Jump to content

Ōhōri Tsuruhime

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Curly Turkey (talk | contribs) at 10:09, 4 March 2016 (top). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Template:Japanese name Tsuruhime (鶴姫) or Ōhōri Tsuruhime (大祝鶴姫, 1526–1543) was the daughter of Ōhōri Yasumochi, a head priest of Oyamazumi Shrine in Iyo Province.[1] Tsuruhime was born in 1526. At that time the island was under threat from the growing power of Ōuchi Yoshitaka from Yamaguchi on the mainland of Honshu, and fighting took place between the Ōuchi and the Kōnō on Shikoku, under whose jurisdiction the shrine fell. Tsuruhime's two elder brothers were killed in one such conflict, and when Tsuruhime was 16 years old her father died of illness, so she inherited the position of chief priest. She had been trained since childhood in the martial arts, and when the Ōuchi made further moves against Ōmishima she took charge of the military resistance, along with her brothers and husband from the Kōchi clan. She led an army into battle and drove the Ōuchi samurai back into the open sea when they raided Ōmishima in 1541.

Four months later the invaders returned, and while an Ōuchi general, Ohara Takakoto, was being entertained on his flagship he came under attack from Tsuruhime in a raid. At first he mocked her presumption, but Tsuruhime cut him down. This was followed by a deluge of horokubiya (spherical exploding bombs) from Tsuruhime's allies, which drove the Ōuchi fleet away. Two years later, at the age of 18, she was again in action against an attack by the Ōuchi, but when her fiance was killed in action she committed suicide by drowning. Her last words were, "As Mishima's ocean as my witness, my love shall be engraved with my name." She is romanticized to have died when she was young, but there aren't any records that suggest as such. Her body armor is said to be kept at Ōyamazumi Shrine.

She has been a playable character in Sengoku Basara series ever since Sengoku Basara: Samurai Heroes, and also appears in the anime Sengoku Basara: Judge end as one of the main supporting characters.

References

  1. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (2010). Samurai Women 1184-1877. Osprey Publishing. p. 38. ISBN 1846039517.