:''For other uses, see
Kamikaze (disambiguation).''
'Kamikaze' (神風) is a
Japanese word, usually translated as ''divine wind'', believed to be a gift from the gods. The term is first known to have been used as the name of a pair or series of
typhoons that are said to have saved
Japan from
two Mongol fleets under
Kublai Khan that attacked Japan in
1274 and again in
1281.
In popular Japanese myths at the time, the god
Raijin was the god who turned the storms against the Mongols. Other variations say that the god
Fujin or
Ryūjin caused the destructive kamikaze.
The name given to the storm, ''kamikaze'', was later used during
World War II as
nationalist propaganda for
suicide attacks by Japanese pilots. This use of ''kamikaze'' has come to be the common meaning of the word in
English.
Recent research has found that other causes contributing to the invasion's failure included:
★ Many of the ships were requisitioned river craft with flat bottoms and wobbly masts, and thus unstable in rough sea.
★ Some of the ships had been poorly made, perhaps as the result of deliberate
sabotage by
Chinese shipbuilders who resented their Mongol conquerors.
See also
★
Protestant Wind