You might already know the Ganryu Island duel, but the full picture has more scratches and timelines than a samurai sword.
Musashi’s early reputed victory over Arima Kihei is usually dated to the late 1590s, when he was a teenager. After wandering and sharpening his skills, he clashed with the Yoshioka family in Kyoto. The encounters with Yoshioka Seijuro and Yoshioka Denshichiro are commonly placed around 1604–1605; Musashi walked away as the dominant figure, which set up the dramatic end of the Yoshioka school as a serious rival. Those fights show his willingness to take on organized schools, not just single duels.
Then there’s the iconic duel with Sasaki Kojiro, almost always given as April 13, 1612. That one is both a tactical masterclass and a legend: Musashi is said to have arrived late, used a carved wooden sword, and struck decisively. Beyond those big names, many smaller skirmishes and claimed victories fill out the ‘‘over sixty’’ total often quoted in old biographies. Sources mix records,
lore, and later embellishments—Eiji Yoshikawa’s 'Musashi' paints an epic portrait, while Musashi’s own 'The Book of Five Rings' focuses on art and strategy rather than blow-by-blow career stats. I love how these differing sources force you to read
between the lines; it keeps the story alive for me.