Siege of Fukashi: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 36°14′20″N 137°58′09″E / 36.2388°N 137.9691°E / 36.2388; 137.9691
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Adding local short description: "1550 siege", overriding Wikidata description "1550 siege"
per MOS:COA
 
Line 9: Line 9:
| place = [[Matsumoto Castle|Fukashi Castle]], [[Nagano Prefecture]], [[Japan]]
| place = [[Matsumoto Castle|Fukashi Castle]], [[Nagano Prefecture]], [[Japan]]
| result = Takeda victory. [[Ogasawara Nagatoki]] forced to abandon his lands.
| result = Takeda victory. [[Ogasawara Nagatoki]] forced to abandon his lands.
| combatant1 =[[File:Takeda mon.svg|20px]][[Takeda clan]]
| combatant1 =[[Takeda clan]]
| combatant2 =[[File:Mon ogasawara.svg|20px]][[Ogasawara clan]]
| combatant2 =[[Ogasawara clan]]
| commander1 =[[Takeda Shingen]]
| commander1 =[[Takeda Shingen]]
| commander2 =[[Ogasawara Nagatoki]]
| commander2 =[[Ogasawara Nagatoki]]

Latest revision as of 15:24, 21 April 2024

Siege of Fukashi
Part of the Sengoku period

Matsumoto Castle, which stands on the site of the earlier Fukashi Castle
Date1550
Location36°14′20″N 137°58′09″E / 36.2388°N 137.9691°E / 36.2388; 137.9691
Result Takeda victory. Ogasawara Nagatoki forced to abandon his lands.
Belligerents
Takeda clan Ogasawara clan
Commanders and leaders
Takeda Shingen Ogasawara Nagatoki
Strength
3,200 4,000

The 1550 siege of Fukashi was one of a series of battles waged by Takeda Shingen in his long campaign to conquer Shinano province, which was ruled by a number of minor daimyō, notably the Suwa, Ogasawara, Murakami [ja] and Takato.

Shingen mounted his first invasion of Shinano in 1542 and steadily worked his way northwards, defeating the Suwa and Takato by 1547. His inexorable advance through the province alarmed the Uesugi clan, which controlled Echigo province to the north, and in 1547 Uesugi Norimasa sent an army into the province to confront Shingen, but this was swept aside at Odaihara. At this point the Murakami and Ogasawara finally entered the fray, and Murakami Yoshikiyo succeeded in defeating Shingen at Uedahara (1548), but Shingen regrouped and went back on the offensive in 1550. Identifying Yoshikiyo as the greater threat, he decided to concentrate his initial efforts on the weaker Ogasawara, and attacked their principal castle at Fukashi.

Shingen was able to size Fukashi without much difficulty, and Shingen placed Baba Nobuharu in charge of it the fortress. Matsumoto Castle was later built on the site.[1]

The loss of Fukashi broke the power of the Ogasawara clan, and Ogasawara Nagatoki was forced to flee and seek refuge with his ally Murakami Yoshikiyo at Katsurao, which was itself besieged by Shingen four years later.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook. Cassell & Co. p. 212. ISBN 1854095234.
  2. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (2013). Kawanakajima 1553–64: Samurai power struggle. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-84603-652-1.