Siege of Takamatsu

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Siege of Takamatsu
Part of the Sengoku period

Edo period portrait of Takamatsu submerged in water
Date1582
Location
Result Siege succeeds
Territorial
changes
Takamatsu falls to Hideyoshi
Belligerents
forces of Oda Nobunaga Mōri clan
Commanders and leaders
Hashiba Hideyoshi Shimizu Muneharu 
Kikkawa Motoharu
Kobayakawa Takakage

In the 1582 siege of Takamatsu (備中高松城の戦い), Toyotomi Hideyoshi laid siege to Takamatsu Castle, which was controlled by the Mōri clan. He diverted a nearby river with dikes to surround and flood the castle, leading to a relatively speedy surrender. He also constructed towers on barges from which his arquebusiers could keep up a constant rate of fire and be unhindered themselves by the flooding. As the battle grew more intense, the garrison received reinforcements from the Mōri, Kikkawa and Kobayakawa clans, and Hideyoshi sent for aid from his lord Oda Nobunaga. In response, Nobunaga sent a contingent of men west, to make their way to Takamatsu, while he himself stopped at the Honnō-ji for a time; during this stay, he would be betrayed and killed.

Hideyoshi soon learned of the death of his lord, which encouraged him to hurry the arrangement of surrender terms. Shimizu Muneharu, the castle's commander, was forced to commit suicide in a boat on the artificial lake created by the flooding, in full view.

References

Part of the excavated levee formed by Hideyoshi in order to flood the castle.
  • Sansom, George (1961). "A History of Japan: 1334-1615." Stanford, California: Stanford University Press
  • Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.