Kasagake or Kasakake (笠æÂ¸, lit. "hat shooting") is a type of Japanese mounted archery. In contrast to yabusame, the types of targets are various and the archer shoots without stopping the horse. While yabusame has been played as a part of formal ceremonies, kasagake has developed as a game or practice of martial arts, focusing on technical elements of horse archery.
History
The word "kasagake" first appears in "Sadaie Assonn Ki" (å®Âå®¶æÂÂè£è¨Â) by Minamoto no Sadaie in 1057 and "Shin SarugÃ
 Ki" (æÂ°ç¿楽è¨Â) by Fujiwara no Akihira (989-1066) while legendary sayings states kasagake has been started by Minamoto no Yoritomo (1147-1199).
At first, hats (ayaigasa) hung on azuchi were used as targets, later replaced by target specially made for kasagake, consists of wooden skeleton, cotton, wool or rice straws stuffing and leather surface, hung on wooden frames as in the picture above.
In Kamakura period, "the three martial arts of mounted archery" (é¨Âå°Âä¸Âç©), which are yabusame, kasagake, and inuoumono, were widely practiced by samurai. These martial arts lost their importance when the Kamakura Shogunate fell. Kasagake was inherited just inside the Ogasawara and Takeda family as a part of bowing manners for long years.
In Edo period, under the command of Tokugawa Yoshimune, Ogasawara Tsuneharu revived the three martial arts of mounted archery. Ogasawara school arts are played at Edo Bakufu's official yard Takadanobaba with the aid of Bakufu and Takeda school arts are trained in Jishukan school at Kumamoto by the Hosokawa family.
Today, Ogasawara school and Takeda school kasagake can be watched on some festivals, such as the shinji kasagake at Kamigamo Shrine in Kyoto, Dousun Festival in Miura, Kanagawa and local festival in Kasakake, Gunnma, where Minamoto no Yoritomo performed kasageke.
The Rules and Styles of Kasagake
Details may varies from school. Below are some sample rules.
Yard Settings
Kasagake uses a long horse yard. Fences known as "rachi" (Ã¥ÂÂ) are placed on each side of the horse running path: "saguri" (çÂÂ). The target is set at the point from the starting point "babamoto" (馬場åÂ
Â), the left side of the path. The archer shoots the target while running the path.
Dressing
Like yabusame, the archers wear hitatare (ç´åÂÂ, a kind of formal dress for samurai) and mukabaki (è¡Â縢). Cuffs are not tied and traditionally igote (å°Âç± æÂÂ, arm bands) are not put on. The archer does not wear the hat, for the hat was historically taken for the target.
The Variety of Kasagake Targets and Styles
tÃ
Âkasagake (é 笠æÂ¸, ã¨ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã lit. far hat shooting)
TÃ
Âkasagake is the most common style of kasagake. A diameter circle target is set far from the running path fence. Unlike yabusame, only one target is shot.
Kokasagake or Ogasakake (å°Â笠æÂ¸, ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã or ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã lit. small hat shooting)
Usually performed on returning run of tÃ
Âkasagake. Small () square wooden board clipped on a bamboo bar is shot with smaller arrows. The target is set from the fence, at the low place. Kokasagake declined aduring Genkyu era (1204), though there were some famous archers such as Hojo Tokimune, who is famous for kogasagake ("Agatsuma Kagami" April 25th, 1261 (Genkyu 1).)
Kuji Kasagake (籤笠æÂ¸, literally âÂÂlottery hat shootingâÂÂ)
Kasagake conducted as a competition of martial arts. The referee (æ¤Âè¦Âå½¹) and the recoder (æÂ¥è¨Âå½¹) are involved. 10 participants are separated into 5 pairs by the lottery, and compete for the number of hits with a partner.
Shinji Kasagake (ç¥ÂäºÂ笠æÂ¸, literally âÂÂdivine hat shootingâÂÂ)
Kasagake conducted as shrine ceremonies. Deer, birds, or fish devoted to the shrine are shot.
Hyakuban Kasagake (ç¾çª笠æÂ¸ literally âÂÂ100-time hat shootingâÂÂ)
Performed as a dedication for prayer. Each archer shoots 100 times.
Tanabata Kasagake (ä¸Âå¤Â笠æÂ¸) or Shichido Kasagake (ä¸Â度笠æÂ¸, literally âÂÂ7-time hat shootingâÂÂ)
Kasagake as a tanabata event. Archers shoot the target seven times or shoot seven targets.
Hasamimono (æÂÂç©, literally âÂÂclipping objectsâÂÂ)
The archer shoots targets (typically Ã
Âgi, hand-held fans) clipped onto bamboo bars. This is usually done for recreation. Hasamimono also appear in other styles of kyÃ
«dÃ
Â.
Footnotes
References
- å½å²大è¾ÂÃ¥Â
¸ç·¨éÂÂå§Âå¡ä¼Â, 1979-1997 "å½å²大è¾ÂÃ¥Â
¸" Ã¥ÂÂå·Âå¼ÂæÂÂ館.
- ç¥Âå®®å¸åºÂ, 1932 "å¤äºÂé¡Âè æÂ¦æÂÂé¨" å¤äºÂé¡ÂèÂÂÃ¥ÂÂè¡Âä¼Â.
- é´æÂ¨æÂ¬ä¸Â, 1995 "æÂÂèÂÂæÂÂ
å®Â大è¾ÂÃ¥Â
¸" Ã¥ÂÂå·Âå¼ÂæÂÂ館.
- æÂÂäºÂäºÂé (MURAI Goro), 1939 "é¨Âå° (ç¬追ç© 笠æÂ¸ æµÂéÂÂ馬)" in "å¼ÂéÂÂè¬Â座 第12å·»" edited by é·åÂÂéÂÂéÂÂ, éÂÂå±±é£.
See also