WEKO3
アイテム
戦場での晴れ着 陣羽織
https://kyoritsu.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/2001246
https://kyoritsu.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/200124633337ed5-a9ad-48cc-90cd-008b8de02a77
| 名前 / ファイル | ライセンス | アクション |
|---|---|---|
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| アイテムタイプ | 紀要論文 / Departmental Bulletin Paper(1) | |||||||||||||
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| 公開日 | 2026-04-06 | |||||||||||||
| タイトル | ||||||||||||||
| タイトル | 戦場での晴れ着 陣羽織 | |||||||||||||
| 言語 | ja | |||||||||||||
| タイトル | ||||||||||||||
| タイトル | Jinbaori : Special Clothing for the Battlefield | |||||||||||||
| 言語 | en | |||||||||||||
| 言語 | ||||||||||||||
| 言語 | jpn | |||||||||||||
| 資源タイプ | ||||||||||||||
| 資源タイプ識別子 | http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 | |||||||||||||
| 資源タイプ | departmental bulletin paper | |||||||||||||
| 著者 |
長崎, 巌
× 長崎, 巌
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| 抄録 | ||||||||||||||
| 内容記述タイプ | Abstract | |||||||||||||
| 内容記述 | Jinbaori, a type of outerwear worn over lightweight armor known as tosei-gusoku (modern armor), emerged in the late Muromachi period. They provided protection from rain, wind, and cold. They were worn by warriors primarily when camping outdoors, traveling on horseback, and even during battles. Therefore, from the late Muromachi period through the early Edo period, jinbaori were carefully crafted with materials and fabrics suited to the specific conditions required. Worn on the crowded battlefield, jinbaori required not only practicality but also visibility. The life-risking relationship between samurai and their subordinates on the battlefield depended on constant visual contact. If a master were killed, subordinates instantly lost their “meaning to fight“ (the will to fight). Furthermore, it was essential for a subordinate’ s master to clearly recognize his performance on the battlefield, without being confused with others. From the master’s perspective, subordinates who did not perform well on the battlefield were not worth supporting, and conversely, those who did perform well were rewarded. Therefore, on the battlefield, the jinbaori had to be highly visible and identifiable, in order to show his subordinates that he was still in good health as a master, and to make his own master clearly aware of his own achievements. In this article, we will look at the jinbaori, which developed rapidly as the battlewear of the samurai from the end of the Muromachi period through to the Momoyama period, and will use surviving relics to specifically examine its functionality and significance as battlewear. |
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| 言語 | en | |||||||||||||
| 書誌情報 |
ja : 共立女子大学博物館年報/紀要 en : Kyoritsu Women's University Museum annual report & bulletin 巻 9, p. 33-48, 発行日 2026-03 |
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