Siege of Terabe
forces of Imagawa Yoshimoto
forces of Oda Nobunaga
Sakai Tadatsugu
Ishikawa Kazumasa
Koriki Kiyonaga
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- Akatsuka
- Kiyosu
- Muraki
- Inō
- Nagara river
- Ukino
- Terabe
- Marune
- Okehazama
- Inabayama Castle
- Chōkō-ji
- Kanegasaki
- Anegawa
- Ishiyama Hongan-ji
- Mount Hiei
- Nagashima
- Mikatagahara
- Hikida Castle
- Odani Castle
- Ichijōdani Castle
- Itami
- Nagashino
- Mitsuji
- Kizugawaguchi
- Shigisan
- Tedorigawa
- Takatenjin
- Tottori
- Hijiyama
- Takatō
- Tenmokuzan
- Uozu
- Honnō-ji
The siege of Terabe Castle took place in 1558 in feudal Japan. Terabe Castle was a possession of the Ogasawara clan of Mikawa Province. The Siege of Terabe Castle was Matsudaira Motoyasu's first battle, who would later change his name to Tokugawa Ieyasu.
History
The castle was built on the north shore of Mikawa Bay, in what is now called Hazu, in the city of Nishio, Aichi Prefecture. In 1558, Suzuki Shigeteru(or Suzuki Shigetatsu), lord of Terabe Castle, defected from the Imagawa in favor of an alliance with Oda Nobunaga. The Imagawa responded by sending an army under the command of Matsudaira Motoyasu, a young vassal of Imagawa Yoshimoto which would later be known as the Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu. Terabe Castle was the first of a series of battles waged against the Oda clan.
Motoyasu's forces attacked Terabe Castle, but were driven off by reinforcements sent by Oda Nobunaga.[1] Motoyasu then continued his campaign against other Oda clan possessions.
References
- ^ Turnbull, Stephen (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook. Cassell & Co. p. 215. ISBN 1854095234.
- This article incorporates text from OpenHistory.
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