104:
600:
from the battlefield at
Odaihara and subsequently paraded these round the walls of Shika in a bid to intimidate the garrison into surrender. Kasahara continued to hold out nevertheless, but then at noon on 23 September a fire broke out within the castle, greatly damaging the defences. Shingen seized
560:
himself
Shingen mounted his own invasion in 1542, which ended with the successful conquest of the Suwa, and then followed that up with the defeat of the Takato in 1543-5, and of the turncoat
181:
324:
621:. However this was only a temporary setback for Shingen, who went back on the offensive in Shinano in 1550 and drove Yoshikiyo out of Shinano after the 1553
488:) began to assert themselves. Such lords gained power by usurpation, warfare or marriage—any means that would safeguard their position. It was manifested in
580:, who feared that Shingen might conquer the whole of Shinano if left unchecked. He therefore sent an army into the province to relieve Shika, commanded by
404:
174:
581:
768:
526:
568:. Securing this castle would secure the Takeda position in the Saku Valley and enable Shingen to advance on into the northern half of Shinano.
561:
537:
167:
743:
705:
680:
517:, a large mountainous territory which was not controlled by a single clan but by several relatively weak ones, notably the
319:
564:
in 1546. Fresh from the defeat of the
Sadakiyo, in 1547 he then turned his attention to Shika castle, controlled by
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Takeda
Shingen's famous display of severed heads before the walls of Shika is depicted in the 1969 Japanese film
738:
17:
531:
763:
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651:
419:
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540:. As such it was an attractive target to its neighbours, in particular the Takeda to the south and
204:
633:
344:
309:
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753:
748:
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274:
553:
209:
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s system and taxation had increasingly less control outside the province of the capital in
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8:
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625:. This in turn prompted a renewed Uesugi intervention in Shinano, led by their new
617:, into moving against the Takeda, and in 1548 he succeeded in defeating Shingen at
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the opportunity to mount an assault that evening, in which
Kasahara was killed.
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576:
Takeda
Shingen laid siege to the castle on 8 September 1547. This move alarmed
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446:
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86:
36:
732:
552:, had already made a probing expedition into Shinano in 1536 (leading to the
510:
650:('Samurai Banners'), which follows the careers of Shingen and his general
159:
541:
506:
192:
107:
466:
445:, which took place in September 1547, was one of many battles fought in
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497:
One of the most ambitious and successful warlords of the period was
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471:
596:
590:
479:
103:
64:
588:. The Takeda forces collected the severed heads of 15
584:, but Shingen ambushed and defeated this force at the
494:("mountain castles"), which overlooked the provinces.
465:, also known as the "Age of Civil War". After the
730:
461:The battle took place during the 16th-century
700:. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 29–30.
175:
698:Kawanakajima 1553–64: Samurai power struggle
675:. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 8–11.
673:Kawanakajima 1553–64: Samurai power struggle
189:
182:
168:
695:
670:
548:to the north. Takeda Shingen's father,
14:
769:16th-century military history of Japan
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639:
163:
24:
25:
780:
632:, which culminated in the famous
513:. Bordering Kai to the north was
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689:
664:
75:Siege succeeds; Takeda victory
13:
1:
744:Battles of the Sengoku period
657:
456:
613:, the most powerful Shinano
604:
7:
723:. London: Cassell & Co.
449:'s bid to seize control of
10:
785:
719:Turnbull, Stephen (1998).
696:Turnbull, Stephen (2013).
671:Turnbull, Stephen (2013).
609:The fall of Shika spurred
200:
145:
116:
96:
42:
34:
29:
571:
634:Battles of Kawanakajima
739:Sieges involving Japan
721:The Samurai Sourcebook
556:), and after becoming
482:, and powerful lords (
117:Commanders and leaders
554:Battle of Un no Kuchi
443:siege of Shika castle
30:Siege of Shika Castle
50:8-23 September 1547
640:In popular culture
611:Murakami Yoshikiyo
586:battle of Odaihara
566:Kasahara Kiyoshige
509:, which dominated
132:Kasahara Kiyoshige
764:Conflicts in 1547
759:Conflicts in 1546
707:978-1-84603-652-1
682:978-1-84603-652-1
623:Siege of Katsurao
438:
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320:Musashi-Matsuyama
191:Campaigns of the
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16:(Redirected from
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515:Shinano Province
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451:Shinano Province
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85:Castle falls to
61:Shinano Province
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578:Uesugi Norimasa
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469:(1467–77), the
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630:Uesugi Kenshin
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582:Kanai Hidekage
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463:Sengoku period
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447:Takeda Shingen
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59:Shika castle,
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37:Sengoku period
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18:Siege of Shika
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380:Mikatagahara
310:Kawanakajima
137:
97:Belligerents
35:Part of the
647:Fūrin Kazan
562:Oi Sadakiyo
542:Uesugi clan
530: [
507:Takeda clan
390:Noda Castle
315:Katsurayama
210:Un no Kuchi
108:Takeda clan
80:Territorial
733:Categories
658:References
457:Background
430:Tenmokuzan
420:Takatenjin
395:Takatenjin
350:Mimasetoge
605:Aftermath
523:Ogasawara
410:Nagashino
340:Hachigata
300:Kannomine
250:Ryūgasaki
240:Kojinyama
619:Uedahara
597:ashigaru
527:Murakami
491:yamajiro
467:Ōnin War
375:Futamata
370:Tonegawa
365:Fukazawa
360:Hanazawa
330:Kuragano
290:Katsurao
270:Uedahara
260:Odaihara
255:Uchiyama
235:Nagakubo
225:Kuwabara
146:Strength
55:Location
591:samurai
505:of the
485:daimyōs
400:Yoshida
385:Iwamura
355:Kanbara
345:Odawara
280:Fukashi
138:†
82:changes
704:
679:
627:daimyō
615:daimyō
558:daimyō
538:Takato
503:daimyō
501:, the
472:shōgun
425:Takatō
405:Akechi
335:Minowa
305:Matsuo
285:Toishi
245:Takatō
230:Fukuyo
220:Uehara
215:Sezawa
193:Takeda
134:
72:Result
572:Siege
534:]
480:Kyoto
476:'
415:Omosu
265:Shika
65:Japan
702:ISBN
677:ISBN
536:and
519:Suwa
441:The
154:2600
151:3000
47:Date
544:of
735::
654:.
636:.
532:ja
525:,
521:,
453:.
63:,
710:.
685:.
183:e
176:t
169:v
20:)
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