"light of foot" were peasant infantry employed by the warlords of Japan to supplement the samurai in their armies. The first known reference to ashigaru was in the 14th century, Warriors of Medieval Japan, Stephen Turnbull, Osprey Publishing, 2007 p.99 but it was during the Ashikaga shogunate (Muromachi period) that the use of ashigaru became prevalent by various warring factions. War in the early modern world, Jeremy Black, Taylor & Francis, 1999 p.59
Land-owning samurai, together with farmer foot soldiers, fought in many wars and conflicts including the Mongol invasions of Japan in 1274 and 1281. Constant warfare between the 14th and 16th centuries made the hiring of foot soldiers with no particular loyalty necessary at times. Paid only in loot, these mercenaries were not well-trained and thus could not always be depended upon in battle. These wandering foot soldiers eventually became the ashigaru. Ashigaru 1467–1649, Stephen Turnbull, Howard Gerrard, Osprey Publishing, 2001 p.5–6
The warfare of the Sengoku period (15th and 16th centuries) required large quantities of armor to be produced for the ever-growing armies of ashigaru. Simple munition armour The Watanabe Art Museum Samurai Armour CollectionVolume I ~ Kabuto & Mengu, Trevor Absolon P.130 cuirasses and helmets were mass-produced including armor which could be folded or were collapsible. Samurai: The Weapons and Spirit of the Japanese Warrior, Clive Sinclaire, Globe Pequot, 2004 P.29 Tatami armor was made from small rectangular or hexagonal iron plates that were usually connected to each other by mail and sewn to a cloth backing.
In the 16th century the ashigaru were also armed with of the type known as tanegashima. Small banners called sashimono could be worn on their backs during battle for identification.
Those who were given control of ashigaru were called ashigarugashira. The most famous of them was Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who also raised many of his warrior followers to samurai status.
The advantage of the matchlock guns proved decisive to samurai warfare. This was demonstrated at the Battle of Nagashino in 1575, where carefully positioned ashigaru gunners of the Oda and Tokugawa clans thwarted the Takeda clan's repeated heavy cavalry charges against the Oda clan's defensive lines and broke the back of the Takeda war machine.
After the battle, the ashigaru's role in the armies was cemented as a very powerful complement to the samurai. The advantage was used in the two invasions of Korea in 1592 and 1597 against the Koreans and later the Ming dynasty. Though the ratio of guns (matchlocks) to bows was 2:1 during the first invasion, the ratio became 4:1 in the second invasion since the guns proved highly effective."日本戦史 朝鮮役" (1924) Staff headquarters of Imperial Japanese Army /
When entering the Edo period, the ashigaru's position was fixed and the use of conscripts was abandoned for over two hundred years in Japan. Ashigaru were considered to be the lowest rung of the samurai class in some han (domains), but not in others. Samurai Armies 1467–1649, Stephen Turnbull, Osprey Publishing, 2008, . p. 88.
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