Akiyama Nobutomo
Template:Short description Template:Family name hatnote Template:Infobox military person
Template:Nihongo was a samurai during the Sengoku period in Japan. He is known as one of the "Twenty-Four Generals of Takeda Shingen".<ref>Internet Movie Database (IMDb), "Shingen Takeda (Character) from Kagemusha (1980); retrieved 2013-5-17.</ref> Nobutomo also served under Shingen's son, Takeda Katsuyori.
Biography
In 1527, Akiyama Nobutomo was born at Template:Nihongo in Kai province. His father was Akiyama Nobutou, a descendant of Takeda Mitsutomo, and a member of a cadet branch of the Takeda clan. When Nobutomo came of age, he entered into the service of Takeda Shingen, patriarch of the clan and lord of Kai province,<ref name=samurai>Template:Cite book</ref> in the mountainous area of central Japan. In 1547, during the campaign for the Ina district, Nobutomo fought with excellence and was granted a fief in the northern half of Ina, present day Kamiina District in Nagano prefecture. Nobutomo continued his service, most often tasked in a defensive role and holding such castles as Takatō Castle and Iida Castle. During this time, Nobutomo acquired the nickname Template:Nihongo (literally: Raging Bull of the Takeda Clan).
By 1568, Nobutomo was esteemed enough to be entrusted with diplomatic duties. In that year, he was dispatched to Gifu Castle where he represented his lord, Takeda Shingen, at the wedding ceremony of Oda Nobutada, eldest son of Nobunaga, and Matsuhime, daughter of Shingen.<ref name=samurai/>
In 1571, Takeda Shingen organized a campaign against Tokugawa Ieyasu, intent on taking the coastal lowlands of Tōtōmi province and pushing westward toward the fertile fields of Mikawa province.<ref name=samurai/> Nobutomo was recalled from Iida Castle and ordered to lead an invasion of Mino province. His advance was checked by troops of the Saigo clan, led by Saigo Yoshikatsu. The two armies met at the Battle of Takehiro, and though Yoshikatsu was killed in action, Nobutomo was forced to retreat.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In 1572, the Takeda organized another campaign against Mikawa province which would culminate in the Battle of Mikatagahara in January 1573. As Takeda Shingen drove south and west, Nobutomo would descend from the north, cutting off an escape route and blocking reinforcements. To accomplish this, Nobutomo laid siege to Iwamura Castle. When Toyama Kagetou, lord of Iwamura Castle, died of a sudden illness, the morale of the defending troops collapsed, and the Lady Otsuya (Kageto's widow and an aunt of Oda Nobunaga) entered into negotiations with Nobutomo. They agreed on a treaty, and under its terms the castle was surrendered without bloodshed, and Lady Otsuya agreed to marry Nobutomo, thus securing his protection and the safety of the defending troops.<ref name=iwamura>Template:Cite web</ref> Also among the spoils was Template:Nihongo, the biological son of Oda Nobunaga, adopted son of Kageto, who was then seven years old. Nobutomo sent him to Kai Province as a hostage; the boy would later become known as Oda Katsunaga. With the fulfillment of treaty stipulations, Nobutomo made Iwamura Castle his headquarters and a front-line defensive position from which he could support the Takeda.<ref name=iwamura/>
Death
After the death of Takeda Shingen in the spring of 1573, Nobutomo continued to support Shingen's son, Takeda Katsuyori, in the prosecution of his campaigns.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In 1575, Katsuyori lost the Battle of Nagashino, a disaster for the Takeda clan<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> which left Nobutomo at Iwamura Castle without support. Under repeated siege by Oda Nobutada, the forces under Nobutomo managed to hold the castle until November when Nobunaga swept in with the main army. Nobutomo signed a truce to surrender the castle after realizing that he had no chance to hold out any longer. However, Nobunaga broke the truce and ordered Nobutomo, his wife (Nobunaga's aunt), and the troops of the castle garrison to be executed.<ref name=iwamura/>
On December 28,Template:Citation needed 1575, Nobutomo was crucified upside down on the banks of the Nagara River along with his wife Otsuya no Kata, and his elder retainers Oshima Nagatoshi and Zakouji Sadafusa on the banks.Template:Efn
His domain holdings in Shinano passed to his eldest son Akiyama Katsuhisa.
Cultural references
The main character in the book, The Samurai's Tale, by Erik Christian Haugaard served under Akiyama Nobutomo.
Appendix
Footnote
References
External links
Template:Twenty-Four Generals of the Takeda Template:People of the Sengoku period