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@@IPendragonI Thanks for understanding. Firstly, I personally like the game and really don't see what the fuss is about, although I play casually. Secondly, as you mentioned, making these videos is a full time job, with 150-200 work hours going into each video - I work 10 to 15 hour days with barely any days off. It's a job that I love doing, but a full time job nonetheless, and everything from music licenses, books, software, various subscriptions for texts, artwork, sound effects, different graphics, as well as paid artwork, etc. all cost money, and on top of that I got a family to feed. Thirdly, if anyone hates the ads that much, instead of complaining about free content they can actually help support the channel with as little as $1 per month and watch my videos ads-free on Patreon.
Oda and Tokugawa are very accomplished and legendary generals in their own right, in their battle strategy and empire administrative. During the rise to his power, Oda once defeated armies over 10 times his own by attacking in the night. Kenshin is legendary in his ways of war, the bulwark to Oda’s goal.
Uesugi Kenshin and takeda Shingen were the masters of their games. The tactical genius of these two was unfathomable. Their 10 years long clash of sieges and counter sieges and maneuvers against each other were beyond brilliant. Honestly speaking by sheer tactical genius there were none at the time to counter them except each other. This battle was the only time Oda Nobunaga went against one of them and the result was apparent. I would call him extremely lucky that both of these generals passed away before any of them could move against him and was succeeded by idiots.
Credit to Kenshin using everything to his advantage. Even more credit to Oda Nobunaga deciding to bite the bullet and retreat with most of his army intact rather than doubling down on a losing situation and losing the rest of his army.
Even more so when we know that Takeda katsuyori did the exact opposite and lost his army in the battle of nagashino. The finest calvary in the empire. Just commit more man to volley of fire gave away the mobility of horseman even though the first charge proved ineffective.
@@NoyNoy-xb8tdthat's what happened when kings or lords have an incompetent successor. Oda-Tokugawa never scored any meaningful victory against the Takeda or Uesugi when Shingen and Kenshin are still alive. It's a shame that the Takeda faded out of existence after the disastrous Battle at Nagashino due to Katsuyori, while the Uesugi fell to infighting because Kenshin didn't have an heir.
Holy hell this video is awesome. Uesugi were my fav after takeda in shogun, gonna try a campaign as uesugi in shogun 2 now. Awesome how it was sake that killed him, not a mortal man. Bishemonten indeed.
Personally, I liked the older battle maps where cavalry has the dash and infantry the X's and so on. Really enjoyed the video on the sengoku period. It's crazy how Nobunaga died by a general betraying him.
AdalRoderick I know right. Especially if your the Hattori where you have to get better units but your just wasting time researching the religious techs.
@@alexanderthegreat445 You can try one city policy until you have researched full markets and full tech, works best at sado if you are uesugi. Once you have all upgrades you will be able to support 2full armies
Thank you very much HistoryMarche, Uesugi Kenshin is my favorite daimyo of Sengoku Jidai and I believe his victory at Tedorigawa is his biggest victory in all his military life!
It speaks volumes that Uesugi Kenshin only allied Takeda after their crushing defeat at Nagashino. It shows that Kenshin did not expect Takeda to get crushed so easily. Seeing how he handled Oda here, shows that he thought Takeda could've at least stalemated the Oda-Tokugawa alliance.
@@rhysnichols8608 According to history Nobunaga would have been ready to surrender to Shingen if he ever managed to reach the capital. Nobunaga was kissed by destiny when Shingen and Kenshin died of natural causes
Could you maybe do a video on Eugene of Savoy? He was a brilliant general, even Napoleon considered him one of the seven greatest commanders in history. However he is rarely talked about.
@@HistoryMarche I'd like to see one about Raimondo Montecuccoli. He's one of my favorite 17th century commanders. He was one of the few people who could on equal terms with Condé and Turenne. So while the French under Louis XIV were immensely powerful their efforts were often hampered by Montecuccoli's actions. Eugene of Savoy is also an awe-inspiring leader. His teamwork with Marlborough during the War of Spanish Succession, while ultimately unsuccessful, helped put a stop to nearly half a century of French expansion. And Eugene's victories in Italy are amazing. At the end of the day I think it's a shame that both these men go unremembered. They changed history.
@@vkaivos I'm pretty sure Uesugi Kenshin didn't attack at night on both Kawanakajima and Tedorigawa. He did use the night to his advantage, but he didn't attack at night, and that's what makes him unique. On Kawanakajima, he used the night as a cover to move his army from the mountain to the plains. On Tedorigawa, he used the night as a reverse psychology at Oda by sending a small number of his army to the flank in order to make the enemy think that they were launching a night attack on them. Pretty genius in my opinion.
Thank you, HistoryMarche. I didn't know of this battle. Always a pleasure to know more about this time period and the mighty Dragon of Echigo. And beautiful poem by him to end the video!
I don’t think Kenshin had the ambition for unification like Nobunaga did. He was still loyal to the shogun. He probably was more concerned about just protecting his province
3 year old comment but whatever. They were united not too long after. Nobunaga was kissed by destiny, he claimed that he would be ready to surrender to Shingen had he ever reached the capital
Great content! There are a lot of videos on Sengoku-era Japan, but most of them focus on the Three Unifiers and almost nothing else. It’s fascinating to see this period from other angles.
I really, really like this one. Great lateral thinking by Uesugi, to use 'living' battlefield like that in order to sidestep his tactical weakness (not to mention Oda's advantage) and snatch victory out of the jaws of defeat - and, presumably, inspire Tolkien to apply similar terraneous trickery while dispatching the Nazgul =)) Very moving ending also, truly life passes swiftly, and increasingly feels like a dream.. I'm immediately re-watching it
I just love seeing famous personalities (like the great Oda Nobunaga) humbled by legendary masters of their game. I was so happy to see Uesugi's stratagem revealed at the end. What seemed to be a botched flanking manoeuvre was, in fact, in itself, a feint. A true master of warfare! :') PS. Is this just me or is this battle truly reminiscent of Pompeii vs Sertorius during the Civil War?
@@Shadow.24772 The Uesugi clan in 1444 of EU4 isn't actually Kenshin's clan though, his clan is originally named Nagao, but the Uesugi clan later sought his help to restore their power in Kanto region and bestowed upon Kenshin the name of the great Uesugi clan name.
Thanks so much! Make sure to check out Hoc Est Bellum channel (link is in the description). He did most of the work in this one! Thanks again for watching!
great narration on all your vids especally ur vids on japan gettin all the names and plaxes correct.fair play and keep the vids coming This channel is definitly in top 3 for battles in hstory for me along with kings and general and cold war.
Uesugi's battle plan is a masterpiece. The decoy served its purpose brilliantly and a too eager Oda Nobunaga felt into a perfectly planned and executed trap. I do wonder what would have happened if Uesugi and Takeda would have attacked Oda Nobunaga.
Odds are Nobunaga would have been pushed to the brink as together the Takeda and the Uesugi would have proven to be a formable force for him, even with Takeda in its weaken state and if they had united and attacked it is likely other enemies of Oda would have rallied to them and attacked, putting him in a difficult situation. However had Kenshin lived and if Shingen had still been alive and they had united their forces, those two together would have steamrolled Nobunaga without question
@@shadownight9956 stop speculating history, the person you replied speculating too but he had a point, but oda nobunaga himself against takeda shingen and kenshin together, bro, i think you are overestimating oda nobunaga too much... Oda can beat yoshimoto due to luck, but shingen and kenshin is not on the level of yoshimoto, You cant just depends on luck when you are in the battlefield with these 2 on the field, you would never know what they would do. I dont care if this is 3 years old comment, i just hate it bec you are overestimating oda nobunaga,
Not a Patreon, but i do like your content, so i watch the ads that play before, during or after your video, hope it helps the channel out, best of luck and health.
It's interesting how both Uesugi and Guan Yu are famously nicknamed as gods of war as both brilliantly used flash flooding as a strategy to sweep away enemy forces and win a decisive battle.
Everytime I watch these, I want to see more. It's like seeing only 5min of a movie. Good stuff. The only problem is keeping track of the names of the leaders and groups.
Just watched some interesting coverage of Otto the Great. Would make a great story if you're able to get enough details to put together his story or cover the Ottonian Dynasty. Thanks for the great content!
I wonder if history had been different of Kenshin Uesugi or Shingen Takeda had been at Nagashino and fighting against Nobanaga. Would things have been different. How knows. Great video.
One of the most exciting things with videos about battles I haven't heard about is that I don't know who wins. The title of the video kinda spoils it. So... yeah. Still great video, keep it up!
I just wanna point out that Hatakeyama Yoshitaka (by most studies) was believed to have died in 1576, leading to the succession of the clan by his son, Hatakeyama Haruomaru. Haruomaru was merely a child and the clan was undergoing internal conflict between the pro-Uesugi and the pro-Oda factions. The reason why the Uesugi attacked was because Kenshin wanted the Hatakeyama hostage under the Uesugi: Hatakayama Masashige, to replace Haruomaru. By doing so, Kenshin would effectively make the Hatakayama clan his puppet. While some might say that it was a cautious measure against the Oda influence, there was certainly no "justice" in the war. I think this is a good example of Kenshin's willingness to betray his principles, of which popular culture often neglects.
11:15 false there were other defeats nobunaga had such as 3 siege needed attempts to conqueror ikko ikke castle of nagashima the second attempt was a disaster for nobunaga
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@@stretchchris1 Hey I dislike their ads too but to make quality content you need money. So I deal with it.
@@IPendragonI This. Fucking edgelords acting like content creators should work for nothing.
@@IPendragonI Thanks for understanding. Firstly, I personally like the game and really don't see what the fuss is about, although I play casually. Secondly, as you mentioned, making these videos is a full time job, with 150-200 work hours going into each video - I work 10 to 15 hour days with barely any days off. It's a job that I love doing, but a full time job nonetheless, and everything from music licenses, books, software, various subscriptions for texts, artwork, sound effects, different graphics, as well as paid artwork, etc. all cost money, and on top of that I got a family to feed. Thirdly, if anyone hates the ads that much, instead of complaining about free content they can actually help support the channel with as little as $1 per month and watch my videos ads-free on Patreon.
Dunked on lmao
Those things doesn't look like troops at all. Draw something else guys.
Its been reported that after hearing news of Uesagi Kenshin's death, Oda Nobunaga announced in triumph: "The empire is now mine".
Oda and Tokugawa are very accomplished and legendary generals in their own right, in their battle strategy and empire administrative. During the rise to his power, Oda once defeated armies over 10 times his own by attacking in the night. Kenshin is legendary in his ways of war, the bulwark to Oda’s goal.
Oda was very lucky, though, when he attacked the Imagawa.
Imagine Oda/Tokugawa vs Takeda/Uesagi. My money would be on Takeda/Uesagi 100%
@andychang5888 absolutely Amazing for a Japanese Samurai who been seen in Anime/video games like Onimushta warlords!
Wow i'm surprised because it's quite rare for someone to make a video about this battle
He surely did a great and accurate historical video.
Yeah, everyone forgets about this battle.
How could anyone forget about a battle where God of war used the power of a river to crush his enemies.
Uesugi Kenshin and takeda Shingen were the masters of their games. The tactical genius of these two was unfathomable. Their 10 years long clash of sieges and counter sieges and maneuvers against each other were beyond brilliant. Honestly speaking by sheer tactical genius there were none at the time to counter them except each other. This battle was the only time Oda Nobunaga went against one of them and the result was apparent. I would call him extremely lucky that both of these generals passed away before any of them could move against him and was succeeded by idiots.
Credit to Kenshin using everything to his advantage.
Even more credit to Oda Nobunaga deciding to bite the bullet and retreat with most of his army intact rather than doubling down on a losing situation and losing the rest of his army.
Even more so when we know that Takeda katsuyori did the exact opposite and lost his army in the battle of nagashino. The finest calvary in the empire. Just commit more man to volley of fire gave away the mobility of horseman even though the first charge proved ineffective.
You gotta know when to hold em, know when to fold em
@@NoyNoy-xb8tdthat's what happened when kings or lords have an incompetent successor. Oda-Tokugawa never scored any meaningful victory against the Takeda or Uesugi when Shingen and Kenshin are still alive. It's a shame that the Takeda faded out of existence after the disastrous Battle at Nagashino due to Katsuyori, while the Uesugi fell to infighting because Kenshin didn't have an heir.
The poem that Kenshin wrote at the end was so beautiful, "Year in year out all but a dream" gave me goosebumps.
Yes, you can clearly hear he is contemplating his life, he knows he's approaching the end, wondering where it has all gone.
Holy hell this video is awesome.
Uesugi were my fav after takeda in shogun, gonna try a campaign as uesugi in shogun 2 now.
Awesome how it was sake that killed him, not a mortal man. Bishemonten indeed.
Playing shogun 2 now. Never seen them succeed. They always got annihilated
@@hannibalburgers477 I prefer Nobunaga’s Ambition. Uesugi always has an easy playthrough if Kenshin is the daimyo
Personally, I liked the older battle maps where cavalry has the dash and infantry the X's and so on. Really enjoyed the video on the sengoku period. It's crazy how Nobunaga died by a general betraying him.
me too. but i think it's something unique just for the sengoku series, because I don't find the same style in any other series in this channel
This should have a spoiler alert remark.
@@kostantinos2297 spoiler alert? about historical fact? lol
@@The_Nihl
Well I was on the edge of my seat!
He had it coming for his tyranny
Man, the Ikko-ikki are the worst. You need more priests than you can actually train to convert their provinces. So much micro management -.-
I've been playing Otomo quite fun with the matchlock muskets but getting betrayed when i get near Kyoto is a pain
AdalRoderick I know right. Especially if your the Hattori where you have to get better units but your just wasting time researching the religious techs.
Ikko ikki is a religion of peace
Monk archers op
@@alexanderthegreat445 You can try one city policy until you have researched full markets and full tech, works best at sado if you are uesugi. Once you have all upgrades you will be able to support 2full armies
Damn!!! That poem at the last. Those were the last thoughts of a true warrior, who isn't ashamed of what he has done in life. No regrets.
That decoy maneuver was straight brilliant.
Last battle ever expected to be covered but this channel fails to disappoint. Yet again impressive work done!.
Thank you so much!
Thank you sir.
Thank you very much HistoryMarche, Uesugi Kenshin is my favorite daimyo of Sengoku Jidai and I believe his victory at Tedorigawa is his biggest victory in all his military life!
Always enjoy the battles of Japan, truly bloody and the definition of warfare
Thanks Dennis, great to see you in the comments.
Wow, this was insanely well done. Never seen it before (popped up in my recommendations).
It speaks volumes that Uesugi Kenshin only allied Takeda after their crushing defeat at Nagashino. It shows that Kenshin did not expect Takeda to get crushed so easily. Seeing how he handled Oda here, shows that he thought Takeda could've at least stalemated the Oda-Tokugawa alliance.
Shingen probably would’ve won against them, it was his son who mismanaged the clan and caused them to get crushed at Nagashino
@@rhysnichols8608 According to history Nobunaga would have been ready to surrender to Shingen if he ever managed to reach the capital. Nobunaga was kissed by destiny when Shingen and Kenshin died of natural causes
Could you maybe do a video on Eugene of Savoy? He was a brilliant general, even Napoleon considered him one of the seven greatest commanders in history. However he is rarely talked about.
That's actually an awesome suggestion. Zenta is an awesome battle!
Yep we need a Habsburg vs Ottoman series, without Eugene the Habsburg empire could be long dead before it even face Napoleon
@@HistoryMarche Ooh, Zenta. The big decisive battle of the Hapsburg-Ottoman wars.
@@HistoryMarche I'd like to see one about Raimondo Montecuccoli. He's one of my favorite 17th century commanders. He was one of the few people who could on equal terms with Condé and Turenne. So while the French under Louis XIV were immensely powerful their efforts were often hampered by Montecuccoli's actions.
Eugene of Savoy is also an awe-inspiring leader. His teamwork with Marlborough during the War of Spanish Succession, while ultimately unsuccessful, helped put a stop to nearly half a century of French expansion. And Eugene's victories in Italy are amazing.
At the end of the day I think it's a shame that both these men go unremembered. They changed history.
@@HistoryMarche Could you make a series on sieges of Belgrade during the Ottoman wars?
There's nothing like using the night to his advantage and won deceive battles. And he had done it AGAIN. Uesugi Kenshin for you, people!
@Noujoud Beauty why are you replying that on every comment?
@@vkaivos I'm pretty sure Uesugi Kenshin didn't attack at night on both Kawanakajima and Tedorigawa. He did use the night to his advantage, but he didn't attack at night, and that's what makes him unique. On Kawanakajima, he used the night as a cover to move his army from the mountain to the plains. On Tedorigawa, he used the night as a reverse psychology at Oda by sending a small number of his army to the flank in order to make the enemy think that they were launching a night attack on them. Pretty genius in my opinion.
Uesugi Kenshin is such an interesting historical figure; a philosopher general if there ever was one.
Marcus Aurelius
Sun Tsu
There are a. lot.
Thank you, HistoryMarche. I didn't know of this battle. Always a pleasure to know more about this time period and the mighty Dragon of Echigo. And beautiful poem by him to end the video!
Thank you for watching!
Glad you enjoyed it
12:24 I saw that in your subtitles lol
great loser...hahaha, though it would be better if he explained that Takeda Katsuyori was son and succesor of Takeda Shingan.
10:39 OUR MEN FLEE THE FIELD OF BATTLE, THIS IS A SHAMEFURR DISPRAYYY
i wonder if Japan could've been united if Kenshin and Shingen lives werent taken away by disease. Nobunaga was so lucky in this regard)
I don’t think Kenshin had the ambition for unification like Nobunaga did. He was still loyal to the shogun. He probably was more concerned about just protecting his province
3 year old comment but whatever. They were united not too long after. Nobunaga was kissed by destiny, he claimed that he would be ready to surrender to Shingen had he ever reached the capital
Amazing documentary, always fascinated about Japanese history.
May I say, great work on the animation and love the empire earth style narration
Thanks for the feedback!
Great content! There are a lot of videos on Sengoku-era Japan, but most of them focus on the Three Unifiers and almost nothing else. It’s fascinating to see this period from other angles.
Thank you sir.
I really, really like this one. Great lateral thinking by Uesugi, to use 'living' battlefield like that in order to sidestep his tactical weakness (not to mention Oda's advantage) and snatch victory out of the jaws of defeat - and, presumably, inspire Tolkien to apply similar terraneous trickery while dispatching the Nazgul =))
Very moving ending also, truly life passes swiftly, and increasingly feels like a dream..
I'm immediately re-watching it
Those rare times that history reads like a movie script.
Thank David for presenting it in delightful way though we neither have heard of it before still we enjoyed it❤️
*The ad starts at **0:48** and ends at **1:55**...* Intro is obviously from 0:00 to 0:47.
The hero we need
You sir should be knighted
I just love seeing famous personalities (like the great Oda Nobunaga) humbled by legendary masters of their game.
I was so happy to see Uesugi's stratagem revealed at the end. What seemed to be a botched flanking manoeuvre was, in fact, in itself, a feint. A true master of warfare! :')
PS. Is this just me or is this battle truly reminiscent of Pompeii vs Sertorius during the Civil War?
Him: This is sponsored by raid shadow legends
Me : Return of the king
Yes
Deal with Uesegi as fast as you can in your Japan games
He's just a pain if you're playing Date in Shogun 2
childs play. fight uesugi in EU4 let's you then
@@Shadow.24772 The Uesugi clan in 1444 of EU4 isn't actually Kenshin's clan though, his clan is originally named Nagao, but the Uesugi clan later sought his help to restore their power in Kanto region and bestowed upon Kenshin the name of the great Uesugi clan name.
You meant Hojo, the Uesugi are easy to crush in Nobunaga's Ambition games, but the Hojo just keep getting stronger.
Or just let the AI Takeda steamroll them in Shogun 2
Thank you, HistoryMarche for such great content! Looking forward to your further videos on Sengoku Jidai.
"Wars should be won with swords, not rice."- Kenshin
But also with alchohol
Woah! the animation, the poem..... as always awesome job guys...
Thanks so much! Make sure to check out Hoc Est Bellum channel (link is in the description). He did most of the work in this one! Thanks again for watching!
Been waiting for next battle video, but didnt expected this particular one to be covered! great video
Glad you liked it!
@@HistoryMarche Watched every single one of your videos so far! always waiting for more ^_^ keep up to majestic job!
Another fantastic video, thoroughly enjoyed it, thanks for making such a high standard video 👌
So nice of you, thank you. Check out Hoc Est Bellum channel as well, hid did most of the work in this one.
Thank you History Marche for yet another great video. This is quality history. You're doing a great job.
Glad you enjoyed it
Thanks again for this awesome episode...love your work...a fan from Sudan
Thank you sir.
Top notch content once again, thank you for your work.
Much appreciated!
great narration on all your vids especally ur vids on japan gettin all the names and plaxes correct.fair play and keep the vids coming This channel is definitly in top 3 for battles in hstory for me along with kings and general and cold war.
"Now that kenshin is dead, Japan is MINE! " - Oda
And get killed by one of his general.
what an amazing death, I wish I could write a poem like that before dying and be remembered by many people lol
You really get the sense that he knew his time was approaching, wondering where all the years went.
Amazing! Is always great to see more collab videos 😃
Thank you very much! I really appreciate it!
More to come!
The quality of your maps keeps getting better! Lots of love from Pakistan
Awesome video! Great topic. I never new nobunaga was defeated once
Glad you enjoyed it!
Uesugi's battle plan is a masterpiece. The decoy served its purpose brilliantly and a too eager Oda Nobunaga felt into a perfectly planned and executed trap.
I do wonder what would have happened if Uesugi and Takeda would have attacked Oda Nobunaga.
Odds are Nobunaga would have been pushed to the brink as together the Takeda and the Uesugi would have proven to be a formable force for him, even with Takeda in its weaken state and if they had united and attacked it is likely other enemies of Oda would have rallied to them and attacked, putting him in a difficult situation. However had Kenshin lived and if Shingen had still been alive and they had united their forces, those two together would have steamrolled Nobunaga without question
@@Lightingwarrior Point well taken.
You have forgotten how nobunaga have steamrolled the first anti-nobunaga coalition at that stage nope that would only pause the campaign
@@shadownight9956 stop speculating history, the person you replied speculating too but he had a point, but oda nobunaga himself against takeda shingen and kenshin together, bro, i think you are overestimating oda nobunaga too much...
Oda can beat yoshimoto due to luck, but shingen and kenshin is not on the level of yoshimoto, You cant just depends on luck when you are in the battlefield with these 2 on the field, you would never know what they would do.
I dont care if this is 3 years old comment, i just hate it bec you are overestimating oda nobunaga,
Thnks historymarche
Not a Patreon, but i do like your content, so i watch the ads that play before, during or after your video, hope it helps the channel out, best of luck and health.
That certainly helps! Thank you!
Thank you for this wonderful content top notch as always!
Much appreciated!
Well done! Thanks for a great video
Glad you liked it!
Love all these videos
Man you are just Amazing keep it up and i hope you reach a Million subs my brother.
Thank you so much 😀
Good job. Keep up the great work.
Friendship with Nobunaga is over, now Katsuyori is my best friend.
It's interesting how both Uesugi and Guan Yu are famously nicknamed as gods of war as both brilliantly used flash flooding as a strategy to sweep away enemy forces and win a decisive battle.
guan yu use of water didn't win him the battle, he was flanked by sun quan army before fan castle fall
Well, he died in that battle where he used the flood tactic and his army was defeated.
great video ..... Uesugi is often under highlighted for the great commander he was :)
Couldn't agree more
wonderful video!
that tactic using the dam was clever.
Uesugi Kenshin was the greatest general of the Sengoku period, undefeated in over 50 battles. There is a reason they called him the god of war.
Kenshin was a brilliant and unorthodox commander
My favorite Japanese figure in tis period.
A great leader and military commander. More importantly, an honourable man and not tyrannical like Oda.
The fearless Nobunaga defeated by the God of war himself. I love the Sengoku period.
Magnificent video and the music ❤
Excellent! Thank you for the work.
第一次看到專講手取川之役的影片,期待之後會有日本戰國全集。
(Recommend 源平合戰(Genpei war), this part is also very fascinating!)
Thank you kindly!
Again very good video! 👌🏻👏🏻:D
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks 😋 Make sure to check out Hoc Est Bellum channel, he did most of the work here.
@@HistoryMarche of course! :)
Looking forward to the next episode in this series! 🧡 I'm learning alot more about the period thanks to you HistoryMarche!
Glad you enjoy it!
Great content keep up the goodwork 👏👏
Thank you mr.Takeda :)
Kenshin: The only guy to defeat Nobunaga
A stunningly beautiful poem
all these extra information badges are great
Microprose had Sword of the Samurai back in the late 80s. I loved learning the history of the period (and it was a damned fun game ).
Nice to see more Sengoku Jidai videos.
Can you do the Siege of Kawagoe(1545) next pls?
You guys are the best.
Uesugi too often overlooked. One of the greatest.
Wow, that was a great poem containing the essence of a life.
Everytime I watch these, I want to see more. It's like seeing only 5min of a movie.
Good stuff. The only problem is keeping track of the names of the leaders and groups.
You really pumping us up for ghost of Tsushima lol
I'm addicted to learning about the samurai, Blessed Be.
When an 8 star general meets a 10 star general
good good good ... we need more videos and amazing stories
Thank you for watching.
I like your intro, well done
Thanks for the visit
How do you make these vids cause they are the best
Thank you
Just watched some interesting coverage of Otto the Great. Would make a great story if you're able to get enough details to put together his story or cover the Ottonian Dynasty. Thanks for the great content!
Nice Video
I wonder if history had been different of Kenshin Uesugi or Shingen Takeda had been at Nagashino and fighting against Nobanaga. Would things have been different. How knows. Great video.
really wonderful
10:47
SHAMEFUL DISPRAY
I think my wife is on the verge of leaving me iv been watching this channel nonstop.. She's not happy but oh well more battles to see 🤣🤣🤣
Geek lmao
beautiful poem
One of the most exciting things with videos about battles I haven't heard about is that I don't know who wins. The title of the video kinda spoils it. So... yeah. Still great video, keep it up!
beautiful visuals
I just wanna point out that Hatakeyama Yoshitaka (by most studies) was believed to have died in 1576, leading to the succession of the clan by his son, Hatakeyama Haruomaru. Haruomaru was merely a child and the clan was undergoing internal conflict between the pro-Uesugi and the pro-Oda factions.
The reason why the Uesugi attacked was because Kenshin wanted the Hatakeyama hostage under the Uesugi: Hatakayama Masashige, to replace Haruomaru. By doing so, Kenshin would effectively make the Hatakayama clan his puppet. While some might say that it was a cautious measure against the Oda influence, there was certainly no "justice" in the war. I think this is a good example of Kenshin's willingness to betray his principles, of which popular culture often neglects.
Very interesting info.
My jaw literally dropped when the water came. Sometimes reality is better than fiction
11:15 false there were other defeats nobunaga had such as 3 siege needed attempts to conqueror ikko ikke castle of nagashima the second attempt was a disaster for nobunaga
Learning from the master.
HistoryMarche uploads.. I click.
I'm a simple man. :3
Thank you sir :)
Awesome!!!
Thank you! Cheers!
Well done ty