Yamanaka Shikanosuke (Yukimori)
1545-1578
The Yamanaka were retainers of the Amako who had assisted the Amako in regaining Gassan-Toda castle
in 1486.
Yukimori was the second son of Yamanaka Mikawa no Kami Mitsuyuki (1519?-1546). His mother issued from the
Tachihara family. A natural fighter
who had taken his first head at the age of 13, Yamanaka had been born during the
harvest moon and even prior to the events of 1566 allegedly thought of himself as a child
of the moon.
By 1563, Môri
Motonari had penetrated the borders of Izumo and was besieging the
strategically vital Shiraga Castle. Yukimori was dispatched in relief
with 200 horsemen and while he failed to lift the siege, he did distinguish
himself for bravery. Further displays of his martial abilities would come in
1565, when the Môri surrounded Gassan-Toda, the Amako's headquarters.
During the siege, Yamanaka's talents became well known even among the Môri, and
a certain Shinagawa Daisen challenged him to a one-on-one duel. Such a request
was actually quite unusual by this time, and both opposing daimyo agreed,
perhaps in the hopes of encouraging their respective armies. The site chosen for
the fight was an island of land in the middle of the Toda River, which ran past
the Amako stronghold. At this point it should be mentioned that the 'shika' in
Yamanaka's honorific title, 'Shikanosuke', can be read as deer, and Yamanaka
accordingly wore a helmet adorned with deer horns. Prior to their duel,
Shinagawa poked fun at him by changing his own name to Taraki Ôkaminosuke, which
essentially meant that when Yamanaka (the deer/shika) had his horns down
(while eating the tara plant), Shinagawa (the wolf/ôkami) would kill him.
In the event, Shikanosuke proved the better warrior. Under the attentive gaze of
both armies, Yamanaka grappled with his foe and killed him with a knife. Cutting
his head off, he shouted, "The deer has killed the wolf!"
Yamanaka's display of skill was not enough to save Gassan-Toda, which
surrendered the following year. Yoshihisa was sent into exile and the Amako
lands absorbed by the Môri. For Yamanaka, however, the war wasn't over yet.
Determined to fight on to restore the Amako, he made a famous vow before the new
moon, declaring that he would gladly accept all of the 'seven troubles and eight
pains' if it would bring relief to the Amako.
To this end, Yamanaka managed to convince Amako Katsuhisa (d.1578), Amako Haruhisa's first
cousin, to abandon his monkish habit and return to lay life. Together, the two
men spent some years engaged in minor harassing operations against the Môri.
Izumo was presently under the control of Kikkawa Motoharu (one of the by-now
late Motonari's sons) and it was with this talented general that Yamanaka butted
heads with.
In 1577 Oda
Nobunaga began a campaign against the Môri, presenting what seemed a golden
opportunity for Katsuhisa and Yamanaka. In 1578 the two managed to secure the
somewhat disinterested support of Nobunaga and were allowed to join Hashiba [Toyotomi]
Hideyoshi's campaign in Harima. Around the same time Hideyoshi captured
Kozuki Castle from the Bessho and almost immediately lost it to the Ukita
(allies of the Môri). Yamanaka was incorporated into the effort to retake
Kozuki, and helped defeat Ukita Naoie when he came
from Bizen in relief. Once Kozuki was securely in Oda hands, Hideyoshi turned it
over to the Amako.
Unfortunately, a Môri army of 30,000 had just arrived from the western
provinces, and this drew up around Kozuki, no doubt tempted both by Kozuki's
strategic situation and the presence of Amako. Hideyoshi was presently involved
with the siege of Miki Castle but dispatched part of his army in relief, an
operation he immediately curtailed when Nobunaga sent word to abandon Kozuki to
its fate.
Vastly outnumbered and forsaken by their allies, the Amako gave in. Katsuhisa
committed suicide but Yamanaka was taken alive and was offered the grant of a
small fief in the far-western provinces. Yamanaka actually accepted the fief but
his old enemy Kikkawa Motoharu was taking no chances and arranged for his murder
at Takahashi in Bitchu Province.
A brave warrior reknowned for his skill in arms, Yamanaka is sometimes seen
as a 16th Century Kusunoki Masashige in
terms of his qualities of loyalty and devotion. His surrender at Kozuki
tarnished his legacy slightly, but takes little away from the story of the
'samurai of the crescent moon".