Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Which Celebrities Made Surprise Cameos on ‘Calabasas Confidential’? From Jordyn Woods to Larsa Pippen

Which Celebrities Made Surprise Cameos on ‘Calabasas Confidential’? From Jordyn Woods to Larsa Pippen

May 31, 2026
Trump heaps more praise on Giants QB, ‘male model’ Jaxson Dart in fawning interview: ‘He’s a beautiful guy’

Trump heaps more praise on Giants QB, ‘male model’ Jaxson Dart in fawning interview: ‘He’s a beautiful guy’

May 31, 2026
Asian toy companies — like Labubu maker — invading NYC’s Times Square after recent departures

Asian toy companies — like Labubu maker — invading NYC’s Times Square after recent departures

May 31, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Which Celebrities Made Surprise Cameos on ‘Calabasas Confidential’? From Jordyn Woods to Larsa Pippen
  • Trump heaps more praise on Giants QB, ‘male model’ Jaxson Dart in fawning interview: ‘He’s a beautiful guy’
  • Asian toy companies — like Labubu maker — invading NYC’s Times Square after recent departures
  • NJ Gov. Sherrill claims victory on ICE detention center Delaney Hall — but DHS says she solved a problem she created
  • Jessica Alba, Jessie James Decker lead hottest celebrity bikini photos
  • ‘Criminal Minds’ Showrunner Addresses Chances of More Onscreen Deaths After Surprise Character Loss (Exclusive)
  • Caitlin Clark has furious reaction to benching as spat with Fever head coach goes viral after loss
  • Bryan Johnson reveals ‘everything he learned spending millions on longevity’
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Did Japan have female samurai?
Did Japan have female samurai?
Science

Did Japan have female samurai?

News RoomBy News RoomMay 3, 20263 ViewsNo Comments

The samurai of Japan are famous for being skilled warriors who followed a code of honor. In popular culture and museums, samurai are often depicted as men, which raises a question: Were any samurai women?

Female samurai existed and there is some evidence that they fought in battle, several experts told Live Science. But how often they fought is a matter of debate, with some scholars calling it very rare and others suggesting it happened more often.

One important point in answering this question is that the samurai were an entire social class, sometimes called the “bushi” class. Anyone born into this class was a “samurai,” regardless of whether they fought or practiced any form of martial arts.


You may like

Sign up for our newsletter

(Image credit: Marilyn Perkins / Future)

Sign up for our weekly Life’s Little Mysteries newsletter to get the latest mysteries before they appear online.

“Any woman born in the samurai status group was a ‘female samurai’ even if she never picked up a weapon, just as any man born into that status group was a samurai, no matter how wimpy/untrained/etc. he may have been,” Sean O’Reilly, a professor of Japan studies at Akita International University, told Live Science in an email.

It’s unclear how often female samurai fought in battle, however. Women who fought in battle are sometimes called “onna-musha,” which translates to “women warriors.”

“I must say, as an historian, that onnamusha ‪—‬ female warriors ‪—‬ were probably not as frequent or as militarily significant as most people today believe,” O’Reilly said.

Some particularly good evidence for female samurai participating in battle comes from the late 19th century, near the time when the samurai class was abolished, Diana Wright, who was a professor at Western Washington University, wrote in a 2001 article in the journal “War in History.”

At that time, Japan was in a civil war as supporters of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which ruled Japan from around 1603 to 1868, battled those who wanted to overthrow the shogunate and return some of the military governor’s powers to the emperor. The Boshin War, as it is sometimes called, lasted from January 1868 to June 1869. During that war, there were a number of recorded instances where female samurai, who fought on the side of the shogunate, engaged in battle, Wright noted in her article.

The shogunate forces were led by the Aizu domain (a regional government in northern Japan), and during the siege of the Aizu’s capital of Aizu-Wakamatsu, a group of female samurai formed their own unit known as the “Joshigun.”

“Although 20 to 30 women are believed to have made up the unit, the names of only 10 are known,” Wright wrote. A 22 year-old woman named Nakano Takeko was the unit’s unofficial leader.


What to read next

An ancient painting of a woman wearing striped armor with a bow and arrow on her back.

A 19th-century woodblock depicts a female warrior in armor.

(Image credit: H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929, the Met Museum; Public Domain)

Armed with only swords and naginatas (pole weapons with curved blades that can both stab and slash), they fought in a battle at Yanagi bridge against a force equipped with rifles, Wright explained. Records indicate that Nakano Takeko killed five or six men with her naginata before she was shot down. Ultimately, the battle ended in defeat and the surviving members of the Joshigun, along with the male troops, had to withdraw to a castle.

During the time of the Tokugawa shogunate, women of the samurai class were required to undergo martial art training with the naginata so they could defend themselves and their families, Wright noted. The amount of training they received varied, with the women of the Aizu domain tending to receive a larger amount.

Remains of female warriors?

A mound located in Numazu, a city in central Japan, may hold the remains of female samurai who fought in battle, some scholars believe. The mound contains human skulls, along with other skeletal bones, and an analysis of the mound’s remains was published in Japanese in 1989 in the Journal of Anthropology. The skulls are from about 105 people; all of them were young adults when they died, and about one-third were women. They date to the 16th century, and scientists interpreted them as being the remains of people who were killed in combat, likely in the Battle of Senbonhama (also known as the Battle of Senbon Matsubara), which was fought between the Takeda and Hojo clans.

This mound is “indicative that women of fighting age fought and died in sixteenth century battles,” Thomas Conlan, a professor of medieval Japanese history at Princeton University, told Live Science in an email.

However, Karl Friday, a professor emeritus of history at the University of Georgia, said the mound should be regarded with caution, as we can’t be sure everyone buried in it actually fought in a battle. It’s possible that some of the people buried in the mound were noncombatants who were killed anyway, Friday told Live Science in an email.

Stories and legends of female samurai

A number of stories refer to female samurai fighting in battle. Perhaps the most famous was Tomoe Gozen, who lived during the late 12th century. Stories say she served a lord named Minamoto no Yoshinaka and fought in the Genpei War, which was fought between the Taira and Minamoto clans between about 1180 and 1185, Thomas Lockley, a law professor at Nihon University who has studied and written extensively about the samurai, wrote in a 2022 article in the magazine Medieval World: Culture & Conflict.

One of the chronicles, called “The Tale of the Heike,” says that as “a fighter she was a match for a thousand ordinary men, skilled in arms, able to bend the stoutest bow, on horseback or on foot, ever ready with her sword to confront any devil or god that came her way” (translation by Thomas Lockley).

Another famous woman mentioned in stories was Ōhōri Tsuruhime, who lived circa 1526 to 1543. She became the chief priestess of Ōyamazumi Shrine, located on the island of Ōmishima, after her father and brothers were killed while defending the island from a daimyo (a regional governor) named Ōuchi Yoshitaka, Stephen Turnbull, a historian who has written extensively on the samurai, wrote in his book “Samurai Women: 1187-1877” (Osprey Publishing, 2012). Despite being just 16 years old, she took charge of the island’s defense force and defended it from the invaders. During her defense, she claimed to have been aided by the shrine’s kami (spirit) and has been compared to Joan of Arc, Turnbull noted.

A black and white photograph of a woman wearing traditional samurai armor, sitting and holding a helmet.

An 1870 photo of an actress dressed as a female samurai in armor.

(Image credit: Pictures from History via Getty Images)

Some of what’s said to be Tsuruhime’s armor survives today and is displayed at the shrine. Conlan said that it is a suit of 16th century armor that is “tailored to the female anatomy.”

However, Friday said we should be cautious when interpreting stories like these. “We do have stories about female warriors, like Tomoe Gozen, Hangaku Gozen, Ohori Tsuruhime, Ueno Tsuruhime, and a few others, but these women are all semi-legendary — especially with regard to their participation in battles,” Friday told Live Science in an email.

Regardless of how accurate the stories are, female warriors became famous. “Mythologizing female warriors of yore began in Japan’s Kamakura period [circa 1185 to 1333] and intensified in the Edo period [circa 1603 to 1868], with a huge proliferation of woodblock prints showing women holding naginata and so forth,” O’Reilly said. Friday said the “very fact that these women became so famous is a pretty good indication of how uncommon female warriors must have been.”

Taboos about women and battle

Friday thinks it would have been very rare for female samurai to engage in battle because it was considered taboo.

“One fascinating primer on military conduct, passed down within a branch of the Hōjō family, enjoined against such things as sharing quarters with women for three days prior to battles, allowing pregnant women or women who had recently given birth to touch a warrior’s weapons, riding in boats with female passengers while in route to battle, and even allowing women to look upon the backs of officers departing for campaigns!” Friday said.

“The bottom line is that while there almost certainly must have been at least a few cases of women participating in Japanese battles over the course of [the] 8th to 16th centuries … there’s absolutely no good evidence to support the conclusion that women warriors were any more common in Japan than they were in medieval France or ancient Sparta, much less that this occurred often enough to justify calling it a practice or even a phenomenon,” Friday said.

While the samurai class was effectively abolished during the 1870s, some of the training practices done by female samurai are still carried out today. Eric Shahan, a Japanese translator who specializes in translating martial arts texts, noted that the Yoshin School (a branch of traditional Japanese martial arts) “still practices Naginata in Kimono, reflecting the fact that women may have to suddenly take up arms — and therefore have no time to change into training gear.”


Can you identify these historical objects of war? Test your smarts with our weapons of the world quiz!

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

‘We were being bullied in our own home’: How ‘authoritarian’ HOAs are contributing to the insect apocalypse

‘We were being bullied in our own home’: How ‘authoritarian’ HOAs are contributing to the insect apocalypse

Bronze Age 5-year-old’s skull found in Uzbekistan is the oldest known evidence of surgery in Central Asia

Bronze Age 5-year-old’s skull found in Uzbekistan is the oldest known evidence of surgery in Central Asia

‘Astonishing’: James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancient universe

‘Astonishing’: James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancient universe

Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week

Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week

How many generations of humans have there been?

How many generations of humans have there been?

Are some people wired to see ghosts? A psychologist explains what makes paranormal experiences more likely

Are some people wired to see ghosts? A psychologist explains what makes paranormal experiences more likely

Scientists got mouse eyes to perform photosynthesis ‪—‬ and no, they didn’t turn green

Scientists got mouse eyes to perform photosynthesis ‪—‬ and no, they didn’t turn green

New device could make processors run 1,000 times faster without additional waste heat — scientists say it could reduce data center energy demands

New device could make processors run 1,000 times faster without additional waste heat — scientists say it could reduce data center energy demands

Science news this week: Exploding rocket overshadows NASA’s next steps to the moon, ‘Doomsday Glacier’ faces big loss, quantum computer AI hybrid shows impressive results, and war deepens Iran’s water crisis

Science news this week: Exploding rocket overshadows NASA’s next steps to the moon, ‘Doomsday Glacier’ faces big loss, quantum computer AI hybrid shows impressive results, and war deepens Iran’s water crisis

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Trump heaps more praise on Giants QB, ‘male model’ Jaxson Dart in fawning interview: ‘He’s a beautiful guy’

Trump heaps more praise on Giants QB, ‘male model’ Jaxson Dart in fawning interview: ‘He’s a beautiful guy’

May 31, 2026
Asian toy companies — like Labubu maker — invading NYC’s Times Square after recent departures

Asian toy companies — like Labubu maker — invading NYC’s Times Square after recent departures

May 31, 2026
NJ Gov. Sherrill claims victory on ICE detention center Delaney Hall — but DHS says she solved a problem she created

NJ Gov. Sherrill claims victory on ICE detention center Delaney Hall — but DHS says she solved a problem she created

May 31, 2026
Jessica Alba, Jessie James Decker lead hottest celebrity bikini photos

Jessica Alba, Jessie James Decker lead hottest celebrity bikini photos

May 31, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
‘Criminal Minds’ Showrunner Addresses Chances of More Onscreen Deaths After Surprise Character Loss (Exclusive)

‘Criminal Minds’ Showrunner Addresses Chances of More Onscreen Deaths After Surprise Character Loss (Exclusive)

May 31, 2026
Caitlin Clark has furious reaction to benching as spat with Fever head coach goes viral after loss

Caitlin Clark has furious reaction to benching as spat with Fever head coach goes viral after loss

May 31, 2026
Bryan Johnson reveals ‘everything he learned spending millions on longevity’

Bryan Johnson reveals ‘everything he learned spending millions on longevity’

May 31, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.