All particulars aside, one could still appreciate the elaborate displays of uniquely crafted armor and helmet crests worn by prominent Samurai or Daimyo giving you a sense of what earlier armor might have looked like at events such as the great Battle at Sekigahara or the epic clashes between the Uesugi and Takeda Clans or that of the Oda Clan.
Behold this finely crafted helmet bearing the Mon of the Tokugawa Clan. This would be not unlike something worn by Ieyasu Tokugawa himself during battle.
While there were few weapons on display, what we could see displayed portrayed a high respect for it's owner. If these swords could talk, what would they tell us?
Note the Matchlock Arquebus on display which the Oda Clan made the most effective use of. With 3000 of these primitive rifles, the Oda Clan destroyed the greatest Cavalry ever seen by firing in cyclical fashion.
Not to be excluded were the presence of archers and their lethal quivers which the Samurai were Masters.
Such elaborate tools of the Samuri's Archery would make any modern day Kyudo master dream.
Note the detail of these helmets. Unfortunately, we were rushed as we took these photos so we could not provide you with details as to their origins. That being said we can tell you these were largely exclusively from the Edo Period of Peace.
Note to the right face masks. There were more of them but we couldn't get good photos of them.
In this photo we see the Naginata which was more commonly used by foot soldiers or farmers conscripted to serve their lords in times of battle. To the right is a set of boy armor similar to what might have been worn by Katsuyori Takeda or Hidetsugu Toyotomi.
This one made me think of Takeda Shingen. Kagamusha Anyone?
Peacetime or not, you would not would have wanted to cross swords with these Samurai.
Who is to say what attachment the wearer and the armor may have had.
You could not help but feel the presence of these Samurai still at their posts waiting to fight and if necessary die for their Lord.
I could see one the faces of visiting Nihonjin and Nisei a sense of pride as they looked on and explained this period of their history to their children. Even for a Hakujin, we were awed by the might of the Samurai Display.
We at American Mishima are thankful to both LACMA and the Government of Japan for allowing us to enjoy this awesome display into a window of Japan's Medieval past.
ども ありがとう ございます!
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