The castle took part in not one but two notable campaigns of the Sengoku period. The first was the [[Komaki-Nagakute]] campaign of 1584, which pitted [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] against [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]. Hideyoshi’s vassal [[Ikeda Nobuteru]], himself a former lord of Inuyama, used his knowledge of the castle’s defenses along with agents on the inside to cross the river and swampland surrounding the castle. Having bypassed this difficult terrain, Nobuteru’s troops overran the defenders (who were being commanded by a Zen priest) and the castle became Hideyoshi’s headquarters for the remainder of the campaign. Afterwards, it was given to Nobuteru and his son [[Ikeda Terumasa|Terumasa]]. The castle subsequently was passed to [[Ishikawa Sadakiyo]] after the [[Siege of Odawara]] in [[1590]]. | The castle took part in not one but two notable campaigns of the Sengoku period. The first was the [[Komaki-Nagakute]] campaign of 1584, which pitted [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] against [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]. Hideyoshi’s vassal [[Ikeda Nobuteru]], himself a former lord of Inuyama, used his knowledge of the castle’s defenses along with agents on the inside to cross the river and swampland surrounding the castle. Having bypassed this difficult terrain, Nobuteru’s troops overran the defenders (who were being commanded by a Zen priest) and the castle became Hideyoshi’s headquarters for the remainder of the campaign. Afterwards, it was given to Nobuteru and his son [[Ikeda Terumasa|Terumasa]]. The castle subsequently was passed to [[Ishikawa Sadakiyo]] after the [[Siege of Odawara]] in [[1590]]. |