Siege of Iwamura Castle
| Siege of Iwamura | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the Sengoku period | |||||||
| 
 | |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| forces of Takeda Shingen | Iwamura castle garrison | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Akiyama Nobutomo | Tōyama Kagetō | ||||||
The siege of Iwamura was a military event which occurred in 1572 in Japan, concurrent with Takeda Shingen's push into Tōtōmi Province and the Battle of Mikatagahara. Akiyama Nobutomo, one of Shingen's "Twenty-Four Generals," set his eye on the great yamashiro (mountain castle) of Iwamura when Tōyama Kagetō, the commander of the castle's garrison, fell ill and died.[1]
Akiyama negotiated the castle's surrender with Tōyama's widow, Lady Otsuya, and took it without any bloodshed. The official keeper of the castle, a seven-year-old lord called Gobōmaru, was taken to the Takeda home province of Kai as a hostage. In accordance with the surrender treaty, Lady Otsuya, who was the aunt of Oda Nobunaga, married Akiyama and she remained the lady of the castle.
References
- ↑ A. Sadler (23 December 2014). Shogun: The Life of Tokugawa Ieyasu. Tuttle Publishing. pp. 97–. ISBN 978-1-4629-1654-2.
- Turnbull, Stephen (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & Co.