Uesugi Kenshin
(Nagao Kagetora)
1530 - 1578
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Uesugi Kenshin
was born in February 1530 at Kasugayama in Echigo Province, the
4th son of Nagao Tamekage, a powerful warlord who was first an
enemy and then a nominal vassal of the Yamaouchi-Uesugi. A leader of some
note, Tamekage had in his youth defeated Uesugi Sadanori in 1509 at the
Battle of Ichiburi. He had then been besieged at Nishihama (Etchû
Province) by Uesugi Funayoshi and emerged victorious, killing Funayoshi in
the process. In later years, Tamekage found himself confronted both with
rebellious kokujin within Echigo and the growing power of the
Ikko-ikki in the Hokuriku. In 1530-31 a power struggle took place within
the so-called ‘Peasant’s province’ of Kaga that saw the nominal Shugo
family, the Togashi, expelled once and for all and the Honganji assume the
dominant political position. From this point on the Ikko became more
aggressive in their relations with neighboring daimyo, and those who
opposed the Honganji were liable to suffer internal difficulties in the
form of riots or even armed attacks. This was nowhere more the case then
in Echigo, prompting Nagao Tamekage in 1536 to raise an army and march
westward, possibly in the hopes of reaching Kaga. A fierce battle took
place at Sendanno in Etchu that left Tamekage dead and his army
defeated.1 It was one of the Kaga Ikko’s greatest triumphs and
disastrous to the stability of Echigo. Leadership of the Nagao fell to
Tamekage’s eldest son, Harukage, whose cause was forwarded by a
number of important Nagao retainers. A power struggle ensued, in the
course of which another of Tamekage’s sons, Kageyasu, was killed. The
youngest son was spirited away to the Rizen-ji, where he studied
from the age of 7 to 14. When the boy reached 14, he was approached by Usami
Sadamitsu2 and others, who urged him to make a claim for
leadership of the Nagao family. Evidently, Harukage was an unpopular
figure who had failed to garner the loyalty of the province’s various and
powerful kokujin families. Internal strife soon threatened to tear
the province apart. Kagetora, we are told, at first hesitated to war on his brother, but in
the end was convinced to fight for the good of Echigo. Kagetora and Usami
went on to win a series of engagements against Harukage’s supporters that
led to Kagetora’s victory in 1547. Harukage’s fate is not certain, though
he likely committed suicide.3 Now the head of the Nagao family, Kagetora turned to the difficult
business of cementing his control over Echigo, a time-consuming process
given that Echigo was noted for the fiercely-independent nature of it’s
people. In fact, his efforts were only beginning to bear fruit when word
came of Takeda
(Shingen) Harunobu’s advances in northern Shinano. Two defeated
Shinano warlords, Ogasawara Nagatoki (1519-1583) and Murakami Yoshikiyo
(1510-1573), came to Echigo around 1553 and asked for assistance against
the encroaching Takeda clan, which in the space of ten years had absorbed
much of Shinano. Kagetora was probably alarmed by the bellicose Takeda’s
proximity to the borders of Echigo, and agreed to assist the two
refugees.4 He got his first chance in 1553. In June Takeda marched up and onto the
Kawanakajima, a
stretch of flat land that was so-named as it was lapped on three sides by
the waters of the Sai and Chikuma rivers. Kagetora responded by leading an
army down from Echigo and the two warlords fought a brief skirmish, though
as each man already had a reputation for cunning, caution won out. Takeda
pulled back but returned in November.5 This time, a sharper
engagement was fought that left a number of Takeda’s generals
dead.6 Kenshin and Shingen would face one another at
Kawanakajima in five ‘official’ confrontations (1553, 1555, 1557, 1561,
and 1564), while putting in an appearance on at least five other years
(according to one theory). Some time prior to these first tentative struggles, in 1551, Kagetora
had received Uesugi Norimasa (1522?-1579), his nominal overlord. Norimasa, head of the Yamanouchi branch of the Uesugi, had suffered as a result of the Hôjô family's advances in the Kanto. Losing Hirai Castle in Kozuke, he had been forced to seek refuge in
Echigo. Kagetora readily agreed to shelter Norimasa but was not immediatly able to attempt to restore him in Kozuke.
For some time Kenshin had involved himself in the goings-on in
neighboring Etchû Province, where the Jinbo and Shiina clans had been
feuding since around 1550. Kenshin had at first acted as a mediator
between the two but in 1560 he entered the fight on the side of the Shiina
and took Toyama Castle from the Jinbo in 3rd month of 1560. Later, Kenshin would
turn on the Shiina when it seemed as if they were becoming too friendly
with the Takeda; the Shiina's Matsukura castle was taken in 1575 and
Kenshin at that point became the effective ruler of Etchû Province. The
Jinbo and Shiina were both reduced to vassal houses. After returning from the Siege of Odawara Castle, Kenshin, the newly-minted Kanto Kanrei, immediatly began planning another campaign, this one aimed at Shinano Province. Takeda Shingen’s
northernmost fort was Kaizu, presently garrisoned by Kosaka
Masanobu and a token force of cavalry. Kenshin set out with some 13,00 men under his command, intending apparently to provoke a major battle with Shingen. Here one must pause to consider that our only real source for the course of the following campaign is the Koyo Gunkan, a rambling and at times disjointed record of the Takeda family under Shingen. This was composed by Takeda partisans (Kosaka Masanobu himself is sometimes given as the composer but the actual author appears to have been Obata Kagenori, 1570-1644) and its accuracy is often dubious. But that having been said, the battle the Koyo Gunkan describes is the one imprinted in the minds of generations of Japanese.
It was decided that the Takeda army, now numbering some 20,000 men,
would be split into two parts. 8,000 men would go to the Hachiman Plain
under cover of darkness while the other 12,000 (under Kosaka and Baba Nobufusa)
would attack Saijoyama. Whether or not Kosaka and Baba succeded, Kenshin
was likely to withdraw north - and right into the trap Shingen would have
set for him. Accordingly, the two forces departed at night - although not
in the secrecy the plan required. Kenshin had learned of the scheme
somehow, and resolved to turn Shingen’s planning against him. Kenshin
marched his own army off Saijo and crossed the Chikuma as quietly as
humanly possible.7 Once on the other side of the river, he dispatched 1,000 men under Naoe
Kanetsugu north with the supply train while leaving 2,000 more under
Amakasu Kagemochi at the Amenomiya Ford to stall the Takeda’s attack force
once they discovered Saijo was empty. The other 10,000 Kenshin put into
formation and waited for the dawn. At first light, Kenshin’s army smashed into the Takeda ranks, which
quickly buckled under the force of the attack. Kenshin’s vanguard was
headed by Kakizaki
Kageie, whose cavalry struck the center of Shingen’s formation and
killed Takeda Nobushige, Shingen’s brother. According to the Koyo
Gunkan Kenshin employed a ‘Rolling wheel’ formation, which allowed him
to withdraw weary or damaged units from the fight without reducing the
pressure on the enemy. Very soon Shingen had suffered the wounding of his
son Yoshinobu, and the suicide of his veteran commander Yamamoto Kansuke.
At this point, Kenshin led a charge himself that carried the Uesugi
banners into the heart of the Takeda formation. According to legend,
Shingen and Kenshin himself traded blows, with the former fending off the
latter’s sword cuts with his iron war fan before a retainer drove Kenshin
back. Actually, neither men may have been thus at jeopardy. Shingen's role in the duel is thought to have been played by one of his doubles, or kagemusha, possibly his younger brother, Takeda Nobukada. Kenshin may also have not been the one to trade blows, that honor instead going to a certain Ayukawa (Ayukawa Kiyonaga or Morinaga?) By now Baba and Kosaka had discovered that Saijo was empty and rushed
down to Amenomiya. After defeating Amakasu in a fiercely contested
crossing, the Takeda force moved on to fall on the Uesugi army from
behind. Though Kenshin had come very close to decisively defeating
Shingen, he had missed his chance and was forced to retreat. Baba and
Kosaka’s horsemen made cruel work of any stragglers they came across, and
it is assumed that quite a few Uesugi men drowned in the Saigawa in the
retreat. The Koyo Gunkan states that 3,117 of Kenshin’s men had
been killed, and the Takeda certainly suffered comparably if not much worse.8 Here is where we may begin to make some educated assumptions about the course of the actual battle. Given the Takeda's losses in generals, the first part of the battle may well have gone as the Koyo Gunkan describes. However, despite supposedly receiving over 3,000 dead, the fact that no major Uesugi general was killed is interesting. Also, unlike Kenshin, Shingen did not issue any battle citations following the engagement, which he most certainly would have in the aftermath of such a great battle. Finally, Kenshin was campaigning in faraway Shimosa Province only a MONTH after the supposedly bloody 'stalemate' of Kawanakajima. Postulating a clear Uesugi victory does not seem at all unreasonable; the best the author of the Koyo Gunkan could say for the Takeda was that a draw had been achieved, despite mentioning that Shingen led a victory cheer after the battle.
Kenshin and Shingen would face each other again, at Kawanakajima (1564)
and in a number of stand-offs in Kozuke as the latter moved to scarf up
castles there in the early 1560’s. Yet the enemy who most absorbed
Kenshin’s attention for the rest of his life was the Hôjô clan. Kenshin
evidently took his Kanto-Kanrei title seriously, and resolved to
restore the Kanto to the Uesugi. In almost every year of the 1560’s
(starting, as mentioned, almost immediatly after the 4th Battle of Kawanakajima), he
raided the Hôjô’s lands and fought for various castles in Kôzuke, Musashi,
and Shimosa - although without lasting effect. At the same time, the
Uesugi came into conflict with the Ashina of Mutsu. It should be mentioned here that as much as Kenshin may have liked to
fight, he also worked hard to increase the economic strength of Echigo. He
pursued a number of initiatives designed to stimulate trade, including
making the most of Echigo’s lucrative hemp trade, building Kasugayama
Castle (which acted as his headquarters and a prosperous castle town) and
in 1564 revitalizing the seaport of Kashiwazaki. Like many daimyo, Kenshin
offered merchants special privileges, including tax reductions, to ectice
them to do business in his domain. By 1576 Kenshin had finally begun to look westward. In 1565 Ashikaga Yoshiaki
had asked him to come to Kyoto and drive out Shogun Yoshiteru’s murderers,
a request Kenshin had been in no position to fulfill in those days. Now,
with both Takeda Shingen and Hôjô Ujiyasu dead,
Kenshin could consider an expansion in the direction of the capital. At
this time, the capital and all the land around it was controlled by Oda Nobunaga, the
rising ‘super-daimyô’ who had been the one to install Ashikaga Yoshiaki
into the shogunate in 1568. Afterwards, Nobunaga had courted Kenshin’s
favor with a series of gifts and letters that resulted in a pact against
Takeda Shingen. Among the gifts Nobunaga sent to Kenshin were a pair of
screens depicting life in Kyoto, known as the Rakuchû rakugai zu,
which would later assist historians in gathering a sense of life in the
capital at the time. In 1577 one of the lords of Noto, Hatakeyama Yoshinori, was overthrown
and killed by one of his retainers, Chō Shigetsura, apparently after the
latter had come into some sort of agreement with Oda Nobunaga. Feuding
broke out among the former members of the Hatakeyama and Kenshin was quick
to take advantage of the situation. He invaded Noto, captured the home of
the new head of the Hatakeyama (Yoshitaka), Nanao, and besieged Chō in
Anamizu Castle. Shigetsura was killed, and after securing the
loyalty of the other Noto warriors, Kenshin moved into Kaga. Nobunaga
responded to this activity by leading reinforcements up to Echizen, where
he joined forces with his generals Shibata Katsuie
and Maeda Toshiie. All told, Nobunaga may have had as many as 50,000 men
on hand to oppose Kenshin, whose own army counted about 30,000
warriors.10 Kenshin and Nobunaga met at the Tedorigawa in Kaga,
with the lord of Echigo demonstrating just how much he had learned from
all those fights with Shingen. Kenshin based his army at Matsuo Castle,
across from which Nobunaga massed his forces. Suspecting that Nobunaga was
itching for a fight and probably meant to attack at dawn, Kenshin
dispatched a small force to move further up the river (while making a show
if it). Nobunaga took note of the movements and believed that Kenshin was
splitting his forces-a perfect opportunity for an attack; in the moonlight
Nobunaga threw his forces across the river and against Matsuo. Kenshin’s
forward units absorbed the charge, and in the end Nobunaga’s army was
defeated. Nobunaga pulled his army back and took the bulk of it back to
Ômi, while Kenshin, after building a few forts in Kaga, returned to
Echigo. During the winter of 1577-78, Kenshin declared his intentions to
continue fighting Nobunaga again and organized for an impressive army to
assemble in the spring. Even as he readied for a great campaign (whether against Oda or HOJO), however,
he was in poor health, reportedly barely able to eat solid food and
walking with a pronounced limp. On 9 April he had a seizure of some sort
while using his lavatory and died four days later, at the age of 48. The timeliness of Kenshin’s death for the Oda gave rise to rumors of
assassination. One popular albeit unlikely story has Kenshin being stabbed
from below by an assassin who had hid himself in Kenshin’s lavatory some
days before. In fact, many Japanese scholars believe that Kenshin died of
illness - perhaps stomach cancer, combined with a lifetime of heavy
drinking.11 Regardless of the manner of Kenshin’s death, the event spelled disaster
for the Uesugi house. Some years prior to his death, Kenshin had adopted
two sons, Kagetora (1552-1579, a son of Hôjô Ujiyasu) and Kagekatsu
(1555-1623, the son of Nagao Masakage, Kenshin’s elder brother). Perhaps
naively, Kenshin had hoped that upon his death, the two would divide up
the Uesugi holdings and rule in cooperation. Needless to say, this ended
up being hardly the case. Kagekatsu, while not an exceptionally skilled
general, was extremely ambitious and a gifted political schemer. He
ultimately succeded in forcing Kagetora to commit suicide in 1579, but not
before the struggle had cost the Uesugi precious time and manpower,
allowing Oda Nobunaga to take Kaga and march as far as Etchu’s borders.
Uesugi Kenshin was one of the most reknowned warlords of the
16th Century, a colorful figure who combined a love of
campaigning with a thirst for learning and a genuine sense of honor.
A devout religious man, Kenshin would never marry nor produce off-spring. Buddhist vows did not, however, prevent him from acquiring a taste for drink, which he consumed in
copious amounts during his lifetime and may well have contributed to his
early demise.
Both Shingen and Hojo Ujiyasu are said to have spoken highly of their rival in
Echigo and he is certainly one of the most beloved figures to emerge from the sengoku period, a sort of Japanese Robert E. Lee. In fact, and like Lee, Kenshin's personal image probably exceeded his actual talent for war. His seemingly endless raids and invasions did not materially enhance the position of his clan in any great way and, in a general sense, he seems to have been destined to play the role of would-be spoiler to other great clans. A man of learning, Kenshin enjoyed poetry and wrote the following piece
in anticipation of his own death in 1578…
Even a life-long prosperity is but one cup of sake;
A life of forty-nine years is passed in a dream;
I know not what life is, nor death.
Year in year out-all but a dream.
Both Heaven and Hell are left behind;
I stand in the moonlit dawn,
Free from clouds of attachment.12 1The victorious enemy commander was a certain
Enami Kazuyori.
2Also known as Usami Sadayuki and sometimes as
Usa Sadayuki.
3Another version of the event has it that
Harukage surrendered to his brother and was treated reasonably well-a
somewhat unlikely but not impossible outcome.
4Ogasawara in fact retired from active life,
content to teach archery-which his clan was well known for. Murakami went
on to serve in many of Uesugi's campaigns, and was counted among his top
retainers.
5Most of our knowledge of the Battles of
Kawanakajima comes from the Koyo Gunkan, a not always accurate
chronicle prepared by a number of Takeda retainers in the 1570's. However,
surviving documents from the Uesugi side seem to confirm at least in
substance the general elements of the events portrayed in the Koyo
Gunkan.
6Most notably Itagaki Nobutaka.
7Anyone who has ever served in the infantry and
been involved in a night maneuver will probably realize just how
impressive Kenshin's movement was.
8Certain western sources state that Kenshin
lost 72 percent of his army in this battle, while Shingen lost 62 percent.
These figures are quite speculative, and no effort has as yet been made to
justify them.
9He had some years before defeated Jinbo
Nagamoto and forced the submission of the Jinbo clan, Lords of
castle.
10If these figures are accurate, then the
following battle would be one of the largest in the Sengoku period up to
this time, with a total of 80,000 men involved.
11See Turnbull's Ninja pg. 54-58 for a detailed
discussion of the events surrounding Kenshin's death, which mentions the
death of Kakizaki Kageie, the spearhead at Kawanakajima, whom Kenshin had
put to death in 1576 on the suspicion of treason.
12Suzuki Zen and Japanese Culture pg. 82.
Sources
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(last updated 11/21/04)