>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> The Okita Soji article on Wikipedia (
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okita_S?ji) is ready to be
> uploaded. However, the Okita Rintaro article (
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okita_Rintaro)
> is not ready yet.
>
> The Wikipedia doesn't use the MLA-like "(author, page #)" format so I've
> only listed 2
> major references. (Other Shinsengumi/Okita books, of course, contain a lot
> of the same
> info. Though, I don't think it's necessary to list all of them on the
> article page at this
> point.)
>
> ~Seven
>
> PS. Here's the Okita article with "(author, page #.)"
>
> Okita Soji
> From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
>
> Okita Soji (?? ??), (1842 or 1844 - July 19, 1868) was the captain of the
> first troop of
> the Shinsengumi, a special police force in Kyoto during the late shogunate
> period. He was
> a well-known genius swordsman, being one of the strongest out of the
> Shinsengumi,
> along with Saito Hajime and Nagakura Shinpachi.
>
> Contents
> 1 Background
> 2 Shinsengumi Period
> 3 Death
> 4 Trivia
> 5 References
> 6 Okita in Fiction
>
> Background
> He was born Okita Soujirou Fujiwara no Harumasa in 1842 or 1844 from a
> samurai family
> in the Shirakawa- han's Edo mansion. (Oji p. 58 - p.59) His
> Great-grandfather was Okita
> Kan'emon (? - 1819) and his Grandfather was Okita Sanshiro (? - 1833.) His
> father, Okita
> Katsujiro, died in 1845; he had two older sisters, Okita Mitsu (1833-1907)
> and Okita Kin
> (1836-1908.) In 1846, in order to marry the adopted son of the Okita
> family, Okita Rintaro
> (1826-1885), his oldest sister Okita Mitsu became an adopted daughter of
> Kondo Shusuke
> in name. Kondo Shusuke was the third master of the Tennen Rishin Ryu and
> Okita started
> training at the Shieikan with him around the age of nine. By that time,
> Kondo Shusuke had
> already adopted Shimazaki Katsuta (the later Kondo Isami), but Hijikata
> Toshizo had not
> yet enrolled at the Tennen Rishin-ryu school. Okita proved to be a prodigy
> and attained
> Menkyo Kaiden status (master of kenjutsu) at eighteen or so. (Mori, p.9 -
> p.11)
>
> In 1861, Okita became the Head Coach (??) at the Shieikan. Even though he
> was often
> commented to be honest, polite, and good-natured by those around him, he
> was also
> known to be a strict and quick-tempered teacher to his students. (Mori,
> p.27 - p.28)
>
> According to Yagi Tamesaburou (Yagi Gennoujou's son) and Satou Shun'sen
> (Satou
> Higokorou's descendent), Okita was a tall, dark, and thin man with high
> cheekbones, a
> wide month, and a "flatfish" face. (Mori, p.56) In addition, he was known
> as a man who
> smiled and laughed well (not very talkative, however.)
>
> Shinsengumi Period
> Okita changed his name to Okita Souji Fujiwara no Kaneyoshi shortly before
> his departure
> to Kyoto in 1863. He soon became a founding member of the Shinsengumi and
> a
> Fukuchou Jokin (Vice-Commander's Assistant.) (Oji, p.111) Okita Rintarou,
> also a
> practitioner of the Tennen Rishin-ryu, became a commander of the
> Shinchougumi (the
> Shinsengumi's brother league in Edo.) (Mori, p.52)
>
> Okita was the second youngest among the Shieikan members, with Todo
> Heisuke being
> the youngest. He was one of the Shieikan members involved in the Serizawa
> Kamo (one of
> the original commanders of the Shinsengumi) and the Uchiyama Hikojiro
> assassinations in
> 1863. (Oji, p.132)
>
> Equally skilled with shinai, bokken/bokutou, and katana, his signature
> technique was
> named the Mumyo-ken or Sandanzuki (which translates as "Three Piece
> Thrust"), a
> technique that could attack one's neck, left shoulder, and right shoulder
> with one strike.
> (the Mumyo-ken supposedly could hit all three points simultaneously, but
> this is most
> likely an embellishment.) (Oji, 20) The Mumyo-ken was his own invention
> and it could
> have been derived from an invention of Hijikata's (the Hirazuki.)
>
> It was rumored that his tuberculosis was discovered when he coughed blood
> and fainted
> during the Ikedaya Affair, but some sources say that he contracted the
> disease after that.
> Both are reasonable, as tuberculosis can kill quickly (weeks), or very
> slowly (many years).
> While many of the Shinsengumi fans believe that Yoshida Toshimaru was
> killed by Okita
> during the Ikedaya Affair (based on Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction), it is in
> fact historically
> inaccurate. (Mori, p.92 - 98)
>
> Based on Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction, many also believe that Okita and
> Hijikata were like
> brothers. In history, Yamanami Keisuke was the vice-commander Okita shared
> a brotherly
> relationship with. Yamanami's seppuku (with Okita as his second) in 1865
> was an
> extremely painful incident in Okita's short life. (Mori, p.78) There is no
> record showing
> that Hijikata and Okita were close; it is debatable whether Okita even got
> along with
> Hijikata.
>
> In 1865, Okita became the captain of the first unit of the Shinsengumi and
> also served as a
> kenjutsu instructor ((Oji, p.175); later that year, he was appointed by
> Kondo Isami to be
> the fifth master of the Tennen Rishin-ryu after him. (Mori, p.132)
>
> Although highly unlikely, it was rumored that he wielded a famous katana
> called Kikuichi-
> monji. However, he surely owned a set of Kaga Kiyomitsu (a katana and a
> wakizashi) and
> his so-called "Kikuichimonji Norimune" was likely a Yamasiro Kunikiyo
> instead. (Oji, 96)
>
> Death
> During the Boshin War, after the Battle of Toba-Fushimi in January of
> Keiou 4, Okita went
> into Matsumoto Ryoujun's hospital in Edo. (Oji, p.235) He then moved to a
> guesthouse
> with Okita Rintarou, Okita Mitsu, and their children. When the shogunate
> forces (including
> the Shinsengumi and the Shinchougumi) retreated to the Tohoku region,
> Okita remained in
> Edo alone. (Mori, p,170 - p.171) He died on July 19 (lunar calendar May
> 30th), 1868. Later
> that night, he was buried at his family temple in Edo (present Tokyo),
> under his birth name
> (with Okita Souji listed in the death records.) Today, Okita's grave is
> not open to the
> public. (Oji, p.252)
>
> The information that Okita died when he was 25 is based on the theory that
> he was born
> in 1844 and therefore was 25 by East Asian age reckoning when he died in
> 1868 (or on a
> lesser-known theory that he was born in Summer, before July 19, 1842 and
> therefore was
> 25 by Western standards when he died in July 19, 1868.)
>
> Trivia
> It is historical accurate that Okita loved children. Duing his time in
> Kyoto, he was often
> seen playing with children and was a baby-sitter to Yagi's sons in the
> Mibu temple. (Oji,
> p.100)
>
> He was not particularly fond of liquor but it is fictional that he loved
> sweets.
>
> Okita was a bit of a clean freak. (Oji, p.130)
>
> Aside from being treated by Matsumoto, Okita also took Kyorou Sanyaku
> (medicine for
> enervation and coughing) for his tuberculosis (not to be confused with
> Ishida Sanyaku for
> treating injures such as brusises and broken bones.)
>
> There has not been any evidence of an Okita photograph.
>
> References
> ? Mori, Makiko. Okita Soji Feature. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Oraisha, 1999.
> ? Oji, Kazuko. Walking with Okita Soji. Tokyo: Shin Chosha, 2003.
>
> Okita in Fiction
> It is important not to confuse fictional work featuring Okita with
> historical data about him.
>
> Okita is briefly mentioned and shown in the anime/manga series Rurouni
> Kenshin, which
> takes place during and after the Meiji Revolution in Japan. A character
> later on in the
> series, Seta S?jir?, was based on the Okita Soji from fiction Shinsengumi
> Keppuroku (and
> therefore, darker than the real Okita.) Okita is also a main character in
> the anime/manga
> Peacemaker Kurogane, which takes more liberties with history. In an
> episode of the anime
> GS Mikami, ghost-hunter Mikami Reiko gets inside of a haunted movie about
> the
> Bakumatsu and meets Okita, who is depicted as a crazy guy who thinks only
> of killing
> people (obvious pun on his usual portrayal, which also is a foil to the
> show's rendition of
> Hijikata.) Okita is also the male protagonist in the manga Kaze Hikaru,
> which is a fictional
> story about the Shinsengumi during the late Tokugawa shogunate (where
> Okita trains a
> young girl to be one of the Shinsengumi to avenge her father and older
> brother.) He is also
> depicted in the 1999 film Taboo (Gohatto.) In the anime/manga series Shura
> no Toki,
> Okita's (fictional) last battle before succumbing to his sickness is with
> a warrior from the
> Mutsu, a clan that supposedly practiced unarmed combat. Their duel was a
> request from
> Okita himself from years before.
>
> His anime, manga, and TV depictions tend to be as a handsome young man
> (sometimes a
> bish?nen). The Latin American dub of Rurouni Kenshin, in fact, mistook
> Okita for a
> woman, and the Hijikata/Okita yaoi pairing is very popular among the
> fangirls of
> Peacemaker Kurogane.
>
> While only briefly appearing in Kido Shinsengumi: Moeyo Ken (in a
> flashback and as a
> possible ghost), Okita's (obviously) fictional daughter Kaoru (by an
> equally-obviously
> fictional unnamed wife) is one of the three main characters of the series.
>
> His three-point strike (Mumyo-ken) and his tuberculosis are also very
> similar to the
> character Ukyo Tachibana from the video game series Samurai Shodown.
>
>
>
--- In SHQ@yahoogroups.com, "k kobayakawa"wrote:
>
> Just spelling correction.
>
> Satou Higokorou>>>Satou Hikogorou
>
>
> 2006/6/18, Seven:
> >
> > The Okita Soji article on Wikipedia (
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okita_S?ji) is ready to be
> > uploaded. However, the Okita Rintaro article (
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okita_Rintaro)
> > is not ready yet.
> >
> > The Wikipedia doesn't use the MLA-like "(author, page #)" format so I've
> > only listed 2
> > major references. (Other Shinsengumi/Okita books, of course, contain a lot
> > of the same
> > info. Though, I don't think it's necessary to list all of them on the
> > article page at this
> > point.)
> >
> > ~Seven
> >
> > PS. Here's the Okita article with "(author, page #.)"
> >
> > Okita Soji
> > From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
> >
> > Okita Soji (?? ??), (1842 or 1844 - July 19, 1868) was the captain of the
> > first troop of
> > the Shinsengumi, a special police force in Kyoto during the late shogunate
> > period. He was
> > a well-known genius swordsman, being one of the strongest out of the
> > Shinsengumi,
> > along with Saito Hajime and Nagakura Shinpachi.
> >
> > Contents
> > 1 Background
> > 2 Shinsengumi Period
> > 3 Death
> > 4 Trivia
> > 5 References
> > 6 Okita in Fiction
> >
> > Background
> > He was born Okita Soujirou Fujiwara no Harumasa in 1842 or 1844 from a
> > samurai family
> > in the Shirakawa- han's Edo mansion. (Oji p. 58 - p.59) His
> > Great-grandfather was Okita
> > Kan'emon (? - 1819) and his Grandfather was Okita Sanshiro (? - 1833.) His
> > father, Okita
> > Katsujiro, died in 1845; he had two older sisters, Okita Mitsu (1833-1907)
> > and Okita Kin
> > (1836-1908.) In 1846, in order to marry the adopted son of the Okita
> > family, Okita Rintaro
> > (1826-1885), his oldest sister Okita Mitsu became an adopted daughter of
> > Kondo Shusuke
> > in name. Kondo Shusuke was the third master of the Tennen Rishin Ryu and
> > Okita started
> > training at the Shieikan with him around the age of nine. By that time,
> > Kondo Shusuke had
> > already adopted Shimazaki Katsuta (the later Kondo Isami), but Hijikata
> > Toshizo had not
> > yet enrolled at the Tennen Rishin-ryu school. Okita proved to be a prodigy
> > and attained
> > Menkyo Kaiden status (master of kenjutsu) at eighteen or so. (Mori, p.9 -
> > p.11)
> >
> > In 1861, Okita became the Head Coach (??) at the Shieikan. Even though he
> > was often
> > commented to be honest, polite, and good-natured by those around him, he
> > was also
> > known to be a strict and quick-tempered teacher to his students. (Mori,
> > p.27 - p.28)
> >
> > According to Yagi Tamesaburou (Yagi Gennoujou's son) and Satou Shun'sen
> > (Satou
> > Higokorou's descendent), Okita was a tall, dark, and thin man with high
> > cheekbones, a
> > wide month, and a "flatfish" face. (Mori, p.56) In addition, he was known
> > as a man who
> > smiled and laughed well (not very talkative, however.)
> >
> > Shinsengumi Period
> > Okita changed his name to Okita Souji Fujiwara no Kaneyoshi shortly before
> > his departure
> > to Kyoto in 1863. He soon became a founding member of the Shinsengumi and
> > a
> > Fukuchou Jokin (Vice-Commander's Assistant.) (Oji, p.111) Okita Rintarou,
> > also a
> > practitioner of the Tennen Rishin-ryu, became a commander of the
> > Shinchougumi (the
> > Shinsengumi's brother league in Edo.) (Mori, p.52)
> >
> > Okita was the second youngest among the Shieikan members, with Todo
> > Heisuke being
> > the youngest. He was one of the Shieikan members involved in the Serizawa
> > Kamo (one of
> > the original commanders of the Shinsengumi) and the Uchiyama Hikojiro
> > assassinations in
> > 1863. (Oji, p.132)
> >
> > Equally skilled with shinai, bokken/bokutou, and katana, his signature
> > technique was
> > named the Mumyo-ken or Sandanzuki (which translates as "Three Piece
> > Thrust"), a
> > technique that could attack one's neck, left shoulder, and right shoulder
> > with one strike.
> > (the Mumyo-ken supposedly could hit all three points simultaneously, but
> > this is most
> > likely an embellishment.) (Oji, 20) The Mumyo-ken was his own invention
> > and it could
> > have been derived from an invention of Hijikata's (the Hirazuki.)
> >
> > It was rumored that his tuberculosis was discovered when he coughed blood
> > and fainted
> > during the Ikedaya Affair, but some sources say that he contracted the
> > disease after that.
> > Both are reasonable, as tuberculosis can kill quickly (weeks), or very
> > slowly (many years).
> > While many of the Shinsengumi fans believe that Yoshida Toshimaru was
> > killed by Okita
> > during the Ikedaya Affair (based on Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction), it is in
> > fact historically
> > inaccurate. (Mori, p.92 - 98)
> >
> > Based on Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction, many also believe that Okita and
> > Hijikata were like
> > brothers. In history, Yamanami Keisuke was the vice-commander Okita shared
> > a brotherly
> > relationship with. Yamanami's seppuku (with Okita as his second) in 1865
> > was an
> > extremely painful incident in Okita's short life. (Mori, p.78) There is no
> > record showing
> > that Hijikata and Okita were close; it is debatable whether Okita even got
> > along with
> > Hijikata.
> >
> > In 1865, Okita became the captain of the first unit of the Shinsengumi and
> > also served as a
> > kenjutsu instructor ((Oji, p.175); later that year, he was appointed by
> > Kondo Isami to be
> > the fifth master of the Tennen Rishin-ryu after him. (Mori, p.132)
> >
> > Although highly unlikely, it was rumored that he wielded a famous katana
> > called Kikuichi-
> > monji. However, he surely owned a set of Kaga Kiyomitsu (a katana and a
> > wakizashi) and
> > his so-called "Kikuichimonji Norimune" was likely a Yamasiro Kunikiyo
> > instead. (Oji, 96)
> >
> > Death
> > During the Boshin War, after the Battle of Toba-Fushimi in January of
> > Keiou 4, Okita went
> > into Matsumoto Ryoujun's hospital in Edo. (Oji, p.235) He then moved to a
> > guesthouse
> > with Okita Rintarou, Okita Mitsu, and their children. When the shogunate
> > forces (including
> > the Shinsengumi and the Shinchougumi) retreated to the Tohoku region,
> > Okita remained in
> > Edo alone. (Mori, p,170 - p.171) He died on July 19 (lunar calendar May
> > 30th), 1868. Later
> > that night, he was buried at his family temple in Edo (present Tokyo),
> > under his birth name
> > (with Okita Souji listed in the death records.) Today, Okita's grave is
> > not open to the
> > public. (Oji, p.252)
> >
> > The information that Okita died when he was 25 is based on the theory that
> > he was born
> > in 1844 and therefore was 25 by East Asian age reckoning when he died in
> > 1868 (or on a
> > lesser-known theory that he was born in Summer, before July 19, 1842 and
> > therefore was
> > 25 by Western standards when he died in July 19, 1868.)
> >
> > Trivia
> > It is historical accurate that Okita loved children. Duing his time in
> > Kyoto, he was often
> > seen playing with children and was a baby-sitter to Yagi's sons in the
> > Mibu temple. (Oji,
> > p.100)
> >
> > He was not particularly fond of liquor but it is fictional that he loved
> > sweets.
> >
> > Okita was a bit of a clean freak. (Oji, p.130)
> >
> > Aside from being treated by Matsumoto, Okita also took Kyorou Sanyaku
> > (medicine for
> > enervation and coughing) for his tuberculosis (not to be confused with
> > Ishida Sanyaku for
> > treating injures such as brusises and broken bones.)
> >
> > There has not been any evidence of an Okita photograph.
> >
> > References
> > ? Mori, Makiko. Okita Soji Feature. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Oraisha, 1999.
> > ? Oji, Kazuko. Walking with Okita Soji. Tokyo: Shin Chosha, 2003.
> >
> > Okita in Fiction
> > It is important not to confuse fictional work featuring Okita with
> > historical data about him.
> >
> > Okita is briefly mentioned and shown in the anime/manga series Rurouni
> > Kenshin, which
> > takes place during and after the Meiji Revolution in Japan. A character
> > later on in the
> > series, Seta S?jir?, was based on the Okita Soji from fiction Shinsengumi
> > Keppuroku (and
> > therefore, darker than the real Okita.) Okita is also a main character in
> > the anime/manga
> > Peacemaker Kurogane, which takes more liberties with history. In an
> > episode of the anime
> > GS Mikami, ghost-hunter Mikami Reiko gets inside of a haunted movie about
> > the
> > Bakumatsu and meets Okita, who is depicted as a crazy guy who thinks only
> > of killing
> > people (obvious pun on his usual portrayal, which also is a foil to the
> > show's rendition of
> > Hijikata.) Okita is also the male protagonist in the manga Kaze Hikaru,
> > which is a fictional
> > story about the Shinsengumi during the late Tokugawa shogunate (where
> > Okita trains a
> > young girl to be one of the Shinsengumi to avenge her father and older
> > brother.) He is also
> > depicted in the 1999 film Taboo (Gohatto.) In the anime/manga series Shura
> > no Toki,
> > Okita's (fictional) last battle before succumbing to his sickness is with
> > a warrior from the
> > Mutsu, a clan that supposedly practiced unarmed combat. Their duel was a
> > request from
> > Okita himself from years before.
> >
> > His anime, manga, and TV depictions tend to be as a handsome young man
> > (sometimes a
> > bish?nen). The Latin American dub of Rurouni Kenshin, in fact, mistook
> > Okita for a
> > woman, and the Hijikata/Okita yaoi pairing is very popular among the
> > fangirls of
> > Peacemaker Kurogane.
> >
> > While only briefly appearing in Kido Shinsengumi: Moeyo Ken (in a
> > flashback and as a
> > possible ghost), Okita's (obviously) fictional daughter Kaoru (by an
> > equally-obviously
> > fictional unnamed wife) is one of the three main characters of the series.
> >
> > His three-point strike (Mumyo-ken) and his tuberculosis are also very
> > similar to the
> > character Ukyo Tachibana from the video game series Samurai Shodown.
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>