Soga Monogatari


Soga Monogatari is a Japanese military chronicle-tale based on the vengeance incident, Revenge of Soga Brothers. The story is often known as The Tale of the Soga Brothers or The Revenge of the Soga Brothers. It is sometimes written as Soga Monogatari Zue. It is regarded by some as the last of the gunki monogatari or great "war tales".

Plot

Events take place in 12th century Japan. The general accepted version is that the father of the Soga brothers, Soga Sukenari and Soga Tokimune, was killed when the two were infants. As adults the brothers became skilled fighters intent on avenging their father and retrieving his sword Tomokirimaru.
In May 1193, the Soga brothers participated in shogun Minamoto Yoritomo's hunting event Fuji no Makigari. On the last night of the event, the brothers took their revenge and killed their father Kudō Yūsuke. After the brothers killed ten other participants in a fierce battle, the elder brother Sukenari was shot by Yūsuke's subordinate Nitta Tadatsune. The younger brother Tokimune killed all the samurai one by one who attempted to stop him, and broke into Yoritomo's living quarters. However, Yoritomo's close vassal Gosho no Gorōmaru, who was in Yoritomo's bedchamber, took Tokimune down, thus ending the massacre and saving the shogun from a possible assassination attempt. The next day, Tokimune was brought in for questioning by Yoritomo about the motives of the incident, but was ultimately executed.

Authorship

The Tale of the Soga Brothers origin cannot be traced to a single creator. Like most of these historical stories, it is the result of the compounding of versions passed down through an oral or other tradition. The origin of the story may be true, but the story is probably romanticised. In some versions of the story it is only revealed at the end that the main character is actually one of the brothers.

Theme

The Tale of the Soga Brothers is an example of "blood revenge", similar to a vendetta.

In popular culture

The story has been the subject of many Noh, kabuki and bunraku performances. There are also updated versions such as Sukeroku . It is also said that the Soga tales in Kōwakamai are based on this tale.
The story and its performers have been popular subjects for woodblock prints, netsuke and okimono.
The story has also been the subject of a number of films.

Translations

The story was translated by Thomas J. Cogan. This translation was reviewed by Laurence Kominz in the Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies.