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By age thirteen, Miyamoto Musashi had killed his opponent in what would become the first of many celebrated swordfights. By thirty, he had fought more than sixty matches, losing none. He would live another thirty years but kill no one else. He continued to engage in swordfights but now began to show his skill simply by thwarting his opponents' every attack until they acknowledged Musashi's all-encompassing ability. At the same time, the master swordsman began to expand his horizons, exploring Zen Buddhism and its related arts, particularly ink painting, in a search for a truer Way." "Musashi was a legend in his own time. As a swordsman, he preferred the wooden sword and in later years almost never fought with a real weapon. He outfoxed his opponents or turned their own strength against them. At the height of his powers, he began to evolve artistically and spiritually, becoming one of the country's most highly regarded ink painters and calligraphers, while deepening his practice of Zen Buddhism. He funneled his hard-earned insights about the warrior arts into his spiritual goals. Ever the solitary wanderer, Musashi shunned power, riches, and the comforts of a home or fixed position with a feudal lord in favor of a constant search for truth, perfection, and a better Way. Eventually, he came to the realization that perfection in one art, whether peaceful or robust, could offer entry to a deeper, spiritual understanding. His philosophy, along with his warrior strategies, is distilled in his renowned work, The Book of Five Rings, written near the end of his life.
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This magnificent book tells the story of the evolution of swords, how they were made, how they were used, and the people that used them. It doesn't claim to give comprehensive coverage but instead takes certain surviving examples as landmarks on a fascinating journey through the history of swords. Each is selected because it can be linked to a specific individual, thus telling their story too and giving a human interest. So the journey starts with the sword of Tutankhamun and ends with the swords of J E B Stuart and George Custer. Along the way we take in Henry V, Cromwell and Uesugi Kenshin,
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The wandering swordsman, Himura Kenshin, once an assassin, now fights to protect those in need.
Swordsmen --- Assassins --- Japan --- Tokyo (Japan) --- Kyoto (Japan) --- History
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Swordsmen --- Epéistes --- Biography. --- Biographie --- Miyamoto, Musashi, --- Japan --- Japon --- Civilization --- Civilisation --- Biography --- Epéistes --- Swordsmen - Japan - Biography --- Miyamoto, Musashi, - 1584-1645
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Action and adventure films --- Swordsmen in motion pictures. --- 791.43 --- CDL --- Motion pictures --- History and criticism. --- Adventure films --- History and criticism --- Swordsmen in motion pictures
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J6976 --- Japan: Sports and recreation -- martial arts, fighting sports -- kendō, iaidō, bōjutsu, fencing --- Kendo. --- Bushido. --- Swordsmen --- Martial arts --- Kendō. --- Swordsmen. --- Religious aspects --- Buddhism. --- Yamaoka, Tesshū, --- Japan.
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