Warrior Sciences University - African Warrior History #6 ; Africoid Samurai Origins (article)
- warriorsciencesuniv
- May 21, 2020
- 5 min read
Updated: Jan 22, 2021

The Samurai, the Ainu Man and the “black blood of the Samurai”
This is an article that actually provides a modern answer to the Japanese legend “it takes one drop of black blood to be a Samurai”. It also mentions the story of how the black belt came to be considered the highest in their belt system of martial arts. It was respect from a battle with fierce Africoid warriors whom once attacked southern Japan. The following below is the article.
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There was a very interesting recent article on the origins of the Samurai. An American anthropologist studying Samurai bones concludes they resemble Ainu more than Yayoi.
From the New York Times.
Quote:
AN anthropologist has concluded that the exalted samurai, the legendary warriors who were idealized as the epitome of everything Japanese, were actually descended from the lowly Ainu, an ethnic group that is considered primitive by most Japanese and is often the target of their discrimination.
The new findings are drawing a mixed response of agreement and skepticism among American scholars and are expected to provoke spirited controversy in race-conscious Japan.
In the genealogy of Japan, as it is usually drawn, most modern Japanese, as well as the samurai, the warrior class of feudal Japan, are deemed to be descended directly from the Jomon, prehistoric inhabitants of what is now Japan. In contrast, the Ainu (pronounced EYE-new), a shrinking ethnic group in northern Japan, are traditionally regarded as ''racially different,'' stuck out on a genealogical side branch.
But after a detailed study of skeletal remains and historical documents, the anthropologist, C. Loring Brace of the University of Michigan, concluded that the lowly Ainu, not the ethnic Japanese, are the true descendants of the Jomon, and that the samurai were descended from the Ainu.
Most modern Japanese, he found, are descended mainly from the Yayoi, who migrated to the islands from Korea and China about 300 B.C., introducing intensive rice agriculture and largely supplanting the Jomon. Light Skin and European like Noses
''I knew after my first shot at it that the prehistoric Japanese, the Jomon, just don't look like modern Japanese,'' Dr. Brace said in a telephone interview. ''They do look remarkably like modern Ainu.''
But Dr. Brace's most startling conclusion, and the one likely to upset traditionalists, was that most of the samurai were not really ethnic Japanese but descendants of the Ainu.
Like the Ainu, the samurai had more body hair, lighter skin and higher-bridged, European like noses than most Japanese. Indeed, nearly all of the physical characteristics of the samurai, celebrated in art and held high in social esteem, are those that closely resemble the facial features of the 18,000 Ainu who live on the northern island of Hokkaido.
Dr. Brace said this interpretation also explains why the facial features of the Japanese ruling class are often so unlike those of typical modern Japanese. The Ainu-related samurai achieved such power and prestige in medieval Japan that they intermarried with royalty and nobility, passing on Jomon-Ainu blood in the upper classes, while other Japanese were primarily descended from the Yayoi.
Likewise, this would account for the ''un-Japanese'' appearance of the Kabuki actors, courtesans and samurai portrayed in paintings and on silkscreens. The people in this highly stylized art are invariably shown with the elevated nose, the slight swelling at the center of the brow, the pointed chin and flat cheeks that set the Ainu apart from typical Japanese.
Dr. Brace, writing in a recent issue of The American Journal of Physical Anthropology, said, ''There is more than a little irony in this whole picture: where the Ainu, so looked down upon in the traditional Japanese conception of the social spectrum, have had a genetic effect on the ruling classes of Japan that would be completely unexpected for a conquered and despised people presumed to have been exterminated.''
The proposed revisions in Japanese genealogy were based on a study of 34 features of the skulls and teeth of more than 1,100 skeletons of Japanese, Ainu and other Asian ethnic groups. The samurai skeletons analyzed were from victims of the Battle of Kamakura in the summer of 1333. The skulls, Dr. Brace said, consistently bore a strong likeness to the Ainu-Jomon characteristics.
Historical accounts furnish a possible explanation how some descendants of the Ainu came to be the celebrated warriors.
Dr. Brace and his co-authors, M. L. Brace and W. R. Leonard, said that when the emperor in Kyoto wanted to subdue unruly inhabitants on the eastern frontier, the area around present-day Tokyo, generals usually recruited armies from the very residents meant to be controlled, the Ainu. This practice had gone on for nearly two centuries, and these recruited warriors became the revered samurai, sword-wielding knights in armor whose exploits led to six centuries of military rule in Japan. Theory Is Disputed
''Because of the course of history and the regional shifts of power that occurred as the feudal system emerged in medieval Japan,'' Dr. Brace wrote, ''the genetic characteristics derived from the Jomon-Ainu continuum came to constitute a significant part of the biological makeup of the dominant military class.''
But Hisashi Suzuki, a retired professor of anthropology at the University of Tokyo, has denied that the fallen samurai of Kamakura, and thus succeeding generations of ruling classes, could be Ainu. Dr. Suzuki, reflecting the established view of Japanese anthropology, said that, despite some Ainu traits, the samurai physical characteristics were merely a local variant of modern Japanese features.
Dr. Brace said that other Japanese reaction to his ideas had been muted so far. ''Dealing with the Japanese is difficult,'' he said. ''They don't tell you to your face that they disagree with you. I did have one anthropologist come up to me and politely say, 'I hope you are wrong.' '' Centuries of Mixing Seen
William W. Howells, emeritus professor of anthropology at Harvard University, said the Ainu-samurai connection was ''a pretty good theory, but I don't think it's proven yet.''
Edwin O. Reischauer, a Harvard authority on Japanese history and culture, who was an American Ambassador to Tokyo, said he had ''very strong reservations about the theory.''
''The early samurai came mostly from areas that had been inhabited by Ainu,'' Dr. Reischauer said, ''but there had been a mixing of people for several hundred years.''
In fact, Dr. Reischauer said, the ''great variety of facial types'' in Japan testified to the absorption of the Ainu and other people into the ''Japanese bloodstream.'' The mixing, he said, was not limited to any one social group. Caucasian Link Rejected
As Dr. Brace acknowledged, the Ainu genetic legacy is widespread and accounts for the relative abundance of facial and body hair of many Japanese, in contrast to the Chinese and other Mongoloid people.
These differences in the Ainu, as well as their lighter skin color, gave rise to a belief that they could well be related to Caucasians. In some histories, the Ainu are described as proto-Caucasoid people, a group that split off from the white race so early that not all the characteristics of the race had yet developed.
But Dr. Brace said the analysis of ancient and modern Ainu skeletons did not support such a relationship. The study did show that their presumed ancestors, the Jomon, however, shared some intriguing physical similarities, perhaps because of common origins, to the people of Polynesia and Micronesia.

It was said in ancient Egyptian / Kemetic records that they traded with the Japanese and also murals of Japanese warriors paying tribute in gifts to the ancient Egyptians
* Centuries ago, the Japanese had trouble with the Anew people living in Japan. They hired a famous African general. He defeated the Anew people. That’s why the color black is used for black belts in various martial arts in Japan in his honor and to show one's excellence.
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