DURING THE 16TH CENTURY, JAPAN UNDERWENT A MILITARY REVOLUTION,
CHARACTERIZED BY THE DEPLOYMENT OF LARGE ARMIES, THE INTRODUCTION OF
FIREARMS AND AN EVENTUAL SHIFT TOWARDS FIGHTING ON FOOT.
This study encapsulates these great changes through an exploration of
the experience on the ground at three key battles, Uedahara (1548),
Mikata ga Hara (1573) and Nagashino (1575), in which two very
different types of warrior were pitted against each other. On one side
were samurai, the elite aristocratic knights whose status was
proclaimed by the possession and use of a horse. On the other side
were the foot soldiers known as ashigaru, lower-class warriors who
were initially attendants to the samurai but who joined the armies in
increasing numbers, attracted by loot and glory. These two types of
warrior battled for dominance across the period, changing and adapting
their tactics as time went on.
In this book, the development of the conflicts between samurai and
ashigaru is explored across three key battles, where highly trained
elite mounted samurai of the Takeda clan faced ashigaru at very
different stages in their development. The profound and irreversible
changes that took place as the conflicts progressed are analysed in
detail, culminating in the eventual incorporation of the ashigaru as
the lowest ranks of the samurai class in within the standing army of
Tokugawa Japan.
Les mer
Japan 1543–75
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472832443
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter