Battle Of Mikatagahara

The Battle of Mikatagahara (三方ヶ原の戦い Mikatagahara-no-tatakai) was fought in 1572 in Japan. Takeda Shingen was headed for Tokugawa Ieyasu's castle at Hamamatsu. Among his men were Yamagata Masakage and Baba Nobuharu. Ieyasu took about 11,000 men (3,000 of them Oda Nobunaga's troops) out to meet Shingen in battle. Shingen had as many as 30,000 men. Shingen defeated Ieyasu but bad weather and Tokugawa cunning prevented him from following up on the victory. The cunning part is this: Ieyasu managed to retreat into his castle, but ordered the gates left open and bonfires lit, to help his scattered troops to find their way back. Sakai Tadatsugu, in the castle, even went so far as to beat on a drum. In addition to helping morale, these efforts convinced Masakage and Nobuharu -- pursuing the retreating Tokugawa forces -- that there must be some trick. Instead of attacking the wide open castle, they camped outside for the night. The following day, the Takeda army left. Mikatagahara

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
stephen roche
goodwill industries
ernie banks
saint rita of cascia
old granny sweat weed
easter seals
trematoda
lingua franca nova
xochicalco
battle of fallen timbers
christmas seal
treaty of greenville
thomson
valtion teknillinen tutkimuskeskus
pool malebo
brother bear
list of chefs
mobbing
list of canadian military operations
villa san michele
juan gabriel
california state university, chico
yuji naka
san nicolas island
battle of mikagehama
1791 in music
mikawa province
siege of miki
individualist feminism
mimasaka province
woolly flying squirrel
battle of mimasetoge
drc
seminal vesicle
dhaulagiri
battle of anegawa
center for american progress
john podesta
mizuno nobumoto
mizuno tadashige
mori clan
san juan de ula
prince morikuni
prince morinaga