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8/24/2011

Watonai Koxinga

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Watonai 和藤内, the Tiger Hero

He was a warrior from South China, named Coxinga (Koxinga).

Zheng Chenggong, Cheng Ch'eng-kung

born Aug. 28, 1624, Hirado, Japan
died June 23, 1662, Taiwan

Chinese military leader of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. After the Ming dynasty fell to the Manchu, Zheng refused Manchu offers of rank and power and launched a military campaign against the new dynasty in 1659, taking a large force from his base in Fujian province up the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang).

Initial success turned into failure, but, undaunted, Zheng took Taiwan from the Dutch in 1662 to use as a secure rear base area. Further glory was cut short by his death later that year. He became a popular deity and cultural hero to the Chinese on Taiwan, and even the Qing court honoured him as a paragon of loyalty.

In Japan the playwright Chikamatsu Monzaemon celebrated him on the stage (Zheng had a Japanese mother), and in the 20th century both Chinese communists and Nationalists embraced him as a national hero.
source : thefreedictionary.com


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Watonai grabbing a tiger by the tail
Original Toyokuni III/Kunisada (1786 - 1864)

... the famous warrior Watonai fearlessly grabbing a tiger by the tail. The surprised animal stops in its tracks, turning its head to see what is happening. A frightened retainer holding a gun over his shoulder reacts with shock, throwing his hand up in the air.
Above, a one-legged boy encased in an umbrella waves his arms at the hero as a Buddhist deity holding a lotus blossom drifts by on a cloud.
source : www.fujiarts.com

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Watonai hunting a tiger

和藤内虎狩之図 Watonai Toragari no zu
by Kuniyoshi 歌川国芳


Koxinga Hunting the Tiger

Koxinga attacking a huge tiger which carries one of his men with his spear; soldiers in the background force another tiger over a snowy cliff.
source : www.britishmuseum.org


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quote
Battles of Coxinga - Kabuki Poster

The Battles of Coxinga/ Kokusenya kassen 国性爺合戦
is based on the true adventures of Coxinga/ Watonai, a warrior of Chinese and Japanese parentage, who fought for the restoration of the Ming Chinese government after its defeat in the 17th c. by Manchu invaders.

In the kabuki play Watonai joined forces with Kinshojo, his Chinese step-sister, and Kanki, her husband. Chikanobu's print shows Ichikawa Sadanji I (1842-1904) playing the lead role, flanked by Bando Kakitsu I (1847-1893) in the female role and Nakamura Shikan IV (1830-1899) as Kanki.
The colorful Chinese-style costumes, exotic settings in China, and dramatic "rough style"/ aragoto acting associated with Watonai made this a popular production.

Scripps College has three prints by other artists depict the same characters in earlier productions. The print depicting Watonai on a bridge is by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797-1861), and probably shows Ichikawa Danjuro VII (1791-1859) about 1847-48. (93.3.142)

As in the Chikanobu print, Watonai has loosened his outer jacket decorated with twisted rope designs to reveal a metal studded shirt that is typically worn by warriors. The two prints depicting Kinshojo and Kanki are by Toyohara Kunichika (1835-1900) from about 1875, with inset street scenes of Tokyo by Hiroshige III. (93.6.131-132)

The role of Kinshojo was played by Bando Hikosaburo V (1832-1877) when he was at the peak of his career; Hikosaburo was the brother-in-law of Bando Kakitsu I, who evidently took over this onnagata part when Hikosaburo died unexpectedly. As in the Chikanobu triptych, Kunichika shows Nakamura Shikan IV in the role of Kanki. An on-stage rivalry between Shikan and Hikosaburo reportedly lead to shouting matches and fist-fights among their ardent supporters. Kunichika's depictions of Kinshojo and Kanki are joined with urban scenes signed "Hiroshige."

These appear to be in the Yokohama-e style of Hiroshige III (1843-1894) and show the changes taking place in Tokyo. The street scene includes both traditional wooden shop buildings and new "fireproof" stores in the Western style, along with a rickshaw (a new form of transportation). The canal scene shows a lotus-filled moat in the Yotsuya area west of the old Edo Castle walls.
source : libraries.claremont.edu


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Watonai and the Tiger - Regional Folk Toys

Watoonai 和唐内 / 和藤内 Watonai

Teisei Koo 鄭成功(ていせいこう) [1624~1662]

He became famous in Japan since Chikamatsu Monzaemon wrote a Puppet Theater Play (bunraku) about him.

In the end, Watonai tamed the tiger and could ride it.



. Kasukabe Hariko 春日部張子 papermachee dolls
Saitama (#Kasugabe)

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Ishimaki ningyoo 花巻人形 Ishimaki clay dolls
Iwate


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Miharu hariko 三春張子 papermachee doll
Fukushima


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Watonai Kabuki Ningyoo 歌舞伎人形 Kabuki doll

His face is painted with the kumadori make-up of Kabuki actors.

伏見人形 Fushimi clay doll, Kyoto


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Another hero famous for his adventures with tigers

. Kato Kiyomasa 加藤清正 in Korea .


. Tora トラ - 虎 - 寅 Tiger Toys .


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Watonai - Festival Float at the Gion Matsuri
沼田祗園祭・ひ組・東倉内町

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The Battles of Coxinga 国姓爺合戦 Kokusen'ya Kassen

. Sadowara ningyoo 佐土原人形 dolls from Sadowara, Miyazaki .


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. . . CLICK here for Photos !

. Reference .

. Reference in English .


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Contribution from Chen-ou Liu, Canada

Coxinga (or Koxinga; Zheng Chenggong in Chinese) has been a highly politicized figure since his death. Based on one's cultural identification, political leaning, and nationality, people read him differently. In Interpreting Zheng Chenggong, Chong Wang, “examines the history of the dramatization of Zheng, by comparing selected texts from Japan, China, and Taiwan, written between 1700 and the 1960s, with regard to the historical contexts.” It’s a good read.

Here is a relevant excerpt from the Wikipedia entitled Koxinga [or Coxinga]:
(accessed at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koxinga)

In politics, Koxinga is an interesting figure because several opposing political forces have invoked him as a hero. For this reason, historical narratives regarding Koxinga frequently differ in explaining his motives and affiliation.
Koxinga is considered a national hero in Mainland China because he drove the Dutch away from Taiwan and established ethnically Chinese rule over the island.
Koxinga is considered a pirate in the Philippines because of his banditry and raids on Philippine soil.

During the Japanese control of Taiwan, Koxinga was honored as a bridge between Taiwan and Japan for his maternal linkage to Japan.

The Chinese Nationalist Party regarded Koxinga as a patriot who retreated to Taiwan and used it as a base to launch counterattacks against the Qing Dynasty of mainland China. As such, the Nationalists have frequently compared Koxinga to their leader Chiang Kai-shek.

Supporters of Taiwan independence have held mixed feelings toward Koxinga. Recent Taiwanese independence supporters have presented him in a positive light, portraying him as a native Taiwanese hero seeking to keep Taiwan independent from a mainland Chinese government.


And his “life story” has been popularized in Japan since the publication/performance of The Battles of Coxinga by Japanese Shakespeare, Chikamatsu Monzaemon, whose work has been subsequently made known to the English-speaking world by Donald Keene's most influential book, entitled
The Battles of Coxinga: Chikamatsu’s Puppet Play, Its Background and Importance.
Keene’s lengthy introduction gives a solid description of Coxinga’s relationship to Japan and its culture.

By the way, his Tiger Hero/Hunter image is completely unknown to most of the Chinese people. That’s a Japanese story.

Here is my haiku for politically conscious readers:

party headquarter
The Battles of Coxinga
leans against the wall


Chen-ou Liu

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和藤内捕らへし寅の年立ちぬ
Watoonai toraeshi tora no toshi tachinu

Watonai
captures a tiger -
the New Year begins


lit:
the year of the tiger, who was captured by Watonai, begins


Jikoku 時刻
source : weekly-haiku.blogspot.com



New Year Greeting Card





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. Regional Folk Toys from Japan .


. Tohoku after the BIG earthquake March 11, 2011

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2 comments:

Gabi Greve - Darumapedia said...

Sadowara ningyoo 佐土原人形 dolls from Sadowara
Miyazaki, Kyushu
.
Dolls from
The Battles of Coxinga 国姓爺合戦 Kokusen'ya Kassen
for example
Kanki 甘輝
.

Gabi Greve said...

Okayama Michio wrote on facebook comments:

Coxinga is a national hero in Taiwan. He organized the workers who had been bought by the Dutch from Southern China (mostly Fujian) and fought against their Dutch masters until he liberated the Island from their control. His father was a Ming-dynasty loyalist who fought the Qing (Manchu) but eventually switched sides at the end of his life. Coxinga, remained a Ming loyalist all his life but eventually failed to establish a Ming loyalist Kingdom on the Island of Taiwan.
Yet, from Taiwan he organized many attacks along the coast line of China, which was then controlled by the Qing dynasty. Another interesting fact is that Coxinga was half Japanese, his mother having born in Nagasaki. There is an interesting story concerning the mother, but it would be too long to explain here.
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https://www.facebook.com/groups/1376256879279591/2586800718225195/?comment_id=2586910984880835&notif_id=1600758309740347&notif_t=group_comment
.