Siege of Odani Castle

1573 siege in Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1573 siege of Odani Castle (小谷城の戦い, Odani-jō no Tatakai) was the last stand of the Azai clan, one of Oda Nobunaga's chief opponents.[1] and the first battle of Oda Nobutada.

Quick Facts Date, Location ...
Siege of Odani
Part of the Sengoku period
DateOctober, 1573
Location
Result
Belligerents
forces of Oda Nobunaga forces of Azai Nagamasa
Commanders and leaders
Oda Nobunaga
Oda Nobutada
Gamō Ujisato
Isono Kazumasa
Miyabe Keijun
Azai Nagamasa 
Akao Kiyotsuna 
Kaihō Tsunachika 
Amenomori Kiyosada
Atsuji Sadayuki
Close

Prelude

In September, 1573, Oda Nobunaga defeated the Asakura clan at the siege of Ichijodani Castle. Later, the Oda forces returned to northern Ōmi, he defeated Isono Kazumasa, took Sawayama Castle and on October, 1573, Nobunaga began attacking Odani Castle, devastating the Azai clan.

Siege

Nobunaga took Odani Castle from Azai Nagamasa, who, left with no other option, committed seppuku along with his father. Azai knew from the beginning that he would lose the battle, so he gave his wife Oichi (Nobunaga's sister), and their three daughters back to Nobunaga, saving them from death.[2] Two of Nagamasa's daughters would later marry into powerful families. Their escape from the besieged castle became a fairly common sentimental scene in traditional Japanese art.

Aftermath

Nagamasa suffered much the same fate as his comrade-in-arms Asakura Yoshikage, whose castle at Oda Nobunaga's siege of Ichijodani Castle was set aflame and destroyed.[1]

The battle has been featured in the game Samurai Warriors 2. In the game, however, both the Azai and Asakura clans are destroyed during the Odani siege. Historically, the Asakura clan was destroyed before the Azai at the Battle of Ichijodani.

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.