The Fall of the Iga Ninja - Part 2

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024

Комментарии • 13

  • @shikochan1171
    @shikochan1171 4 года назад +6

    Tsutsui Sadatsugu is the adopted son of Tsutsui junkei which is the Yamato daimyo (small) that betrayed Matsunaga Hisahide (the mad lad obsessed with tea items) and helped Nobunaga killing him in the battle of Shigi-zan after Hisahide left his place at Hongan-ji siege e betrayed Nobunaga.
    Also Tsutsui was important for the battle of Hijiyama In Iga province of 1581, because he helped Gamo Ujisato (married with nobunaga's daughter) the battle that as you said determined the fall of Iga people (Oda Nobukatsu previously tried an attack on iga but failed)
    Tsusui also supported Hideyoshi during the Komaki and Nagakute campaing vs Ieyasu so you can already see bad vibes between the tokugawa and the tsutsui clan (even if Sadatsugu supported Ieyasu)
    Tsusui Sadatsugu then took the rule on Edo Castle in Iga province after junkei's death.
    As another user said he was banished for bad management of the province and in 1615 he supported Hideyori's cause for the siege of Osaka and was put to death with seppuku by Tokugawa

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro6902 4 года назад +3

    Very good job Antony...!

  • @jameshamster1010
    @jameshamster1010 4 года назад +2

    Thanks

  • @alittlepuertoricanboy1993
    @alittlepuertoricanboy1993 4 года назад +3

    He got removed mostly because he absolutely sucked as a ruler, and he kept taking what little land the Iga mono had. The Iga mono still in Iga complained about how horrible of a ruler he was, so Ieyasu gave him the boot.
    In Turnbull's book, he had also forbade the Iga mono from fighting in either the Korean Invasion or in Sekigahara, I don't remember which, as I only read Turnbull's book a few times and am currently waiting for my copy to come in the mail. But he sat out one of the two, and he had kept the Iga mono from taking part. If it's Korean Invasion, then that disproves any theory of shinobi or Iga warriors ever setting foot on the Korean peninsula. If it's Sekigahara, that might have been the very first thing he did to get on Ieyasu's nerves.

    • @AntonyCummins
      @AntonyCummins  4 года назад +1

      Ok, get me some references for this mate and send over. That would be good to know.

    • @alittlepuertoricanboy1993
      @alittlepuertoricanboy1993 4 года назад

      @@AntonyCummins
      www.google.com/amp/s/peoplepill.com/amp/people/tsutsui-sadatsugu/
      wiki.samurai-archives.com/index.php?title=Tsutsui_Sadatsugu
      www.semanticscholar.org/paper/The-Ninja%3A-An-Invented-Tradition-Turnbull/36af2830fc8923138011a6c2b4d7693f35f75312?p2df
      Also, Turnbull's Ninja Unmasking The Myth book. It's in the middle chapters, the ones that deal mostly with Iga mono specific history.

  • @alittlepuertoricanboy1993
    @alittlepuertoricanboy1993 4 года назад +5

    A Little PUERTO RICAN (Pwear-toh Ree-can) Boy.
    You're welcome, btw. ;)

    • @AntonyCummins
      @AntonyCummins  4 года назад

      I thought that was meant to be one word. I was trying to divide in two. And it is normally spelt differently?

    • @alittlepuertoricanboy1993
      @alittlepuertoricanboy1993 4 года назад

      @@AntonyCummins It's two words, yes.
      It used to be spelled differently, but it was very briefly. The U.S. called it "Porto Rico" after they beat the Spanish Crown in a naval war for it, Cuba, Guam, and the Philippines, but then they changed it back after a few decades. But as far as how it's spelled, it's been "Puerto Rico" since the age of colonialism.

  • @hikari2827
    @hikari2827 4 года назад +1

    Bro Anthony, you should make Discord.

  • @marciawilliams2499
    @marciawilliams2499 4 года назад +6

    First