- Siege of Ōta Castle
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Siege of Ōta Castle
partof=theSengoku period
caption=
date=1585
place=Ōta Castle ,Kii Province ,Japan
result=Siege succeeds;Toyotomi victory
combatant1= forces ofToyotomi Hideyoshi
combatant2= Castle garrisonSaiga Ikki
commander1=Toyotomi Hideyoshi
commander2=Ōta Munemasa
strength1=
strength2=
casualties1=
casualties2=The
1585 nihongo|siege of Ōta Castle|太田城の戦い|Ōta Jō no Tatakai was one of a series of assaults made byToyotomi Hideyoshi against theIkkō-ikki religious zealots towards the end of Japan'sSengoku period . This battle followed thesiege of Negoro-ji , in which Hideyoshi's forces burnt a temple complex to the ground; a number of theSaiga Ikki zealots escaped to nearbyŌta Castle , which was held byŌta Munemasa .Due to the topography of the area, Hideyoshi determined that he could not easily burn this fortress as he had the
Negoro-ji ; he decided to instead use flood tactics, as he had three years earlier in thesiege of Takamatsu . The presence of the Ikki zealots was already straining Ōta's supplies of food and other resources even before the siege began. With the construction of a palisade and series of dikes roughly 300 meters from the castle, Hideyoshi began the process of isolating the castle from supplies, and flooding it, a process bolstered by heavy rains.At one point, part of the dike gave out, resulting in the drowning deaths of several of Hideyoshi's men. However, by the 22nd day of the fourth lunar month, the garrison could hold out no longer and surrendered; fifty samurai committed
seppuku . As Hideyoshi took over the castle, he ordered all those from samurai families killed, while peasants were simply disarmed of all weapons, and sent back to their lords' fields.References
*Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.
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