Oda Nobunaga was a Japanese warrior chieftain who undertook the first stage in the military unification of Japan in the later 16th century after nearly a hundred years of disorder and disunion.
Background
Oda Nobunaga was born on 23 June 1534 in the Owari province of Japan. His childhood name was Kipposhi. His father, Oda Nobuhide, was a warlord and chief of the Oda clan with large land holdings in Owari province. He was the eldest legitimate son of his father and second son of his mother, Tsuchida Gozen. In all, he had 11 brothers and two sisters.
As a child he was known for his bizarre behaviour and given the nickname, ‘Owari no Outsuke’, which meant ‘The Big Fool of Owari’. Even though his father was a clan leader, he was found playing on the streets and took a liking to ‘tanegashima’ (matchlock) firearms at a young age.
Career
From the time of its founding in 1336 the shogunate (military government) of the Ashikaga family exercised at least theoretical military overlordship of medieval Japan. The first great leader of the Ashikaga, Takauji, established his headquarters in Kyoto near the imperial court and attempted to impose shogunate control over as wide an area as possible extending outward from the central provinces of Honshu.
But, as the result of a great struggle among the vassal barons of the shogunate from 1467 to 1477, this hegemony was completely destroyed. Although the shogunate was not abolished, it exercised little more central governance during the next century than the imperial court, which had been largely deprived of its ruling powers by the rise of the provincial military in the 12th century.
The period from 1477 until 1573, when the Ashikaga shogunate was formally terminated, is known in Japanese history as the Age of Provincial Wars. During this time the country was riven by internecine civil strife as warrior bands everywhere fought with one another to establish territorial bases. From this condition of seemingly endless conflict, however, a new group of barons—known as daimyos— ultimately carved out regional domains which they maintained and defended as autonomous "states. " And from about the 1550s the most important of these daimyos began to compete among themselves to reunify the land.
The Oda family held its domain in the region of present-day Nagoya. Oda Nobunaga after succeeding to the family leadership upon the death of his father in 1551, won his first great battle in 1560 against a powerful neighboring daimyo. As a result of this victory, he was able to make alliances that set the stage for a campaign toward Kyoto, the first goal of all would-be unifiers among the daimyos.
Nobunaga entered Kyoto in 1568 after 8 years of hard fighting. He did so with the approval of the Emperor and in the company of an exiled member of the Ashikaga house whom he installed as shogun. But it was, of course, Nobunaga who was now the holder of central military power in the country, and in 1573 he deposed the Shogun, thus bringing about dissolution of the Ashikaga shogunate after some 2 1/2 centuries of tumultuous existence.
Although Nobunaga had established a new hegemony in the central provinces, he still had many enemies to deal with, including both opposing daimyos and the members of certain militant Buddhist sects. In his campaigns against these enemies Nobunaga acted with a ruthlessness that appears to have been considered extreme even in this harsh age. Accounts reveal that he slaughtered thousands without apparent mercy or remorse. Sir George Sansom, the 20th century's most eminent Western scholar of Japan, labeled Nobunaga a "callous brute" who imposed his control over perhaps a third of Japan "at a terrible cost. "
One unusual factor during the period of Nobunaga's rise to power was the presence of Europeans in Japan for the first time. The Portuguese arrived in the early 1540s, and within a few decades both they and the Spanish were actively engaged in trade and Christian missionary work. Later Japanese leaders were to undertake with increasing vigor the suppression of Christianity, and in the 17th century they proscribed it completely. Yet Nobunaga showed no particular animosity toward the foreign religion; indeed, he even gave his approval to the spread of its proselytizing activities. No doubt one of his reasons for doing this was his hatred of those Buddhist sects that actively opposed both him and the Christians.
The introduction of firearms by the Portuguese did not drastically alter methods of warfare in Japan in the late 16th century. This was chiefly because they remained difficult to obtain in any substantial quantity. Nobunaga in particular won some important battles with muskets, but by the end of the century, when these weapons became widely available, unification had been completed and warfare ceased.
It is difficult to assess Nobunaga's qualities as a ruler, because he died before completing the task of military unification and never really had the opportunity to develop permanent governing offices or procedures. He was obliged to concentrate almost entirely on the pursuit of his campaigns of pacification.
Nobunaga did, however, take the time to build a great fortified castle at Azuchi, a short distance to the northeast of Kyoto, in 1576, which he made his headquarters until his death 6 years later. By obliging many of his warrior followers to take up residence near the castle and by providing favorable inducements to commerce, Nobunaga created a flourishing castle town at Azuchi.
One important result of Nobunaga's campaigns was the abolition of barriers of various kinds which had been erected between the daimyo domains, and the consequent freedom of movement and transport that this made possible, at least in the central provinces. Although the new foreign trade with the Europeans was conducted mainly in the westernmost island of Kyushu, most of the luxury goods brought by the Portuguese and Spanish were sent directly to the central provinces, where they were in greatest demand. In the absence of Nobunaga's new hegemony in this region, distribution of these goods would have been immeasurably more difficult.
After establishing control over the central region, Nobunaga launched a major campaign into the western provinces of Honshu, where several powerful and highly independent daimyos had their domains. Nobunaga commissioned two of his leading generals, Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Akechi Mitsuhide, to lead their forces in a two-pronged invasion of the west. It was during the course of this campaign that Hideyoshi first truly demonstrated the strategic and tactical brilliance that was to make him the greatest general in Japanese history.
In 1582 Hideyoshi undertook the siege of a castle at Takamatsu which was held by forces of the Mori family, and he requested reinforcements from Nobunaga. In the course of arranging to meet this request, Nobunaga left Azuchi with a small retinue and went to Kyoto, where he lodged at a temple called the Honnoji. That night Mitsuhide, who had returned from the fighting in the west, attacked the Honnoji. In the struggle that ensued, the temple was set afire and Nobunaga perished in the flames. His body was never found.
Mitsuhide's precise reason for assassinating his over-lord is not known, but one possibility is that he feared he was losing favor with Nobunaga while his chief competitor, Hideyoshi, was rising in Nobunaga's esteem. In any case, Mitsuhide does not appear to have had any carefully considered plan of how to proceed after the assassination. As he hesitated, Hideyoshi concluded a truce with the Takamatsu garrison, marched back at great speed to the central provinces, and destroyed Mitsuhide. In a dramatic sequence of events, Hideyoshi thus emerged as the most powerful figure in the country.
Nobunaga's untimely death at the age of 48 undoubtedly deprived him of a greater place in Japanese history than he actually holds. Hideyoshi and Tokugawa leyasu, who took command of the country after Hideyoshi's death in 1598 and established the great Tokugawa shogunate, are rightfully regarded as the two most significant figures of this heroic age of unification. Yet it should not be forgotten that both were the beneficiaries of the outstanding achievements of Nobunaga.
Achievements
Nobunaga changed the way wars were fought in Japan by integrating the use of long pikes, firearms and castles in prolonged war. He also instituted a specialised warrior class system with ranks related to fighting ability.
Besides being a great warrior he was also a good administrator. He started the system of division of land not as per area, but as per the produce of the land.
He turned over the economy from an agricultural base to a manufacturing base, with castle towns linked by roads to facilitate trade and move of his armies.
He introduced the ‘Rakuichi Rakuza’ system, which was a free market that put an end to the monopoly of a few privileged classes.
As he gained power he took interest in art and culture and built impressive monuments to project his power. The Azuchi Castle on the shores of Lake Biwa is one such example of extravagance.
Oda Nobunaga has been awarded the ‘Senior First Rank’ in Japan’s hereditary titles.
Nobunaga appears frequently within fiction and continues to be portrayed in many other anime, manga, video games, and cinematic films.
Views
Quotations:
"Without destruction there is no creation. .. there is no change. "
"If the Bird does not sing, Kill it. "
Connections
Nobunaga was the eldest legitimate son of Nobuhide, a minor warlord from Owari Province, and Tsuchida Gozen, who was also the mother to three of his brothers (Nobuyuki, Nobukane, and Hidetaka) and two of his sisters (Oinu and Oichi).
Father: Oda Nobuhide (1510–1551)
Mother: Tsuchida Gozen (died 1594)
Brothers:
Oda Nobuhiro (died 1574);
Oda Nobuyuki (1536–1557);
Oda Nobukane (1548–1614);
Oda Nagamasu (1548–1622);
Oda Nobuharu (1549–1570);
Oda Nobutoki (died 1556);
Oda Nobuoki;
Oda Hidetaka (died 1555);
Oda Hidenari;
Oda Nobuteru;
Oda Nagatoshi.
Sisters:
Oichi (1547–1583);
Oinu, married Saji Nobukata later married Hosokawa Nobuyoshi.
Besides military conquests, he brought about an alliance with his potential rivals through the marriage of his daughter to Shingen’s son and a similar relationship between his sister and the first family of Omi Province.
He married Nohime, the daughter of Saito Dosan, as a matter of political convenience. However, he had no children from her and instead had children from his concubines, Kitsuno and Lady Saka. He had a total of 12 sons and 13 daughters, some of whom were adopted.
Sons:
Oda Nobutada (1557–1582);
Oda Nobukatsu (1558–1630);
Oda Nobutaka (1558–1583);
Hashiba Hidekatsu (1567–1585);
Oda Katsunaga (died 1582);
Oda Nobuhide (1571–1597);
Oda Nobutaka later Toyotomi Takajuro (1576–1602) adopted by Toyotomi Hideyoshi;
Oda Nobuyoshi later Toyotomi Musashimori (1573–1615) adopted by Toyotomi Hideyoshi;
Oda Nobusada (1574–1624);
Oda Nobuyoshi (died 1609) adopted by Toyotomi Hideyoshi;
Oda Nagatsugu (died 1600);
Oda Nobumasa (1554–1647, illegitimate child);
Daughters:
Tokuhime (1559–1636), married Matsudaira Nobuyasu;
Fuyuhime (1561–1641), married Gamō Ujisato;
Hideko (died 1632), married Tsutsui Sadatsugu;
Eihime (1574–1623), married Maeda Toshinaga;
Hōonin, married Niwa Nagashige;
Sannomarudono (died 1603), concubine to Toyotomi Hideyoshi, married Nijō Akizane;
Tsuruhime, married Nakagawa Hidemasa;
Oushin, concubine of Saji Kazunari;
Ofuri, married Mizune Tadatane;
Marikoji Mitsufusa's wife;
Tokudaiji Sanehisa's wife;
Adopted:
Toyama Fujin married Takeda Katsuyori;
Ashikaga Yoshiaki.
Father:
Oda Nobuhide
He was a warlord and magistrate of lower Owari Province during the Sengoku period of Japan.
Mother:
Dota Gozen
According to rumors, Dota did not like Nobunaga and instead preferred his well-mannered brother, Nobuyuki.
Spouse:
Nōhime
Her proper name was Kichō, but since she came from Mino Province, she is most commonly referred to as Nōhime ("Lady of Mino"; hime means "lady, princess, woman of noble family"). She was renowned for her beauty and cleverness.
Sister:
Oichi
She was a female historical figure in the late Sengoku period.
adopted son:
Ashikaga Yoshiaki
He was the 15th shogun of the Ashikaga shogunate in Japan who reigned from 1568 to 1573.
Daughter:
Tokuhime
She was born the daughter of Japanese daimyō Oda Nobunaga and later married Matsudaira Nobuyasu, the first son of Tokugawa Ieyasu.
Son:
Oda Nobutada
He was the eldest son of Oda Nobunaga, and a samurai who fought in many battles during the Sengoku period.
Son:
Oda Nobutaka
He was a samurai and member of the Oda clan.
Son:
Oda Katsunaga
He was a Japanese samurai of the Sengoku period through early Azuchi-Momoyama Period, who was the fifth son of Oda Nobunaga.
Son:
Oda Nobukatsu
He was a Japanese samurai of the Azuchi–Momoyama period.
Son:
Hashiba Hidekatsu
He was a Japanese samurai who was the fourth son of the famed feudal warlord Oda Nobunaga and was adopted by Toyotomi Hideyoshi at a young age.
Brother:
Oda Nagamasu
He was a Japanese daimyō who lived from the late Sengoku period through the early Edo period.
Brother:
Oda Nobuharu
He was a Japanese samurai of the Sengoku period, who served the Oda clan.
Brother:
Oda Hidetaka
He was a Sengoku period warrior in 16th century Japan.
Brother:
Oda Nobuyuki
Nobuyuki conspired against his brother Nobunaga with Hayashi Hidesada and Shibata Katsuie.
Brother:
Oda Nobukane
He was a Japanese samurai, the younger brother of the supremely famous warlord, Oda Nobunaga following the Sengoku period of the 16th century.
Brother:
Oda Nobutoki
He was born the sixth son of Oda Nobuhide, a feudal warlord in Owari Province, Japan, during the Sengoku period.