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| * [[Takeda Shingen]] (28,000) vs. [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] (11,000, including 3,000 Oda troops) | | * [[Takeda Shingen]] (28,000) vs. [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] (11,000, including 3,000 Oda troops) |
| ** ''Date: 6 January [[1573]]'' | | ** ''Date: 6 January [[1573]]'' |
− | ** ''Location: [[Totomi Province]]'' | + | ** ''Location: [[Totomi province]]'' |
| ** ''Battle'' | | ** ''Battle'' |
| ** ''KIA: (Tokugawa) [[Natsume Yoshinobu]], (Oda) [[Hiraide Norihide]]'' | | ** ''KIA: (Tokugawa) [[Natsume Yoshinobu]], (Oda) [[Hiraide Norihide]]'' |
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− | As part of an ongoing effort to dominate Totomi, Takeda Shingen led an army south from [[Shinano Province|Shinano]] and captured [[Futamata Castle|Futamata]]. A few months later he returned to Futamata and used it as a base in a move against [[Hamamatsu Castle|Hamamatsu]], Tokugawa Ieyasu's headquarters. Tokugawa Ieyasu, reinforced by troops sent by [[Oda Nobunaga]], rashly marched out to challenge the Takeda army on the Mikata Plain (Mikata ga hara). Shingen ordered a frontal assault that quickly broke the Oda contingent and allowed for Takeda horsemen to begin circling around the Tokugawa flanks. Ieyasu signaled a retreat and barely managed to make it back to Hamamatsu alive. He survived the event only due to Takeda reluctance to become involved in a siege. This battle is often recorded as the opening move of a Takeda advance on Kyoto, but it would appear that Shingen's primary goal was to weaken Ieyasu for local advantage. | + | As part of an ongoing effort to dominate Totomi, Takeda Shingen led an army south from [[Shinano province|Shinano]] and captured [[Futamata Castle|Futamata]]. A few months later he returned to Futamata and used it as a base in a move against [[Hamamatsu Castle|Hamamatsu]], Tokugawa Ieyasu's headquarters. Tokugawa Ieyasu, reinforced by troops sent by [[Oda Nobunaga]], rashly marched out to challenge the Takeda army on the Mikata Plain (Mikata ga hara). Shingen ordered a frontal assault that quickly broke the Oda contingent and allowed for Takeda horsemen to begin circling around the Tokugawa flanks. Ieyasu signaled a retreat and barely managed to make it back to Hamamatsu alive. He survived the event only due to Takeda reluctance to become involved in a siege. This battle is often recorded as the opening move of a Takeda advance on Kyoto, but it would appear that Shingen's primary goal was to weaken Ieyasu for local advantage. |
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| [[Category:Battles|Mikatagahara]] | | [[Category:Battles|Mikatagahara]] |
| [[Category:Sengoku Period|Mikatagahara]] | | [[Category:Sengoku Period|Mikatagahara]] |