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91 bytes removed ,  14:50, 11 October 2013
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oops. there is another Awa
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==Aftermath==
 
==Aftermath==
Yoshimori lost his eldest son [[Wada Yoshinao]] to the arrows of [[Iguma Shideshige]], and was later killed himself, along with three of his other sons, by [[Edo Yoshinori]]. Asahina Yoshihide managed to make it back to the beach, meanwhile, along with roughly 500 men, who boarded boats and headed for [[Awa province]].<ref>Friday writes simply "Awa." It is unclear whether this refers to Awa province, on [[Shikoku]], or somewhere else.</ref> A number of other Wada generals attempted to flee overland. Meanwhile, Yoshitoki placed the heads of Yoshimori and a number of other prominent casualties on pikes, and held a victory party which is said to have lasted two days.
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Yoshimori lost his eldest son [[Wada Yoshinao]] to the arrows of [[Iguma Shideshige]], and was later killed himself, along with three of his other sons, by [[Edo Yoshinori]]. Asahina Yoshihide managed to make it back to the beach, meanwhile, along with roughly 500 men, who boarded boats and headed for the nearby [[Awa province (Honshu)|Awa province]]. A number of other Wada generals attempted to flee overland. Meanwhile, Yoshitoki placed the heads of Yoshimori and a number of other prominent casualties on pikes, and held a victory party which is said to have lasted two days.
    
Reports following the conflict give the names of 142 of Wada's followers who were killed, and indicate that casualties on the Wada side also included many more lesser retainers, whose names are not given. Twenty-eight Wada followers were captured alive, while only fifty names appear as casualties on the Hôjô side, along with an indication that over a thousand lesser shogunate warriors were wounded. Roughly twenty-five properties and titles were confiscated from the [[Wada clan]] and their allies by the Hôjô and redistributed to Yoshitoki and his men.
 
Reports following the conflict give the names of 142 of Wada's followers who were killed, and indicate that casualties on the Wada side also included many more lesser retainers, whose names are not given. Twenty-eight Wada followers were captured alive, while only fifty names appear as casualties on the Hôjô side, along with an indication that over a thousand lesser shogunate warriors were wounded. Roughly twenty-five properties and titles were confiscated from the [[Wada clan]] and their allies by the Hôjô and redistributed to Yoshitoki and his men.
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