Sōten Kōro

Sōten Kōro
蒼天航路
Genre Action, Adventure, Historical
Manga
Written by Hagin Yi
Illustrated by King Gonta
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Morning
Original run October 1994November 2005
Volumes 36 (List of volumes)
TV anime
Directed by Tsuneo Tominaga
Written by Hideo Takayashiki
Studio Madhouse
Network NTV
Original run April 7, 2009September 30, 2009
Episodes 26
Anime and Manga Portal

Sōten Kōro (蒼天航路?) is a Japanese manga by manga artist King Gonta (王欣太?), adapted from an original story by Hagin Yi (李學仁?). It was serialized by Kodansha in the manga anthology magazine Weekly Morning from 1994 to 2005. After Hagin Yi died of cancer in September 1998, King Gonta picked up the story himself. A total of 409 chapters were published and compiled into 36 separate books. In 1998, it won the 22nd Kodansha Manga Award in the general category.[1]

There are no published English translations of it, but a color art compilation book released in 2007 has the English subtitle Beyond the Heavens on the cover, suggesting that it is the accepted English translation of the title. In addition, the last chapter of the series is also titled in English Beyond the Heavens.

In Japan, Sōten Kōro was advertised by its publisher as "Neo-Sangokushi" (ネオ三国志?), which may be translated as "Neo Romance of the Three Kingdoms".

In April 2009, the series was made into an anime series by Madhouse.[2]

Contents

Story

Sōten Kōro’s story is based loosely on the events taking place in Three Kingdoms period of China during the life of the last Chancellor of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Cao Cao (155 – March 15, 220), who also serves as the main character.

The Three Kingdoms period has been a popular theme in Japanese manga for decades, but Sōten Kōro differs greatly from most of the others on several points. One significant difference is its highly positive portrayal of its main character, Cao Cao, who is traditionally the antagonist in not only Japanese manga, but also most novel versions of the Three Kingdoms period, including the original 14th century version, Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong. Another significant difference from others is that the storyline primarily uses the original historical account of the era, Records of Three Kingdoms by Chen Shou, as a reference rather than the aforementioned Romance of the Three Kingdoms novel. By this, the traditional hero of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Liu Bei, takes on relatively less importance within the story and is portrayed in a less positive light. Yet, several aspects of the story are in fact based on the novel version, including the employment of its original characters such as Diao Chan, as well as anachronistic weapons such as Guan Yu’s Green Dragon Crescent Blade and Zhang Fei’s Viper Blade.

A consistent theme throughout the story is Cao Cao’s perpetual desire to break China and its people away from its old systems and ways of thinking and initiate a focus on pragmatism over empty ideals. This often puts him at odds with the prevalent customs and notions of Confucianism and those that support them.

Characters

Cao Cao (曹操 Sō Sō?)
Voiced by: Miyano Mamoru
Liu Bei (劉備 Ryū Bi?)
Voiced by: Seki Tomokazu
Xiahou Dun (夏侯惇 Kakō Ton?)
Voiced by: Kusao Takeshi
Xiahou Yuan (夏侯淵 Kakō En?)
Voiced by: Inada Tetsu
Cao Ren (曹仁 Sō Jin?)
Voiced by: Chiba Isshin
Cao Hong (曹洪 Sō Kō?)
Voiced by: Egawa Hisao
Yuan Shao (袁紹 En Shō?)
Voiced by: Terasoma Masaki
Guan Yu (関羽 Kan U?)
Voiced by: Morozumi Ken'ichi
Zhang Fei (張飛 Chō Hi?)
Voiced by: Seki Takaaki
Cao Teng (曹騰 Sō Tō?)
Voiced by: Nozawa Nachi
Cao Song (曹嵩 Sō Sū?)
Voiced by: Yanaka Hiroshi
Dong Zhuo (董卓 Tō Taku?)
Voiced by: Ōtsuka Hōchū
Zhang Rang (張譲 Chō Jō?)
Voiced by: Arimoto Kinryū
Emperor Ling of Han (霊帝 Reitei?)
Voiced by: Sasaki Nozomu

Media

Manga

The Japanese manga series Sōten Kōro is written by King Gonta (王欣太?), adapted from an original story by Hagin Yi (李學仁?). It has been serialized in the seinen manga magazine Weekly Morning by Kodansha from October 1994 to November 2005. In 1998, manga won the 22nd Kodansha Manga Award in the general category.

Total 409 individual chapters have been collected in 36 tankōbon and are released by Kodansha.The first volume of Sōten Kōro was released on October 23, 1995[3] and last thirty-sixth volume was released on January 23, 2006.[4] It has been also collected in 18 bunkoban (文庫版?) from December 12, 2000 to December 12, 2006 and 12 Gokuatsuban Sōten Kōro (極厚 蒼天航路?) with english title "Beyond the heavens" from May 5, 2009 to October 23, 2009.

Anime

References

External links