Battle of Nagashino
28 June 1575
- Battle Scale
- Field Battle
- Winner
- Oda-Tokugawa Allied Forces
- Parties
Oda-Tokugawa Allied Forces
Oda and Tokugawa Clan AllianceJapaneseTakeda Clan Forces
Takeda ClanJapanese
Comparative Analysis
Compare not just who won, but how it was won through the data: force balance, casualties, inventory, operational capacity, and military perspective...
28 June 1575
Oda-Tokugawa Allied Forces
Takeda Clan Forces
11 October 1570 - 10 Eylül 1580
Oda Clan Forces
Ikkō-ikki and Hongan-ji Allied Forces
Oda-Tokugawa Allied Forces
Oda Clan Forces
| Battle of Nagashino | Ishiyama Hongan-ji War | |
|---|---|---|
| Artillery / Siege | Oda-Tokugawa Allied Forces — Takeda Clan Forces — | Oda Clan Forces
Ikkō-ikki and Hongan-ji Allied Forces — |
| Other | Oda-Tokugawa Allied Forces
Takeda Clan Forces
| Oda Clan Forces
Ikkō-ikki and Hongan-ji Allied Forces
|
The Takeda insisted on traditional cavalry tactics, remaining static; Oda forces demonstrated asymmetric flexibility by integrating firearms and fieldworks.
Oda command demonstrated asymmetric flexibility by transitioning from classical samurai cavalry doctrine to arquebus-equipped infantry corps and iron-clad naval forces; the Ikki side adhered to traditional fortress defense and fanatical infantry waves, failing to adapt doctrinally.
Battle of Annihilation
Attrition War — A decade of blockade, peripheral fortress neutralization, and supply-line strangulation that gradually broke the enemy's will.
Nobunaga correctly identified the center of gravity—the Takeda cavalry's main assault axis—and concentrated his force multiplier along that line to paralyze the enemy's combat power.
Nobunaga correctly identified the Hongan-ji's true Schwerpunkt as not the fortress walls but the maritime supply line, concentrating mass at the Kizugawaguchi estuary; the Ikki command kept its center of gravity in ground defense and recognized the critical maritime vulnerability too late.
The allies used terrain to conceal their strength, deceiving the Takeda into underestimating them; the night assault on Tobigasu was a decisive tactical deception.
Nobunaga fragmented the Mōri-Takeda-Uesugi coalition through diplomatic maneuvers and, after Uesugi Kenshin's sudden death in 1578, stabilized the northern front to concentrate all weight on Osaka; this timing was a masterpiece of operational deception.
The simultaneous and rotating arquebus fire disrupted traditional cavalry formations, creating moral as well as physical shock before contact.
The dense arquebus volley lines of Oda infantry and the cannon fire from Kuki Yoshitaka's tekkōsen warships shattered the traditional naval tactics of the Mōri fleet through shock effect; this constitutes the first modern instance of fire-maneuver synchronization in Japanese military history.
Shitaragahara's broken terrain reduced cavalry effectiveness while offering protected firing positions. Late June weather did not hinder gunpowder weapons, providing an environmental edge.
The marshland of the Osaka delta and the branches of the Yodo River gave the Hongan-ji natural defenses; yet the same geography created absolute dependence on maritime resupply, strategically suffocating the fortress once the Kizugawaguchi estuary was lost.
The allies possessed more accurate intelligence on Takeda numbers and dispositions, especially using surprise at Mount Tobigasu to sever the enemy's line of retreat.
Oda intelligence mapped the Hongan-ji's allied network (the anti-Nobunaga Mōri-Takeda-Uesugi coalition) and dismantled each support node sequentially; the Ikki side belatedly grasped Oda's internal dynamics and divide-and-conquer strategy.
The allies moved rapidly from Gifu, secured interior lines through fortification construction, and Sakai Tadatsugu's night operation exemplified encirclement maneuver cutting the enemy's retreat.
Nobunaga leveraged interior lines, synchronously shifting his Kinai-based forces across the Nagashima (1574), Echizen (1575), and Osaka fronts; the Ikki allies failed to coordinate on the exterior lines among Mōri, Takeda, and Uesugi.
Despite the Takeda's invincible reputation, the disciplined defense behind barricades and the shock of arquebus volleys psychologically broke successive enemy assault waves.
Ikki warriors held a fanatical morale advantage under the 'Shinjin' (absolute faith) doctrine that sanctified death; however, Nobunaga's burning alive of 20,000 ikki members at Nagashima served as a ruthless instrument of psychological warfare, systematically breaking the will to resist.
By establishing a fortified position and avoiding direct relief of the castle, Nobunaga forced the Takeda into a disadvantageous attack, limiting their options through passive-aggressive posture.
Nobunaga engaged Emperor Ōgimachi to secure an imperial decree in 1580 that compelled Kennyo's surrender, achieving the final phase through religious-political pressure rather than military annihilation.