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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Inuoumono
rdf:type
dbo:Sport
rdfs:label
犬追物 Inuoumono Inuoumono
rdfs:comment
犬追物(いぬおうもの)は、鎌倉時代から始まったとされる日本の弓術の作法・鍛錬法。流鏑馬、笠懸と共に騎射三物の一つ。 L'Inuoumono (犬追物) est un ancien sport japonais qui implique des archers montés tirant sur des chiens. Les chiens sont libérés dans une enceinte circulaire d'environ 15 m de diamètre, et des archers montés leur tirent dessus tout en chevauchant autour du périmètre. Inuoumono (犬追物) was a Japanese sport that involved mounted archers shooting at dogs. The dogs were released into a circular enclosure approximately 15m across, and mounted archers would fire upon them whilst riding around the perimeter. The arrows used in dog-shooting were usually rendered non-fatal, by being either padded or blunted. This modification to the original sport was suggested by the Buddhist clergy, as a way of preventing injury to the dogs used.
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dbr:Ogasawara_Sadamune dbr:Ulysses_S._Grant dbc:Japanese_archery dbr:Ashikaga_Takauji dbr:Kasagake dbr:Muromachi_period dbr:Emperor_Go-Daigo n13:Inu_ou_mono_03.gif dbr:Yabusame dbr:Tokugawa_Iemochi dbr:Tokugawa_Ieyoshi dbr:Kamakura_period dbr:Meiji_Emperor
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dbo:abstract
L'Inuoumono (犬追物) est un ancien sport japonais qui implique des archers montés tirant sur des chiens. Les chiens sont libérés dans une enceinte circulaire d'environ 15 m de diamètre, et des archers montés leur tirent dessus tout en chevauchant autour du périmètre. 犬追物(いぬおうもの)は、鎌倉時代から始まったとされる日本の弓術の作法・鍛錬法。流鏑馬、笠懸と共に騎射三物の一つ。 Inuoumono (犬追物) was a Japanese sport that involved mounted archers shooting at dogs. The dogs were released into a circular enclosure approximately 15m across, and mounted archers would fire upon them whilst riding around the perimeter. Originally intended as a military training exercise, dog-shooting became popular as a sport among the Japanese nobility during the Kamakura and Muromachi periods (1185-1573). During this time it was briefly banned during the rule of Emperor Go-Daigo (owing to his concern for the dogs); however, this ruling was overturned by the shōgun Ashikaga Takauji at the behest of his archery teacher Ogasawara Sadamune. The influential Ogasawara family were particular adherents of inuoumono; Sadamune's archery treatise Inuoumono mikuanbumi regarded it as fundamental to a warrior's training, and his great-grandson Mochinaga devoted five books to the subject. The arrows used in dog-shooting were usually rendered non-fatal, by being either padded or blunted. This modification to the original sport was suggested by the Buddhist clergy, as a way of preventing injury to the dogs used. Inuoumono waned in popularity during the sixteenth century and has been largely extinct as a practice since then. It was eventually banned outright during the reign of Tokugawa Iemochi. Occasional revivals have taken place: there is a record of the shōgun Tokugawa Ieyoshi viewing dog-shooting in 1842, and the sport was performed for Ulysses S. Grant during an official visit to Japan in 1879 (Grant reportedly expressed distaste for the practice). The last recorded instance of dog-shooting took place before the Meiji Emperor in 1881.
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