Siege of Kaminoyama
Siege of Kaminoyama |
Part of the Sekigahara Campaign |
Date |
1600 |
Location |
Kaminoyama, Yamagata province |
Result |
Tokugawa victory |
Territorial
changes |
Kaminoyama falls to the Tokugawa |
|
Belligerents |
Tokugawa support forces |
Mogami clan garrison |
Commanders and leaders |
Honmura Chikamori, Yokota Munetoshi |
Satomi Minbu |
The siege of Kaminoyama took place in 1600, at the end of Japan's Sengoku period. It was one of many battles making up the Sekigahara Campaign, in which Tokugawa Ieyasu eliminated the last opposition to his domination of the Japanese islands.
Honmura Chikamori and Yokota Munetoshi, Tokugawa commanders under Naoe Kanetsugu, led 4,000 men against the castle of Kaminoyama in Yamagata province while Naoe led another division towards the province. Kaminoyama was held by Satomi Minbu, a retainer of the Mogami clan. Honmura was killed in the fighting, but in the end the castle fell to the Tokugawa forces.
References
- Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.