (Nate's Blog) http://www.sengokufieldmanual.com/2013/02/giving-up-myths-part-i.html

    Perrin, Noel, Giving Up the Gun, Japan's Reversion to the Sword, 1543-1879 D. R. Godine; First Edition edition 1979 http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20/detail/0879237732

    Yoshikawa, Eiji Taiko http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20/detail/4770026099

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcast: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstore: http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

    EP81 Nobunaga's Motley Crew - BONUS EPISODE 3

    EP81 Nobunaga's Motley Crew - BONUS EPISODE 3

    Welcome to the third bonus episode with your hosts Chris and Forest.  In this bonus episode, your hosts look at Oda Nobunaga's retainer band.  One thing that sets the Sengoku daimyo Oda Nobunaga apart from his contemporaries was his willingness to employ primarily young men of ability who lacked rank or lineage.  The unorthodox composition of Nobunaga's retainer band is perhaps both a reflection of his own unorthodox nature, and a result of a lack of old, traditional retainer families attached to the Oda clan, and a factor in his success. Don't forget, opinions expressed in the bonus episodes do not reflect the views or opinions of anyone not present.  With that, enjoy!

    Shopping on Amazon.com?  Use our link: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/samurai-archives-japanese/id430277324

    Samurai Archives Podcast on Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=41397&refid=stpr

    Support this podcast:

    Shop Amazon.com, suport the podcast: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Bookstore: http://astore.amazon.com/samurai-20

    Samurai Archives Shop (T-Shirts, etc) http://www.cafepress.com/samuraiarchives

    Contact Us:

    Twitter @SamuraiArchives https://twitter.com/#!/samuraiarchives

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Samurai-Archives/104533213984

    Samurai Archives podcast blog: http://www.samuraipodcast.com

     

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