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− | * ''Date: March [[1574]]'' | + | * [[Takeda Katsuyori]] Vs. [[Oda Nobunaga]] |
− | * ''Location: [[Mino Province]]'' | + | ** ''Date: March [[1574]]'' |
− | * ''Castle Siege'' | + | ** ''Location: [[Mino province]]'' |
| + | ** ''Castle Siege'' |
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| + | Despite the death of [[Takeda Shingen]] in [[1573]], the Takeda, now led by Katsuyori, continued to make gains against the Oda and Tokugawa. In March 1574 Katsuyori led an army into Mino Province and surrounded [[Akechi castle]]. Nobunaga hastily dispatched a relief force under his eldest son Nobutada and [[Ikeda Nobuteru]] but this arrived too late: Akechi's commander had already surrendered. Later that year, Katsuyori would score another victory by taking [[Takatenjin castle]] in [[Totomi province]]. This would be the Takeda's high-water mark, which would recede following the [[Battle of Nagashino]] in [[1575]]. |
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− | [[Takeda Katsuyori]] Vs. [[Oda Nobunaga]]
| + | [[Category:Battles|Akechi]] |
− | | + | [[Category:Sengoku Period|Akechi]] |
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− | Despite the death of [[Takeda Shingen]] in [[1573]], the Takeda, now led by Katsuyori, continued to make gains against the Oda and Tokugawa. In March 1574 Katsuyori led an army into Mino Province and surrounded [[Akechi Castle]]. Nobunaga hastily dispatched a relief force under his eldest son Nobutada and [[Ikeda Nobuteru]] but this arrived too late: Akechi's commander had already surrendered. Later that year, Katsuyori would score another victory by taking [[Takatenjin Castle]] in [[Totomi Province]]. This would be the Takeda's high-water mark, which would recede following the [[Battle of Nagashino]] in [[1575]].
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− | [[Category:Battles]] | |
− | [[Category:Sengoku Period]] | |