Battle of Tenmokuzan

The 1582 Battle of Tenmokuzan (天目山の戦い, Tenmokuzan no Tatakai) in Japan, also known as the Battle of Toriibata, is regarded as the last stand of the Takeda clan. This was the final attempt by Takeda Katsuyori to resist the combined forces of Tokugawa Ieyasu and Oda Nobunaga, who had been campaigning against him for some time. In his bid to hide from his pursuers, Katsuyori burned his fortress at Shinpu Castle and fled into the mountains, to another Takeda stronghold, called Iwadono, held by Oyamada Nobushige, an old Takeda retainer. Katsuyori was denied entry by Oyamada, and committed suicide with his wife, while the last remnant of his army held off their pursuers.[2][3]

Battle of Tenmokuzan
Part of the Sengoku period

Edo period scroll depicting the last battle of Takeda Katsuyori
DateMarch 11th 1582
Location
Tenmoku Mountain, Kai Province, Japan
35°39′2.6″N 138°48′44.7″E
Result Oda-Tokugawa victory
Belligerents
Forces of Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu Forces of Takeda Katsuyori
Commanders and leaders
Oda Nobunaga
Tokugawa Ieyasu
Oda Nobutada
Takigawa Kazumasu
Takeda Katsuyori 
Hojo Masako 
Oyamada Nobushige 
Strength
4000[1] 40+[1]
Casualties and losses
Entire army destroyed, Katsuyori commits suicide.
Location within Japan

Prelude

War of Takeda klan against Oda Nobunaga begin in 1572. with battle of Mikatagahara, where Takeda Shingen, overlord of Kai, Shinano and Suruga provinces, defeated combined forces of Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu in Totomi province. Shingen's heir Takeda Katsuyori was decisively defeated in battle of Nagashino (1575), loosing more than 10.000 men and core of his generals. However, thanks to Oda Nobunaga's engagement on other fronts (mostly his war against Ikko-Ikki 1570-1580), Takeda Katsuyori managed to preserve his family domain until 1582.[4] In February of 1582. some of Takeda retainers in Shinano province defected to Oda Nobunaga: in response, on February 14th Nobunaga's army under his son Oda Nobutada invaded Shinano province from the west, rapidly advancing east as Takeda garrisons defected or surrendered without a fight. The only real battle was the siege of Takato Castle, which was taken by storm on March 2nd 1582. At the same time Ieyasu Tokugava invaded province of Suruga, which capitulated on February 25th 1582. by defection of some chief retainers and relatives of Takeda Katsuyori.[4]

After the fall of Takato Castle on March 2nd, remaining Takeda garrisons in Shinano Province surrendered without a fight, and Oda Nobutada's army reached western border of Takeda home province of Kai. At the same time, Tokugawa Iyeyasu burst into Kai from Suruga Province on the south, taking Takeda traitor Anayama Genba along as a guide. In the meantime, Takeda Katsuyori and his army of 10-15.000 in Shimpu Castle (at the time capital of Kai) had calculated that Takato Castle would hold for some time, so the swift fall of that mighty fortress in only a day caused massive panic among Takeda supporters. Both generals and common soldiers were distracted by the urge to evacuate their families and children as the enemy armies of 40-50.000 invaded Kai from the south and the west, so no plans for defense were made, but entire Takeda army dispersed in panic: no more than 500-600 samurai remained with Takeda Katsuyori in Sinpu. So at dawn of the March 3rd (at the Hour of The Rabbit, around 6 a.m) Katsuyori set fire to Sinpu Castle and fled east with his family, leaving great many hostages from noble families of his domain to perish in the flames. Oda Nobutada occupied old Kai capital of Kofu on March 7th 1582. and had all of Takeda Katsuyori's family, relations and house elders hunted down and executed. All the remaining samurai of the three provinces of Suruga, Kai and Shinano flocked to Kofu and proclaimed their allegiance to Nobutada, presenting hostages, and the neighboring province of Kozuke surrendered without a fight.[4]

Battle

Takeda Katsuyori departed Sinpu Castle on March 3rd with about 500-600 samurai and more then 200 women and children from his family and kin. They fled east through the mountains of Kai to a mountain castle called Kogakko, where they hoped to find a refuge with old Takeda retainer Oyamada Nobushige. Once they reached Kogakko Castle, Oyamda turned them away, although a week earlier he had invited Katsuyori himself and promised his support. With no fort to hold and no more allies, remaining Takeda servants and warriors had lost hope and dispersed in panic: all along the way men had dropped out until only forty-one warriors and some 50 ladies were left, close kinsmen of Katsuyori who could not run away. They put up a temporary palisade around an ordinary manor house in a village called Tano (east of Kofu) and made their last camp there.

On March 11th, Oda general Takikawa Sakon picked up information that Takeda Katsuyori and his kin had retreated into the mountains of Kogakko. Sakon divided up his troops into search parties that scoured the mountains, discovering Takeda camp at Tano. They immediately surrounded Takeda's makeshift fortifications and attacked: the last 41 of Takeda samurai solemnly executed their wives and children and came out fighting with their swords, seeking only an honorable death. They fought like desperate men with nothing to lose, and caused many losses to the attackers, Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga glorifies the valor of the last Takeda warriors, among them Takeda Katsuyori's young lover Tsuchiya Uemon, who has felled a great many experienced warriors with his arrows before following his lord in death, and Katsuyori's 16-year old son Takeda Nobukatsu, who fought with his sword as if he were a grown man.[4]

Aftermath

According to Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga, Takeda lost 41 samurai and 50 ladies and women, while Oda had lost many experienced warriors. The last stand of Takeda was such an example of a true samurai spirit and valor in defeat that even a pro-Oda literature (Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga was written by Ota Guyuchi, an old retainer of Nobunaga) showed unrestrained admiration for the last Takeda samurai, who earned unparalleled fame and renown for themselves in death.[4] After Oyamada Nobushige betrayed Katsuyori at the Battle of Tenmokuzan;[3] however, when he went to the Oda clan camp, he was executed by Oda Nobunaga's officer Horio Yoshiharu.

References

  1. "月岡芳年 作「勝頼於天目山遂討死図」". Touken World. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  2. Turnbull, Stephen (1987). Battles of the Samurai. London: Arms and Armour Press. pp. 91–94. ISBN 9780853688266.
  3. Turnbull, Stephen (2000). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & C0. p. 231. ISBN 1854095234.
  4. Ōta, Gyūichi (2011). The chronicle of Lord Nobunaga. J. S. A. Elisonas, Jeroen Pieter Lamers. Leiden: Brill. pp. 426–441. ISBN 978-90-04-20456-0. OCLC 743693801.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.