Author: Turnbull, Stephen
Price: $28.27
Category:Asian History
Publication Date:2023-09-25T00:00:01Z
Pages:170
Binding:Paperback
ISBN:10:1804513539
ISBN:13:9781804513538
During the sixteenth century Japan's medieval period was left behind when the samurai experienced a military revolution that involved the introduction of firearms and the mobilization of large armies who fought from stone castles. The history of this violent time is perfectly encapsulated in the campaigns waged by five generations of one outstanding warlord family: the Hōjō of Odawara Castle. In 1487 their founder attacked a wooden stockade using bows and arrows; in 1590 his great-great grandson defended a huge castle using cannon. Successive Hōjō warlords were the contemporaries of famous samurai like Takeda Shingen, Uesugi Kenshin and Oda Nobunaga, whose armies they fought and defeated, but their end came at the hands of Toyotomi Hideyoshi: the "Napoleon of Japan", who defeated the Hōjō in a massive siege of their mighty castle of Odawara This book tells the complete story of a century of warfare for the first time using Japanese sources never before translated. It is spectacularly illustrated with pictures of armor and weapons and uniquely commissioned artwork. Detailed and authoritative accounts of the campaigns show the Hōjō samurai using every trick in the book from sea raiding to ninja attacks. There are also many surprises such as the use of dogs as messengers and revelation that the final siege of Odawara in 1590 was no pushover when the Hōjō dynasty came to its glorious end and their last patriarch committed hara-kiri. Japan and samurai warfare were changed forever.