Bo-hiya
Bo hiya (棒火矢, Bō hiya) is the Japanese version of the fire arrow. Bo-hiya were used in ancient Japan and by the samurai class of feudal Japan.
History and description
Fire arrows of some type have been used in Japan as far back as the 6th century where they are said to have been used during a military campaign in Korea. Bows (yumi) were used to launch these early fire arrows.[1]
In 10th-century China, gunpowder was used to launch fire arrows, and this type of fire arrow was used against the Japanese by Mongolian naval vessels in the 13th century.[2]
In 1543 the Japanese acquired matchlock technology from the Portuguese, and the resulting firearms developed by the Japanese led to new means of launching fire arrows. These rocket-type bo-hiya had the appearance of a thick arrow with large fins, a wood shaft and a metal tip; they resembled the Korean chongtong, an arrow-firing cannon.[3] Bo-hiya were ignited by lighting a fuse made from incendiary waterproof rope which was wrapped around the shaft; when lit the bo-hiya was launched from either a wide-bore cannon, a form of tanegashima (Japanese matchlock) called hiya zutsu, or from a mortar-like weapon (hiya taihou). By the 16th century, Japanese pirates were reported to have used bo-hiya. During one sea battle it was said the bo hiya were "falling like rain".[4] Bo-hiya were standard equipment on Japanese military vessels, where they were used to set fire to enemy ships.[5]
Gallery
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Antique Japanese (samurai) bo hiya or bohiya (fire arrow) and hiya taihou (fire arrow cannon), Matsumoto Castle, in Nagano prefecture, Japan.
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Antique Japanese (samurai) bohiya or bo hiya (fire arrow), showing the fuse, Matsumoto Castle, in Nagano prefecture, Japan.
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Bo-hiya.
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An Edo period wood block print showing samurai gunners using hiya zutsu (fire arrow guns) to fire bo-hiya.
Similar weapons
References
- ^ Brinkley, Francis (1901). Japan: its history, arts, and literature. J.B. Millet Co. pp. 135.
- ^ Baker, David (1978). The Rocket: The History and Development of Rocket & Missile Technology. Crown. p. 10. ISBN 9780517534045.
- ^ Turnbull, Stephen (2003). Fighting Ships of the Far East (2): Japan and Korea AD 612-1639. Bloomsbury USA. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-84176-478-8.
- ^ Turnbull, Stephen (2007). Pirate of the Far East: 811-1639. Bloomsbury USA. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-84603-174-8.
- ^ H. A. C. Bonar, "On Maritime Enterprise in Japan", in Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan. Asiatic Society of Japan. 1885. pp. 121.