During Japan's Sengoku period, bladesmith Muramasa forged swords so sharp they could split silk, but warriors who wielded them began dying in bizarre circumstances—generals turning on their own troops at midnight, armored men drowning in rivers, and shoguns accidentally cutting themselves during ceremonies. The Tokugawa shogunate banned all Muramasa blades after three members of the same bloodline died by them, not in battle but during peaceful moments. These cursed swords were buried in temple grounds, but when some temples burned centuries later, the blades were never recovered, leading to enduring legends that they may still be carried by unseen hands.
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The Curse of Muramasa BladesAjouté :
They said this sword killed every samurai who ever carried it.
Not in battle, in their sleep.
During the Sengoku period, a bladesmith [music] named Muramasa forged weapons so sharp they could split silk falling through the air.
But something was wrong with his steel.
Warriors who carried Muramasa blades started losing their minds. One general turned on his own men at midnight.
Another walked into a river in full armor and never came back up.
The Tokugawa clan banned every single Muramasa blade after three shoguns in the same bloodline died by them.
Not by enemies, by accidents. Their own swords cutting them during ceremonies, [music] during practice, during moments no blade should draw blood.
Soldiers buried [music] them in temple grounds hoping monks could contain whatever lived inside the metal.
But here is the part nobody talks about.
Some of those temples burned down centuries later. The swords [music] were never found.
And some people believe they are still being carried.
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