Ōnin War(1477)
1467-1477
Eastern Army (Hosokawa Coalition)
Comandante: Hosokawa Katsumoto, Kanrei (Shogunal Deputy)
Fuerza de Combate Inicial
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ⓘ Parámetro de Análisis: Solo proyección de fuerza de combate bruta. No refleja el promedio matemático de puntuaciones de calidad operacional.
Multiplicador de Fuerza Decisiva: Retention of shogunate legitimacy and the transfer of both the Emperor and the retired Emperor to the Bakufu granted the Eastern Army decisive political-ideological superiority.
Western Army (Yamana Coalition)
Comandante: Yamana Sōzen, Shugo (Regional Governor)
Fuerza de Combate Inicial
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ⓘ Parámetro de Análisis: Solo proyección de fuerza de combate bruta. No refleja el promedio matemático de puntuaciones de calidad operacional.
Multiplicador de Fuerza Decisiva: The 20,000-strong reinforcement under Ōuchi Masahiro and regional daimyō support boosted the Western Army's striking power in the early phase.
Proyección de Fuerza Final
Fuerza posterior a la batalla tras desgaste y erosión estratégica
Matriz de Capacidad Operacional
5 Métricas Militares — Sistema de Puntuación del Estado Mayor
Both sides suffered severe attrition over the decade; the Eastern Army gained marginal logistical advantage through Akamatsu reinforcements and the shogunal treasury, while the Western Army lost its supply lines with Ōuchi's withdrawal.
Hosokawa's centralized command structure and authority over the shogun ensured continuity in command and control; on the Yamana side, after Sōzen's death in 1473 the chain of command fragmented and generals began acting independently.
Yamana secured positional advantage by seizing southern and western Kyoto early; however, Hosokawa converted political-spatial superiority by controlling the imperial palace. The ten-foot central trench transformed maneuver warfare into static attrition.
Yamana's bribed capture of Shōkoku-ji temple was a notable intelligence success alone; however, Hosokawa's operation to transfer the imperial family to the Bakufu demonstrated top-tier intelligence and counter-intelligence superiority.
Shogunate legitimacy and the 'rebel' label became the most critical force multiplier working in favor of the Eastern Army in the long run; despite the Western Army's numerical reinforcements, moral erosion was inevitable.
Ganancias Estratégicas y Análisis de Victoria
Evaluación de ganancias estratégicas a largo plazo tras la batalla
Ganancias Estratégicas del Vencedor
- ›The Hosokawa clan secured ideological supremacy by retaining shogunate legitimacy and branding the rival as 'rebel'.
- ›The Eastern Army held the dynastic axis by designating Yoshihisa as heir in the succession dispute.
Pérdidas de la Parte Derrotada
- ›The Yamana clan failed to convert early tactical gains in Kyoto into strategic victory and forfeited political legitimacy.
- ›The collapse of the Western Army shattered central authority over regional daimyō and triggered the Sengoku chaos.
Inventario Táctico y Armas de Guerra
Sistemas de armas críticos y vehículos de combate empleados en batalla
Eastern Army (Hosokawa Coalition)
- Katana Sword
- Yumi Longbow
- Naginata Polearm
- Yari Cavalry Spear
- Ashigaru Infantry Units
Western Army (Yamana Coalition)
- Katana Sword
- Yumi Longbow
- Naginata Polearm
- Tanegashima Early Muskets
- Ashigaru Infantry Units
Informe de Bajas y Pérdidas
Bajas confirmadas y estimadas sufridas por ambas partes como resultado de la batalla
Eastern Army (Hosokawa Coalition)
- 35,000+ PersonnelEstimated
- 150+ Buildings/TemplesConfirmed
- 12+ Command HQsIntelligence Report
- 8+ Supply DepotsClaimed
- Northeast Kyoto DistrictsConfirmed
Western Army (Yamana Coalition)
- 42,000+ PersonnelEstimated
- 180+ Buildings/TemplesConfirmed
- 15+ Command HQsIntelligence Report
- 11+ Supply DepotsClaimed
- Southwest Kyoto DistrictsConfirmed
Arte de la Guerra Oriental
Victoria Sin Combate · Asimetría de Inteligencia · Cielo y Tierra
Victoria Sin Combate
Neither side approached Sun Tzu's ideal of victory without fighting; on the contrary, both clans reduced Kyoto to ruins and departed with a result below even a Pyrrhic victory.
Asimetría de Inteligencia
Hosokawa demonstrated political intelligence superiority through the imperial transfer, while Yamana's tactical intelligence (Shōkoku-ji raid) yielded only local gains; Sun Tzu's principle of 'know yourself and your enemy' was violated by both sides.
Cielo y Tierra
Kyoto's narrow streets and wooden structures forced both sides into fire warfare; the cramped geography of the capital made maneuver warfare impossible, leading to a decade of trench-attrition combat.
Doctrinas de Guerra Occidentales
Attrition War
Maniobra y Líneas Interiores
Maneuver warfare ended in the early phase; the ten-foot-deep central trench between the two armies nullified the Napoleonic principle of interior lines. Ōuchi Masahiro's deployment of 20,000 troops was the only notable operational maneuver.
Guerra Psicológica y Moral
The shogun's preoccupation with constructing Ginkaku-ji and hosting poetry readings deepened the vacuum at the conflict's political center. The psychological erosion of the 'rebel' label on Yamana was a tangible manifestation of Clausewitz's concept of 'friction', accelerating the Western Army's moral collapse.
Potencia de Fuego y Efecto de Choque
Large-scale fires were employed as firepower by both sides; however, shock effect remained limited as static positional warfare prevented fire-maneuver coordination. The burning of Shōkoku-ji and Tenryū-ji yielded psychological impact but failed to achieve objectives.
Racionalismo del Estado Mayor Adaptativo
Centro de Gravedad · Inteligencia · Dinamismo
Centro de Gravedad
Hosokawa correctly identified the Schwerpunkt: shogunate legitimacy and the imperial family. Yamana selected geographic control as the center of gravity, but conquering Kyoto did not confer legitimacy.
Engaño e Inteligencia
Yamana's bribed capture of Shōkoku-ji monastery was a classic example of military deception; however, Hosokawa's operation to transfer the emperor required a far higher level of deception and secrecy, with overwhelming strategic effect.
Flexibilidad Asimétrica
Both command staffs became fixated on static trench warfare; the brothers switching sides amid the succession crisis (Yoshimi joining Yamana) was not doctrinal flexibility but a reflection of political chaos. Asymmetric adaptation could not be achieved.
Sección I
Análisis del Estado Mayor
The Eastern Army deployed approximately 85,000 troops and the Western Army about 80,000 near Kyoto, with numerical parity nearly balanced. Hosokawa's position as Kanrei (Shogunal Deputy) granted the East political-ideological superiority in the war's opening phase. Yamana seized geographic advantage by controlling Kyoto's south and west, and reached peak striking power in September 1467 with Ōuchi Masahiro's 20,000-strong reinforcement. However, Hosokawa's operation to transfer the imperial family to the Bakufu made the political-strategic gain permanent. A ten-foot-deep central trench between the two armies rendered maneuver warfare impossible, transforming the conflict into a decade of trench-attrition.
Sección II
Crítica Estratégica
Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa's indifference to the conflict — occupying himself with the construction of Ginkaku-ji and poetry readings — was a critical leadership failure that accelerated the collapse of central authority. The Yamana command's choice of conquering Kyoto as the center of gravity was a fundamental doctrinal error, as legitimacy resided in the Bakufu, which was under Hosokawa's control. Hosokawa correctly identified the Schwerpunkt through the imperial transfer operation but failed to develop a war-winning strategy. The death of both principal commanders in 1473 deepened the command crisis, and neither side could establish a mechanism to end the war. The result was a gain below even a Pyrrhic victory, triggering the Sengoku chaos.
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