Siege of Iwatsurugi Castle explained

Conflict:Siege of Iwatsurugi Castle
Partof:Sengoku period
Date:1554
Place:Iwatsurugi Castle, Kyushu
Result:Shimazu victory
Combatant1:Shimazu clan
Combatant2:Ito clan
Kimotsuki clan
Commander1:Shimazu Takahisa
Ijuin Tadaaki
Commander2:unknown

The siege of Iwatsurugi Castle was fought in 1554 near Kagoshima Bay at the southern end of the island of Kyushu, Japan. The siege was just one of a number of military actions that Shimazu Takahisa had to take against his rebellious kokujin vassals in the Ito and Kimotsuki clans.

Iwatsurugi Castle was a castle near the coast of Kagoshima Bay, in the vicinity of modern-day Shigetomi Beach, in what is now Aira, Kagoshima. During the siege, Ijuin Tadaaki, one of the Shimazu generals, maneuvered five ships to within range and proceeded with an offshore bombardment of the enemy garrison, a few of whom were killed. The siege lasted a few weeks until the castle fell.[1]

References

31.709°N 130.622°W

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=6RBXXJixf-sC The Cambridge History of Japan: Early modern Japan. p305