Mochizuki Chiyome


Mochizuki Chiyome, also known as Mochizuki Chiyojo or Mochizuki Chiyo, was a Japanese poet and noblewoman of the 16th century. She created an all-female group of ninja agents in service of the Takeda clan.

Biography

Chiyome, a descendant of the 15th-century ninja Mochizuki Izumo-no-Kami of the Kōga-ryū, was the wife of Mochizuki Moritoki, a samurai lord of Shinano's Saku District and himself a distant relative of Izumo-no-Kami. After Moritoki was killed in the Fourth Battle of Kawanakajima in 1561, Chiyome was left in the care of the daimyō Takeda Shingen, the leader of the Takeda clan and an uncle of her late husband. It was then when Shingen approached her and gave her an important mission to recruit women and create an underground network of kunoichi and employ them against the rival warlords. Takeda's plan was to have fully trained female operatives who could act as spies and agents used to gather information and deliver coded messages to his allies; Chiyome was the best candidate for this, since she came from a long line of Kōga ninja. She accepted the task, set up her operation in the village of Nezu in the Shinshū region, and began her search for potential candidates for training.
Chiyome recruited prostitutes and other wayward women, victims of the civil wars of the Sengoku period, and young girls who were either orphaned, lost or abandoned. Many people believed that she was helping these women and giving them an opportunity to start up a new life, but in reality they were trained to become information gatherers and verifiers, seductresses, messengers and, when necessary, assassins. The women were taught all the skills of a miko, which allowed them to travel virtually anywhere without suspicion, receiving religious education to complete their disguise. Over time, Chiyome's kunoichi learned to effectively use more disguises such as actresses, prostitutes or geisha, which allowed them to move freely within villages, towns, castles and temples, and get access to their targets. Eventually, Chiyome and her kunoichi had set up an extensive network of some 200–300 agents that served the Takeda clan and Shingen was always informed of all activities, putting him one step ahead of his opponents at all times until his mysterious death in 1573, after which she disappeared from historical records.

Historicity dispute

It has been alleged that her name has appeared only after the 1971 book Investigation of Japanese History was written by non-academic writer Shisei Inagaki.Yoshimaru In this book, Inagaki:
  1. Describes the details of the Fourth Battle of Kawanakajima.Yoshimaru
  2. Claims that Moritoki Mochizuki was a husband of Chiyome and that he died at this battle.Yoshimaru
  3. Presents a historical written permission to Chiyome issued by Shingen and claims that, due to this permission, the "miko village" emerged.Yoshimaru
  4. Claims that the miko of the village became spies.Yoshimaru
  5. Claims that Chiyome then became a ninja.
However, Katsuya Yoshimaru, an associate professor of Mie University who studies Japanese Edo period literature and the ninja, claims that Chiyome did not actually exist and lists the allegedly erroneous points of Inagaki's book:
  1. There is no historical document describing the details of this battle.Yoshimaru
  2. Moritoki did not die in this battle.Yoshimaru
  3. This written permission is not extant.Yoshimaru Generally speaking, most of such kind of written permissions are forged ones.Yoshimaru
  4. The claim of spy activities of the miko is groundless; it is based only on guess of Inagaki.Yoshimaru
  5. This is groundless as well. Although Inagaki refers History of Japanese Miko, 1930, written by Taro Nakayama, this book says nothing about ninjaYoshimaru and all mentions first appear in Inagaki's book.
The name of Chiyome became popular after a two-page article about her was published in a 1991 special issue of the magazine History Reader titled Extraordinary Special Issue: All the Definitive Types of Ninja.Yoshimaru This article said that Chiyome was an upper ninja ; according to Yoshimaru, historically there was no such rank in a ninja hierarchy.Yoshimaru

In popular culture

Mochizuki Chiyome is featured in many video games in which she is often shown in a partial or full miko costume, including Ayakashi: Ghost Guild, Blood Brothers, Chain Chronicle, Full Boko Heroes, Hero Hunter, Hyakuhime Ryoran! Sengoku Asuka, Jikuu Haoden, Juggler×Monster, Kamigoku no Valhalla Gate, Legend of the Cryptids, Legends of Drift, Nobunaga's Ambition: Souzou, Puzzle & Dragons, Samurai Princess Muramasa, Samurai Retsuden, Samurai Souls, Sangoku Collection, Sengoku Hagyo, Sangoku Heroes, Sangoku Saga, Sangoku Taisen, Sekigahara Engi, Sengoku Hime 3, Sengoku IXA, Shin Sengoku Buster, Shirogane no Seisen, Soul Circle, The Samurai Kingdom, Tenka Touitsu Chronicle, and '. She is mentioned as a trainer of the playable character Kunoichi in Samurai Warriors and appears in person in Samurai Warriors 2, and is Shingen's mistress and the master and surrogate mother of Kurenai, the protagonist of '. Chiyome appears in Assassin's Creed: Memories, where she is recruited by the Templars after the death of Shingen and becomes an enemy of Hattori Hanzō, and in Onimusha Soul, in which she works with the evil Genma and appears in several very different forms, ages and art styles. She is a non-playable character using Ground and Dark type pokémon in Pokémon Conquest, and elite versions of generic "Kunoichi" enemies in are named "Chiyome". Innocent World offered a catgirl version of Chiyome as a player character, and another game has her in a full cat form. In Sangoku Taisen, she is voiced by Miyuki Sawashiro. She also appears as an Assassin-class Servant in Fate/Grand Order.
Yatsuko Tanami played her in the film Sanada Yukimura no Bōryaku. She appears as a major character in David Kudler's young-adult historical novel Risuko.