Romulus Hillsborough's Blog
November 16, 2025
Two Masterpieces of Shinsengumi History and Lore
Shimosawa Kan’s Shinsengumi Shimatsuki and Hirao Michio’s Shinsengumi Shiroku Shimosawa’s Shinsengumi Shimatsuki is an early account of the Shinsengumi. It was first published in 1928, just before Hirao’s groundbreaking history Shinsengumi Shiroku (original title, Shinsengumishi). Shimosawa’s book is partially based on interviews … Continue reading →
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Reflections on Writing about a Different Time, Place, and Culture
In my forthcoming book Samurai Swordsmen: The Definitive History of the Shinsengumi (1863–1869), I wrote about Shinsengumi Vice-Commander Hijikata Toshizō’s anticipation of a war in Kyoto between Aizu and Satsuma based on the latter’s refusal to support the Bakufu in … Continue reading →
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November 15, 2025
Kaishū and Ryōma: The Indispensable Relationship (Part 5)
In Part 4 of this series, I quoted Sakamoto Ryōma’s assessment of Katsu Kaishū as “the greatest man in Japan.” The respect between the two men was clearly mutual. During the months after the two had first met, Kaishū … Continue reading →
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Kaishū and Ryōma: The Indispensable Relationship (Part 4)
Sakamoto Ryōma first met Katsu Kaishū, a high-ranking officer of the shogun’s nascent navy, some time during the final months of 1862. In the following spring, while Kaishū moved forward with plans to establish an official Naval Training Center at … Continue reading →
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November 14, 2025
Kaishu and Ryoma: The Indispensable Relationship (Part 3)
The outlaw samurai Sakamoto Ryōma first met the shogun’s vice commissioner of warships, Katsu Kaishū, some time between the Tenth and Twelfth Months of the Japanese year corresponding to 1862. In light of Ryōma’s background as a leader of Takechi … Continue reading →
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Kaishū and Ryōma: The Indispensable Relationship (Part 2)
Sakamoto Ryōma became a political outlaw upon fleeing his native domain of Tosa on a rainy night in the spring of 1862, amid unprecedented social and political upheaval. Following is a slightly edited excerpt from my Samurai Revolution, Chapter 11 … Continue reading →
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Kaishū and Ryōma: The Indispensable Relationship (Part 1)
It is well known that Katsu Kaishū and Sakamoto Ryōma had a very close relationship for a couple of years. But their relationship abruptly ended with the dismissal of Kaishū as the shogun’s commissioner of warships and his subsequent house … Continue reading →
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November 12, 2025
Did Sakamoto Ryōma Hold the Rank of Kaiden? A Historical Reassessment of His Swordsmanship
Sakamoto Ryōma’s level of expertise with a sword has long been a topic of debate among historians, writers, filmmakers, and so-called “Ryōma fans” throughout Japan. That he was an accomplished swordsman has never been questioned. He practiced the Hokushin-Itto style … Continue reading →
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Saigō Takamori’s “kindness, gentility and modesty”
“I don’t know about difficult things such as affairs of state.” Saigō Takamori 「私は天下の大勢なんどいふやうなむつかしいことは知らない」西郷隆盛 Katsu Kaishu told an anecdote illustrating Saigō’s kindness and gentility—and his modesty. It has to do with a man named Hitomi Yasushi, who had been among … Continue reading →
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“Revere Heaven, love mankind” (敬天愛人): Saigō Takamori’s Words of Wisdom
敬天愛人 — “Revere Heaven, love mankind” — was Saigō Takamori’s cherished motto. In Samurai Revolution, I wrote the following: “Revere Heaven, love mankind” represents a Confucian ethic that dictates the relationship between the people, the government, and the Emperor—in a … Continue reading →
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