Battle of Mimigawa
The Battle of Mimigawa was a battle, fought in Japan, between the Ōtomo clan and the Shimazu clan in 1578. The Ōtomo force was led by Sorin's brother-in-law Tawara Chikataka, while the Shimazu clan was led by Shimazu Yoshihisa. The Shimazu had been advancing north from their Satsuma Province, when Ōtomo Sōrin (retired daimyō) and his heir Yoshimune, moved south to confront them in May. The Christian Ōtomo army destroyed Buddhist and Shinto religious buildings along the way as they crossed the Mimigawa and laid siege to Takajo Castle on 20 October, with its 500 men led by Yamada Arinobu. The Ōtomo set up their Portuguese cannon, kunikuzuri or "destroyer of provinces", across the Kiribaragawa. The castle was soon reinforced by 1000 men under Yoshihisa's younger brother, Shimazu Iehisa. Shimazu Toshihisa was able to ambush some Ōtomo troops and follow the survivors to their headquarters at Matsuyama.[1]
Battle of Mimigawa | |||||||
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Part of Sengoku period | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Shimazu clan | Ōtomo clan | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Shimazu Yoshihisa Shimazu Yoshihiro Shimazu Toshihisa Shimazu Iehisa Shimazu Tadahira Shimazu Tadamune Yamada Arinobu |
Ōtomo Sōrin Ōtomo Yoshimune Tawara Chikataka Tagita Shigekane † Saeki Karenori † Yoshioka Akioki Kamachi Akimori † | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
30,000[1] | 50,000[1] |
Yoshihisa had a dream the night before the battle, which he turned into a poem, and the Shimazu considered a good omen:
The enemy defeated host
Is as the maple leaves of autumn,
Floating on the water
Of the Takuta stream[1]
The Shimazu used their favorite decoy tactic, used 8 times from 1527 to 1600. In the center of their army as decoy was Shimazu Yoshihiro, with Shimazu Tadahira and Shimazu Tadamune on his flanks, and Shimazu Yoshihisa in reserve. The Ōtomo army in the center, led by Tagita Shigekane and Saeki Korenori, were led on by the Shimazu false retreat, across the Takajogawa, into the Shimazu trap. Shimazu Iehisa and Yamada Arinobu sallied from Takajo castle and attacked the Otomo army from the rear. Tawara Chikataka fled while Tagita, Saeki and Tsunokuma were killed. The bodies of the Otomo army littered the 25 km back to the Mimigawa in their retreat and pursuit by the Shimazu army.[1]
Fabian Fucan used the battle to warn other daimyōs not to abandon the Buddhist religion.[1]
References
- Turnbull, Stephen (2000). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & C0. pp. 230, 272–275. ISBN 1854095234.