The Onna-bugeisha were a caste of Japanese female warriors. They were said to have such legendary combat
prowess in sword, bow, spear, horseback riding, that a single unit of the Onna-bugeisha could match any three male units.
Some credit this to skill, others credit it to the Onna-bugeisha's reputed vicious approach to combat tactics.
The Onna-bugeisha were also trained in the
literary arts and statescraft, suggesting they were also leaders and thinkers.
Historically the Onna-bugeisha were
overshadowed by the more numerous and corrupt samurai caste.
Their existence in
Japanese culture later led to women’s right to inherit and bequeath property.
Prominent Onna-bugeisha were the Empress Jingu, Tomoe Gozen, and Hōjō
Masako, and Nakano Takeko. Their influence later diminished significantly as
Japan's culture switched from war to bureaucracy - and bureaucrats forced women out of roles of power - and the role of women once again
became restricted to child-bearing.
However the history and myth of Onna-bugeisha warriors lives in Japanese popular culture - often showing up in popular manga and anime series.
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