Last year, I mentioned I would be posting some of my items. That was before my memory stick containing all the research write-ups I had done dropped out of my pocket somewhere in Japan after the Grand Prix last October. It took a lot of resolve to redo everything after the remorse and grief over the loss, but I finally got to it during the Christmas holidays and I think I ended up with something that would be of interest to collectors that like researching their items.
Since starting to help translate flags on this forum, I noticed that some flags made for very exciting research. I had never taken interest in flags before, but I got hooked on the detective work and how much it can reveal. Collectors like to say, “If it just could talk”, and I realized that some of these flags will talk a great deal, if you pay attention to the clues.
I mean the flags that have all the writings on them. These flags are called Yosegaki flags. Yosegaki means “gathered writing” and when it’s done on the Japanese national flag, it’s called Hinomaru (sun orb flag) Yosegaki. Some people refer to them as prayer flags, but that is not what these are. In the Himalayas, they do indeed have Buddhist prayer flags with mantras written on them and every time the flags flutter they are supposed to send prayers to heaven (automation started earlier than generally thought?). I have seen a Japanese flag covered in Buddhist writing, which would fall into the prayer flag category, but that was an exception. Yosegaki flags are simply “Best Wishes” flags. Some people may translate the common slogan as “Praying for Everlasting Fortune in Battle”, but that is because the Japanese language does not really distinguish between “wishing” and “praying” and often uses the same word for both. Yosegaki is a universal custom; when a work colleague quits or gets transferred and the workplace presents him/her with a card carrying messages wishing the person the best in the new job, etc, that is a Yosegaki; or would some insist on calling that a “Prayer card”?
I will be posting 10 flags and let them tell their stories. I will start with the common silent ones and progress gradually into more talkative examples until we end up with one that just won’t stop, befitting the bunch of politicians they are. They are presented in that order for you to see what clues get the story going. I suppose for most collectors these flags are just a collection of names and that is statistically true. A lot of them were like perfunctory Christmas cards, just signatures, but some will get a lot more personal, hold revealing messages or signatures with titles that establish the timeframe and sometimes the circumstances.
I will post in the following order.
1.Grouping of textbook flag and Senninbari that looks great, but otherwise
says little
2.Grouping of flag, Senninbari and award documents that says a lot between
the lines, but is tight-lipped about military secrets.
3.Grouping of flag and headband that points to the soldier being a tanker
4.Flag from work colleagues from the manufacturer of the Type 99 rifle, Howa
5.Flag for a university student going to war signed by a man training for Tokko
6.Flag with Army Paratrooper reference
7.A flag presented to a unit upon deployment
8.A farewell and best wishes flag signed by a Lt. General and colonels
9.A grouping of a campaign flag, going to war sash and photos that tells the
tale of two brothers.
10.A “who’s who” Yosegaki flag signed by politicians, secret police and military
celebrities.
If you read them all, you realize that together they almost tell you the whole story of the war from a very personal viewpoint. I hope you’ll enjoy following my exhaustive detective work.
Unfortunately, this level of research is only possible if you have advanced command of Japanese reading and writing, but at least it should give you an idea what to look for in a flag that can lead to a lot more than just signatures of people that mean nothing to you.
1.Mitsuo Maruyama Flag and Tiger Senninbari
Since starting to help translate flags on this forum, I noticed that some flags made for very exciting research. I had never taken interest in flags before, but I got hooked on the detective work and how much it can reveal. Collectors like to say, “If it just could talk”, and I realized that some of these flags will talk a great deal, if you pay attention to the clues.
I mean the flags that have all the writings on them. These flags are called Yosegaki flags. Yosegaki means “gathered writing” and when it’s done on the Japanese national flag, it’s called Hinomaru (sun orb flag) Yosegaki. Some people refer to them as prayer flags, but that is not what these are. In the Himalayas, they do indeed have Buddhist prayer flags with mantras written on them and every time the flags flutter they are supposed to send prayers to heaven (automation started earlier than generally thought?). I have seen a Japanese flag covered in Buddhist writing, which would fall into the prayer flag category, but that was an exception. Yosegaki flags are simply “Best Wishes” flags. Some people may translate the common slogan as “Praying for Everlasting Fortune in Battle”, but that is because the Japanese language does not really distinguish between “wishing” and “praying” and often uses the same word for both. Yosegaki is a universal custom; when a work colleague quits or gets transferred and the workplace presents him/her with a card carrying messages wishing the person the best in the new job, etc, that is a Yosegaki; or would some insist on calling that a “Prayer card”?
I will be posting 10 flags and let them tell their stories. I will start with the common silent ones and progress gradually into more talkative examples until we end up with one that just won’t stop, befitting the bunch of politicians they are. They are presented in that order for you to see what clues get the story going. I suppose for most collectors these flags are just a collection of names and that is statistically true. A lot of them were like perfunctory Christmas cards, just signatures, but some will get a lot more personal, hold revealing messages or signatures with titles that establish the timeframe and sometimes the circumstances.
I will post in the following order.
1.Grouping of textbook flag and Senninbari that looks great, but otherwise
says little
2.Grouping of flag, Senninbari and award documents that says a lot between
the lines, but is tight-lipped about military secrets.
3.Grouping of flag and headband that points to the soldier being a tanker
4.Flag from work colleagues from the manufacturer of the Type 99 rifle, Howa
5.Flag for a university student going to war signed by a man training for Tokko
6.Flag with Army Paratrooper reference
7.A flag presented to a unit upon deployment
8.A farewell and best wishes flag signed by a Lt. General and colonels
9.A grouping of a campaign flag, going to war sash and photos that tells the
tale of two brothers.
10.A “who’s who” Yosegaki flag signed by politicians, secret police and military
celebrities.
If you read them all, you realize that together they almost tell you the whole story of the war from a very personal viewpoint. I hope you’ll enjoy following my exhaustive detective work.
Unfortunately, this level of research is only possible if you have advanced command of Japanese reading and writing, but at least it should give you an idea what to look for in a flag that can lead to a lot more than just signatures of people that mean nothing to you.
1.Mitsuo Maruyama Flag and Tiger Senninbari
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