1 00:00:08,008 --> 00:00:10,008 [woman crying] 2 00:00:33,616 --> 00:00:35,616 [opening theme plays] 3 00:00:48,882 --> 00:00:50,972 [narrator] 1568. 4 00:00:51,051 --> 00:00:56,721 Ten years after waging a bloody campaign to gain control over his own province, 5 00:00:56,806 --> 00:01:01,896 powerful samurai warlord Oda Nobunaga has seized much of Central Japan, 6 00:01:01,978 --> 00:01:04,478 including the nation’s capital, Kyoto. 7 00:01:06,649 --> 00:01:09,649 Now, driven by a towering ambition, 8 00:01:09,736 --> 00:01:13,656 he dreams of crushing the powerful clans who still oppose his rule. 9 00:01:14,199 --> 00:01:16,789 And for the first time in over a century, 10 00:01:16,868 --> 00:01:19,288 uniting all of Japan under one banner. 11 00:01:20,288 --> 00:01:24,538 But Nobunaga’s legendary brutality has caused widespread anger. 12 00:01:25,085 --> 00:01:29,085 Across the nation, powerful enemies now plot his demise. 13 00:01:41,351 --> 00:01:44,401 [Ashmore] Nobunaga was a master of the battlefield. 14 00:01:47,190 --> 00:01:53,610 But in Kyoto, he was beginning to see the potential he had for power. 15 00:01:57,534 --> 00:02:01,704 [Turnbull] This caused lasting resentment among Nobunaga’s rivals. 16 00:02:01,788 --> 00:02:06,128 They knew that Nobunaga wanted the power for himself. 17 00:02:09,921 --> 00:02:11,801 [Garrett] This meant Nobunaga's rule 18 00:02:11,881 --> 00:02:14,801 in Central Japan was immediately ringed by adversaries, 19 00:02:14,884 --> 00:02:17,054 who whilst of very diverse origins, 20 00:02:17,137 --> 00:02:21,847 were drawn together by their dislike and worry about his expanding control. 21 00:02:24,018 --> 00:02:27,188 If Nobunaga wished to truly consolidate his power in Central Japan, 22 00:02:27,272 --> 00:02:30,902 he had to either co-opt or eliminate all other sources of authority. 23 00:02:33,027 --> 00:02:35,527 And the Buddhist institutions, the great temples… 24 00:02:36,406 --> 00:02:40,116 and the populist Buddhist sects were two of the greatest threats to this. 25 00:02:42,912 --> 00:02:47,542 [in Japanese] The blessing of the Buddha to us… 26 00:02:47,625 --> 00:02:52,335 [Spafford] The Buddhist establishment was a huge hurdle in Nobunaga’s path. 27 00:02:52,422 --> 00:02:56,842 These institutions were deeply embedded in the political fabric of the country 28 00:02:56,926 --> 00:03:00,096 and absolutely accustomed to flex their political muscle. 29 00:03:07,979 --> 00:03:10,609 [Garrett] Buddhism has a very long history in Japan, 30 00:03:10,690 --> 00:03:14,530 and it arrived in Japan before there really was a Japan 31 00:03:14,611 --> 00:03:17,201 in the sense of a centralized bureaucratic state. 32 00:03:19,824 --> 00:03:24,834 The concept is that the great temples exist to perform ritual and ceremony, 33 00:03:24,913 --> 00:03:28,883 which will protect Japan from invasion, from disease, from hardship. 34 00:03:29,417 --> 00:03:33,757 This is a divine defense against any kind of external or internal threat. 35 00:03:36,633 --> 00:03:42,183 The Buddhist institutions were often as heavily armed as warlords. 36 00:03:44,724 --> 00:03:47,944 [Turnbull] They would fight to the death. Nothing daunted them, 37 00:03:48,019 --> 00:03:51,729 and they knew that victory in battle would guarantee the path to heaven. 38 00:03:51,814 --> 00:03:54,154 [speaking indistinctly in Japanese] 39 00:03:54,234 --> 00:03:58,034 So, these were major institutions that had the military power 40 00:03:58,112 --> 00:04:02,242 to prevent the total domination of Central Japan by Nobunaga. 41 00:04:06,246 --> 00:04:07,536 [in Japanese] You called? 42 00:04:17,465 --> 00:04:19,675 Rid me of these parasites! 43 00:04:19,759 --> 00:04:20,759 Mitsuhide! 44 00:04:21,928 --> 00:04:23,048 Now, get moving! 45 00:04:27,100 --> 00:04:28,140 Yes, sir. 46 00:04:28,226 --> 00:04:30,346 [Spafford] The large Buddhist institutions 47 00:04:30,436 --> 00:04:33,936 were not the only, or even the major, threat 48 00:04:34,023 --> 00:04:36,993 coming from, let’s call it, the Buddhist quarter. 49 00:04:37,068 --> 00:04:39,858 There was a new militant sect of Buddhism that developed 50 00:04:39,946 --> 00:04:41,526 called the Ikkō-ikki… 51 00:04:43,241 --> 00:04:46,831 which were communities of believers spread throughout the land. 52 00:04:48,121 --> 00:04:51,541 The Ikkō-ikki appeal to the simple farmers and workers, 53 00:04:51,624 --> 00:04:54,924 because it was a very simple formula for salvation, 54 00:04:55,003 --> 00:04:57,303 just repeating one’s belief in the Buddha. 55 00:04:57,380 --> 00:05:00,220 This was extremely powerful in a land that's still beset 56 00:05:00,300 --> 00:05:02,340 by poverty and famine and warfare. 57 00:05:04,887 --> 00:05:07,967 [Garrett] The Ikko drew people together across social lines 58 00:05:08,057 --> 00:05:11,937 to defend their places of worship and communities in a collective manner. 59 00:05:12,020 --> 00:05:16,400 Merchants, villagers, monks, everyone could be united by their common faith 60 00:05:16,482 --> 00:05:18,822 to try and drive daimyo rule out of their land. 61 00:05:20,653 --> 00:05:25,073 [Auslin] By the end of the 1500s, the Ikkō-ikki had a network across Japan. 62 00:05:25,158 --> 00:05:27,448 They built large temple fortresses… 63 00:05:30,538 --> 00:05:33,578 and they were rising up in almost all of the provinces. 64 00:05:33,666 --> 00:05:35,076 [yells] 65 00:05:35,168 --> 00:05:36,418 [all yell] 66 00:05:38,379 --> 00:05:41,169 [Auslin] They had armies of monks and peasants. 67 00:05:41,257 --> 00:05:45,347 They answered to a higher authority. They weren't willing to become subordinate 68 00:05:45,428 --> 00:05:48,808 to any of the great daimyo leaders, including Oda Nobunaga. 69 00:05:48,890 --> 00:05:50,980 [in Japanese] Oda Nobunaga is… 70 00:05:52,268 --> 00:05:54,228 torturing our people. 71 00:05:55,772 --> 00:05:58,272 His deeds are of the devil. 72 00:05:58,358 --> 00:06:03,238 We must put from our minds any image of these Buddhist monks being peaceful men 73 00:06:03,321 --> 00:06:05,371 who spent their lives in prayer. 74 00:06:05,448 --> 00:06:08,078 They were a formidable military enemy. 75 00:06:08,910 --> 00:06:09,910 [all] Ho! 76 00:06:11,662 --> 00:06:14,332 [Auslin] If Nobunaga did not make an example of them, 77 00:06:14,415 --> 00:06:17,375 and he felt that they threatened his authority 78 00:06:17,460 --> 00:06:20,250 and would allow uprisings throughout the country 79 00:06:20,338 --> 00:06:23,418 in the strategic points that he wanted to control, 80 00:06:23,508 --> 00:06:24,878 he had to destroy them. 81 00:06:35,103 --> 00:06:37,693 [Garrett] When Nobunaga moved against the Ikkō-ikki, 82 00:06:37,772 --> 00:06:39,772 he was aiming for its total eradication 83 00:06:39,857 --> 00:06:42,527 and the massacre of anyone who stood in his way. 84 00:06:46,656 --> 00:06:48,946 [narrator] August, 1570. 85 00:06:49,033 --> 00:06:52,453 Nobunaga moves to destroy the Ikkō-ikki forever. 86 00:06:53,162 --> 00:06:55,672 After crushing a number of their fortresses, 87 00:06:55,748 --> 00:06:59,458 he decides to strike at the heart of Buddhism in Japan. 88 00:06:59,544 --> 00:07:01,924 The temple complex Enryaku-ji. 89 00:07:03,089 --> 00:07:07,299 It is a decision that will threaten everything he has worked to achieve. 90 00:07:14,976 --> 00:07:20,936 [in Japanese] We, as Buddhists, must not allow this. 91 00:07:21,524 --> 00:07:25,074 We shall not allow his actions. 92 00:07:25,153 --> 00:07:30,033 [Auslin] Enryaku-ji was by far the most politically influential Buddhist complex 93 00:07:30,116 --> 00:07:31,326 in Japan, 94 00:07:31,409 --> 00:07:34,909 and for centuries, it had had political power that rivaled 95 00:07:34,996 --> 00:07:38,996 the great chieftains throughout Japan, and had very close ties with the court. 96 00:07:39,083 --> 00:07:42,213 [in Japanese] Even though it is to disobey Buddha's teachings 97 00:07:42,295 --> 00:07:43,495 to take a life… 98 00:07:43,588 --> 00:07:46,628 And one thing that had enraged Nobunaga, 99 00:07:46,716 --> 00:07:49,836 who was very vehemently anti-Buddhist anyway, 100 00:07:50,928 --> 00:07:55,478 was that these monks had given refuge to his fleeing enemies. 101 00:07:56,142 --> 00:07:59,692 Not only that, it was so close to Kyoto, 102 00:07:59,770 --> 00:08:02,150 it literally overlooked the city, 103 00:08:02,857 --> 00:08:07,737 that here was a potential strategic threat to Nobunaga’s survival. 104 00:08:10,323 --> 00:08:13,743 So he made the most fateful decision of his career. 105 00:08:13,826 --> 00:08:16,696 He would attack and destroy 106 00:08:16,787 --> 00:08:20,627 the greatest monastery in Japan, the Enryaku-ji. 107 00:08:23,085 --> 00:08:25,455 In September 1571, 108 00:08:25,546 --> 00:08:30,586 Nobunaga assembled an army of a size that you would expect for a major battle 109 00:08:30,676 --> 00:08:32,926 against a serious enemy. 110 00:08:38,559 --> 00:08:43,269 [Garrett] Nobunaga's advance on Enryaku-ji caused much of the civilian population 111 00:08:43,981 --> 00:08:45,821 to retreat to the top of a mountain, 112 00:08:45,900 --> 00:08:49,610 to the top of Mount Hiei where the monastic complex of Enryaku-ji was. 113 00:08:49,695 --> 00:08:51,355 [soldiers yelling] 114 00:08:51,447 --> 00:08:55,367 [Garrett] Nobunaga ordered his troops to advance in a line up the mountain, 115 00:08:55,451 --> 00:08:57,291 murdering anyone they came across… 116 00:08:57,370 --> 00:08:59,040 [arquebus fires] 117 00:08:59,664 --> 00:09:01,254 …and burning any buildings. 118 00:09:01,332 --> 00:09:02,962 [flames crackling] 119 00:09:03,042 --> 00:09:06,962 [Auslin] During this period of Sengoku warfare, there was brutality on all sides, 120 00:09:07,046 --> 00:09:09,716 but Enryaku-ji brought it to a different level. 121 00:09:10,800 --> 00:09:12,840 -[whimpers, screams] -[blade slashes] 122 00:09:14,095 --> 00:09:17,515 [Garrett] Sources characterized Nobunaga's troops as wild animals. 123 00:09:18,599 --> 00:09:19,479 [groans] 124 00:09:22,853 --> 00:09:25,363 All Nobunaga's men reached the top of the mountain 125 00:09:25,439 --> 00:09:27,189 and the central temple itself. 126 00:09:27,275 --> 00:09:31,065 And when Nobunaga's troops approached, they gave an ultimatum to Enryaku-ji. 127 00:09:33,197 --> 00:09:35,197 They could display loyalty to him, 128 00:09:36,659 --> 00:09:39,249 or they could resist him and be destroyed. 129 00:09:43,249 --> 00:09:44,829 And they chose the latter. 130 00:09:48,379 --> 00:09:50,299 [Turnbull] The temple was burned, 131 00:09:50,381 --> 00:09:53,471 and the citizens of Kyoto could look up into the eastern sky 132 00:09:54,093 --> 00:09:55,263 and see it lit up 133 00:09:55,344 --> 00:09:59,434 with the flames of the most famous Buddhist monastery in Japan. 134 00:09:59,515 --> 00:10:01,175 [soldiers yelling] 135 00:10:01,267 --> 00:10:04,347 [Turnbull] Nobunaga’s men hunted down anyone who had escaped 136 00:10:04,437 --> 00:10:05,607 from the conflagration. 137 00:10:13,487 --> 00:10:15,407 [cries out in pain] 138 00:10:15,489 --> 00:10:17,949 -[in Japanese] Mother, are you all right? -Run. 139 00:10:19,368 --> 00:10:21,038 Mother! Run away. 140 00:10:21,621 --> 00:10:23,711 Mother! 141 00:10:24,874 --> 00:10:27,674 [Garrett] This was an unsparing attack in which no one, 142 00:10:27,752 --> 00:10:29,712 be they monk, woman, or child… 143 00:10:30,963 --> 00:10:33,053 was exempted from assault. 144 00:10:54,236 --> 00:10:56,276 [crying] 145 00:11:03,954 --> 00:11:05,964 [woman continues crying] 146 00:11:06,791 --> 00:11:09,091 [Garrett] Nobunaga ordered that all of them, 147 00:11:09,168 --> 00:11:10,918 every woman and every child, 148 00:11:11,295 --> 00:11:12,415 should be beheaded, 149 00:11:12,505 --> 00:11:15,965 which was a sight that even his own troops could barely bear to watch. 150 00:11:17,927 --> 00:11:20,807 It’s said that 20,000 people died 151 00:11:20,888 --> 00:11:25,138 in this greatest act of tyranny and cruelty. 152 00:11:25,726 --> 00:11:29,476 It even disgusted some of his most loyal generals. 153 00:11:31,190 --> 00:11:34,820 Akechi Mitsuhide, himself a devout Buddhist, 154 00:11:34,902 --> 00:11:36,282 from that moment on 155 00:11:36,362 --> 00:11:41,242 began to have grave doubts about Nobunaga's ability to rule. 156 00:11:44,787 --> 00:11:48,787 [Auslin] There’s clearly something pathological in Nobunaga’s character. 157 00:11:48,874 --> 00:11:54,054 None of the daimyo shied away from using force, but Nobunaga seemed to revel in it. 158 00:11:54,130 --> 00:11:55,720 -[woman crying] -[blade slashes] 159 00:11:55,798 --> 00:11:57,628 [Auslin] This massacre was absolute. 160 00:11:57,717 --> 00:12:01,387 It’s said that there was a river of blood that ran down the mountainside. 161 00:12:01,470 --> 00:12:05,100 This, of course, was a message. It was a message to other Buddhist sects. 162 00:12:05,182 --> 00:12:10,062 It was also a message to the other daimyos that Nobunaga would observe no boundary. 163 00:12:11,230 --> 00:12:13,820 -[blade slashes] -This man, who, for the first time, 164 00:12:13,899 --> 00:12:18,739 had a realistic chance of actually uniting at least the central provinces of Japan 165 00:12:18,821 --> 00:12:22,321 was going to do it one way, through bloodshed and through the sword. 166 00:12:24,076 --> 00:12:27,656 But his destruction of Enryaku-ji would come back to haunt him later on. 167 00:12:30,750 --> 00:12:33,880 [narrator] The bloodshed continues as Nobunaga strikes 168 00:12:33,961 --> 00:12:35,881 against more of their strongholds, 169 00:12:35,963 --> 00:12:38,513 and puts countless Buddhists to the sword. 170 00:12:40,050 --> 00:12:44,510 These actions enrage other powerful warlords, known as daimyo, 171 00:12:44,597 --> 00:12:46,847 and set Nobunaga on a collision course 172 00:12:46,932 --> 00:12:50,102 with his most powerful and formidable adversary yet. 173 00:12:54,815 --> 00:12:57,395 [Turnbull] It wasn't just the Buddhist establishment 174 00:12:57,485 --> 00:13:01,235 who were shocked by Nobunaga's action on Mount Hiei. 175 00:13:01,322 --> 00:13:04,872 Many of the daimyo now became convinced 176 00:13:04,950 --> 00:13:08,910 that Nobunaga was a cruel tyrant who had to be overthrown. 177 00:13:09,955 --> 00:13:14,915 However, only very few of them had the resources whereby they could do it. 178 00:13:17,254 --> 00:13:18,344 One of them did, 179 00:13:19,048 --> 00:13:21,378 and his name was Takeda Shingen. 180 00:13:25,554 --> 00:13:30,234 [Ledbetter] Takeda Shingen was a daimyo of Kai Province, located in Central Japan. 181 00:13:31,894 --> 00:13:37,324 He was known as a particularly fierce military commander. 182 00:13:38,901 --> 00:13:41,611 [Meyer] He became known widely as the Tiger of Kai, 183 00:13:41,695 --> 00:13:45,445 and he’s really one of the last people who’s in a position 184 00:13:45,533 --> 00:13:48,793 to check Nobunaga’s advance across Japan. 185 00:13:48,869 --> 00:13:50,369 He has a complex reputation. 186 00:13:50,454 --> 00:13:53,584 He's, on the one hand, a man of incredible violence. 187 00:13:53,666 --> 00:13:57,086 Certain crimes are punished by being boiled alive. 188 00:13:58,629 --> 00:14:01,879 On the other hand, he is an ordained Buddhist monk. 189 00:14:02,967 --> 00:14:06,507 A slogan associated with him refers to one of the Buddha's sayings, 190 00:14:06,595 --> 00:14:10,095 “Under heaven, I alone am worthy of respect," 191 00:14:10,182 --> 00:14:14,142 and Shingen puts his own spin on it. "I alone am worthy of being feared." 192 00:14:16,272 --> 00:14:17,982 [Bender] Other daimyo recognized 193 00:14:18,065 --> 00:14:22,145 that Takeda Shingen was a very significant threat, 194 00:14:22,695 --> 00:14:27,615 um, and that he was the head of a formidable army. 195 00:14:27,700 --> 00:14:30,370 What it really comes down to is that 196 00:14:30,452 --> 00:14:34,752 Shingen knows that Nobunaga is a major threat and vice versa. 197 00:14:37,293 --> 00:14:39,963 [Ledbetter] After the destruction of the Enryaku-ji, 198 00:14:40,045 --> 00:14:44,215 Takeda Shingen decided that he needed to take the offensive against Nobunaga. 199 00:14:45,092 --> 00:14:48,302 He did so by first trying to eliminate 200 00:14:48,387 --> 00:14:51,177 Nobunaga’s ally, Tokugawa Ieyasu. 201 00:14:53,767 --> 00:14:56,687 [Auslin] He'd served Nobunaga since the Battle of Okehazama 202 00:14:56,770 --> 00:14:59,610 and was one of his most trusted generals and advisers. 203 00:15:03,485 --> 00:15:06,485 But Ieyasu’s lands lie to the east of Nobunaga 204 00:15:06,572 --> 00:15:09,582 and the south of Shingen, so he’s in between the two. 205 00:15:09,658 --> 00:15:13,948 And now, Shingen is going to attack Ieyasu first and then turn on Nobunaga. 206 00:15:15,915 --> 00:15:20,125 This is the first step on an invasion heading all the way to Kyoto 207 00:15:20,210 --> 00:15:22,880 to displace Nobunaga from Kyoto itself, 208 00:15:22,963 --> 00:15:26,593 so that Shingen could become the new lord of the Imperial City. 209 00:15:31,096 --> 00:15:33,886 This was a dangerous situation for Ieyasu, 210 00:15:33,974 --> 00:15:37,314 because at this point he knows he is outnumbered, 211 00:15:37,394 --> 00:15:39,904 he's facing a very formidable general. 212 00:15:39,980 --> 00:15:44,030 But he does have one ace, and that is his relationship with Oda Nobunaga. 213 00:15:44,109 --> 00:15:47,779 He can reach out to his powerful ally and ask for help. 214 00:15:51,951 --> 00:15:53,741 [horse neighs] 215 00:15:56,205 --> 00:15:59,415 [Meyer] But Nobunaga at this point is embroiled in this war 216 00:15:59,500 --> 00:16:01,920 in Central Japan against Buddhist establishments. 217 00:16:02,002 --> 00:16:04,002 Most of his forces are already engaged. 218 00:16:04,713 --> 00:16:10,183 He sends a paltry force of 3,000 middling commanders at best to assist Ieyasu. 219 00:16:12,805 --> 00:16:15,385 This is a dangerous gamble for Nobunaga. 220 00:16:15,474 --> 00:16:19,814 If Ieyasu falls, then Nobunaga's own home province of Owari 221 00:16:19,895 --> 00:16:21,515 is probably the next target. 222 00:16:21,605 --> 00:16:24,685 But it's a gamble that, in many ways, I think he had to make. 223 00:16:24,775 --> 00:16:26,395 Too many other wars to fight. 224 00:16:30,531 --> 00:16:33,991 [Ledbetter] Now, Takeda Shingen had around 35,000 troops. 225 00:16:36,120 --> 00:16:38,960 Ieyasu had around 8,000 troops. 226 00:16:43,210 --> 00:16:45,460 [in Japanese] We meet them in the field. 227 00:16:46,130 --> 00:16:49,380 We will fight the Takeda and destroy them! No weakness! 228 00:16:50,634 --> 00:16:53,724 Yet he still decided to meet Shingen in the field. 229 00:16:54,888 --> 00:16:57,218 [Meyer] The main reason he chooses to do this 230 00:16:57,307 --> 00:17:01,937 is because he believes a show of strength is necessary for his own vassals. 231 00:17:02,021 --> 00:17:05,521 Loyalty for a samurai at this point is a two-way street. 232 00:17:05,607 --> 00:17:08,487 They're loyal to people who win, who can protect them. 233 00:17:08,569 --> 00:17:10,819 The lord who cannot protect his own territory 234 00:17:10,904 --> 00:17:13,374 from being robbed by an army coming through… 235 00:17:13,449 --> 00:17:14,909 Is that a lord worth following? 236 00:17:21,707 --> 00:17:24,497 [narrator] January 25th, 1573. 237 00:17:25,335 --> 00:17:28,545 Ieyasu ignores his commanders' calls to back down. 238 00:17:30,007 --> 00:17:32,127 He moves his men to confront Shingen. 239 00:17:33,010 --> 00:17:37,770 He is outnumbered three to one. But despite the odds, Ieyasu attacks. 240 00:17:39,600 --> 00:17:45,650 Within hours, Shingen’s superior tactics and numbers annihilate Ieyasu’s forces. 241 00:17:45,731 --> 00:17:46,941 Mad with grief, 242 00:17:47,024 --> 00:17:51,244 Ieyasu fights on and must be dragged to safety by his loyal retainers. 243 00:18:06,210 --> 00:18:08,800 [Ledbetter] This was a humbling defeat for Ieyasu. 244 00:18:09,463 --> 00:18:11,763 He had tried to stand up to a superior force, 245 00:18:11,840 --> 00:18:14,510 like his ally Nobunaga had done several times, 246 00:18:14,593 --> 00:18:16,013 and was defeated decisively. 247 00:18:21,100 --> 00:18:23,980 [Meyer] The loss is very demoralizing for Ieyasu, 248 00:18:24,061 --> 00:18:26,441 as is the fact that the very next year, 249 00:18:26,522 --> 00:18:28,272 the armies of the Takeda do return 250 00:18:28,357 --> 00:18:32,147 and take several castles from him, and he feels utterly unable to stop it. 251 00:18:32,236 --> 00:18:34,396 He doesn't even put an army out to try. 252 00:18:39,535 --> 00:18:43,325 [Bender] Takeda Shingen completely has Ieyasu on the ropes, uh, 253 00:18:43,413 --> 00:18:47,003 and if he wanted to deliver that final knockout blow, he could have. 254 00:18:48,293 --> 00:18:53,013 But in the early part of that decade, 255 00:18:53,090 --> 00:18:58,390 in the midst of this great success that Shingen has enjoyed, uh, he dies. 256 00:19:00,889 --> 00:19:05,019 The consensus is that he probably died of liver cancer. 257 00:19:05,102 --> 00:19:09,192 A kind of unceremonious end to this illustrious warlord. 258 00:19:11,650 --> 00:19:14,740 Before his death, he gave instructions to his senior retainers 259 00:19:14,820 --> 00:19:17,530 that they were to keep it secret for three years… 260 00:19:24,288 --> 00:19:29,588 so that his heir, Takeda Katsuyori, could consolidate his control of Kai 261 00:19:29,668 --> 00:19:35,088 and the retainers underneath him, before mounting any further operations. 262 00:19:41,180 --> 00:19:44,520 Takeda Katsuyori was an accomplished general. 263 00:19:44,600 --> 00:19:46,730 He had performed bravely in battle. 264 00:19:47,227 --> 00:19:51,817 His biggest problem was garnering the support of his father’s senior generals. 265 00:19:53,025 --> 00:19:57,315 These were Shingen’s old guard, who had been with him his entire life. 266 00:19:58,280 --> 00:20:01,660 And he’s in direct competition with the memory of his father. 267 00:20:03,827 --> 00:20:06,577 His father was this gigantic character. 268 00:20:15,547 --> 00:20:17,797 [Meyer] Not all of his retainers trust him. 269 00:20:17,883 --> 00:20:19,683 You see, Katsuyori's mother 270 00:20:19,760 --> 00:20:24,100 was one of the people who Shingen had taken by force as a concubine. 271 00:20:24,181 --> 00:20:26,891 So, many of the Takeda retainers didn't trust Katsuyori. 272 00:20:26,975 --> 00:20:28,765 They thought, "He's a bastard. 273 00:20:28,852 --> 00:20:31,102 He comes from this extramarital relationship, 274 00:20:31,188 --> 00:20:33,898 and he might not really be loyal to the cause." 275 00:20:38,362 --> 00:20:42,532 [Auslin] As Kasuyori tries to make his name as the leader of the Takeda clan… 276 00:20:44,993 --> 00:20:47,913 he receives an unexpected but very welcome letter. 277 00:20:48,538 --> 00:20:53,168 The letter comes from the wife of one of his greatest enemies, Tokugawa Ieyasu. 278 00:20:55,545 --> 00:20:57,915 And it seems almost too good to be true. 279 00:21:02,594 --> 00:21:05,894 Lady Tsukiyama was secretly sending letters 280 00:21:05,973 --> 00:21:11,193 to the leader of Ieyasu's archenemy, Takeda Katsuyori. 281 00:21:12,688 --> 00:21:15,818 [Kitagawa] Lady Tsukiyama and Tokugawa Ieyasu married 282 00:21:15,899 --> 00:21:17,109 when they were very young, 283 00:21:17,192 --> 00:21:19,532 like 14 or 15 years old. 284 00:21:19,611 --> 00:21:22,031 It was an arranged marriage to make peace. 285 00:21:25,200 --> 00:21:27,620 But because this was an arranged marriage, 286 00:21:27,703 --> 00:21:30,213 their relationship was never good. 287 00:21:34,584 --> 00:21:39,134 They then, uh, lived together for 13 years, and they had a son. 288 00:21:40,424 --> 00:21:45,224 Lady Tsukiyama was extremely proud, jealous, tempestuous, 289 00:21:45,304 --> 00:21:47,974 bad-tempered, very difficult to get along with. 290 00:21:48,849 --> 00:21:54,229 Ieyasu started to take concubines, and then he had a number of concubines. 291 00:21:55,772 --> 00:22:00,282 Well, Ieyasu certainly came to prefer the company of his concubines. Um… 292 00:22:01,361 --> 00:22:04,821 All men of power in those days had concubines, 293 00:22:04,906 --> 00:22:08,946 but we do know that Lady Tsukiyama had a jealous personality, 294 00:22:09,036 --> 00:22:12,156 so she very probably, um, was jealous 295 00:22:12,247 --> 00:22:15,667 of the fact that he had some 19 or 20 concubines. 296 00:22:16,793 --> 00:22:19,843 So, as far as she was concerned, she got a pretty raw deal. 297 00:22:29,806 --> 00:22:35,846 In these letters, she said that she would betray Ieyasu and Oda Nobunaga, 298 00:22:35,937 --> 00:22:37,307 and in exchange… 299 00:22:38,607 --> 00:22:42,487 could he please give her son sanctuary and give him lands 300 00:22:42,569 --> 00:22:46,819 and could he also provide her with a husband from among his generals? 301 00:23:00,504 --> 00:23:02,634 [horse neighs] 302 00:23:02,714 --> 00:23:04,724 [horse galloping] 303 00:23:09,554 --> 00:23:14,814 [Bender] So, Katsuyori may have thought, "Here is my chance to eliminate Ieyasu." 304 00:23:16,603 --> 00:23:21,533 This would really solidify his position as the new Takeda family head. 305 00:23:23,026 --> 00:23:28,406 And it would also do a lot to really gain the firm support of his retainers. 306 00:23:30,617 --> 00:23:34,617 [Downer] Takeda Katsuyori answered and said, "This is fine." 307 00:23:34,704 --> 00:23:37,584 And yet she named the general who he would marry to her. 308 00:23:47,634 --> 00:23:49,344 [bell dings] 309 00:23:50,512 --> 00:23:53,772 [Ledbetter] Instead of waiting three years as his father dictated, 310 00:23:53,849 --> 00:23:55,929 Katsuyori decided to move earlier. 311 00:23:56,017 --> 00:24:00,727 And this would lead to one of the most iconic clashes of the Sengoku period. 312 00:24:04,734 --> 00:24:09,824 In 1575, Katsuyori takes his forces and follows essentially the same route 313 00:24:09,906 --> 00:24:12,076 that his father had several years before. 314 00:24:14,202 --> 00:24:18,962 For Ieyasu, once again, this is an invasion into his territory. 315 00:24:22,043 --> 00:24:24,133 Tokugawa Ieyasu is aware of the threat 316 00:24:24,212 --> 00:24:28,472 because he has received messengers detailing the size of the Takeda force, 317 00:24:28,550 --> 00:24:30,050 about 15,000 men. 318 00:24:31,761 --> 00:24:33,391 And if he cannot stop them, 319 00:24:34,556 --> 00:24:37,346 they potentially will eliminate him completely. 320 00:24:39,811 --> 00:24:43,271 The situation, as Ieyasu sees it, is grave. 321 00:24:44,608 --> 00:24:47,028 And he dashes off a message to Nobunaga. 322 00:24:47,944 --> 00:24:50,114 Ieyasu has been a steadfast ally 323 00:24:50,197 --> 00:24:52,657 the entire time of their relationship together. 324 00:24:53,241 --> 00:24:57,451 He has fought battles side by side with Nobunaga, 325 00:24:58,705 --> 00:25:00,705 at times, come to rescue Nobunaga. 326 00:25:16,806 --> 00:25:18,176 And he tells Nobunaga… 327 00:25:19,017 --> 00:25:21,347 "I have done all these things for you. 328 00:25:22,562 --> 00:25:25,612 If you don’t send reinforcements now, 329 00:25:26,191 --> 00:25:27,571 I will change sides. 330 00:25:27,651 --> 00:25:30,991 And with Katsuyori, we will invade your lands, 331 00:25:31,071 --> 00:25:34,161 I will take your castles, and we will defeat you.” 332 00:25:34,741 --> 00:25:38,121 This is a pretty drastic thing to be telling Oda Nobunaga. 333 00:25:39,704 --> 00:25:42,464 [Bender] If Nobunaga lost, 334 00:25:42,541 --> 00:25:45,921 this would arguably be the most serious defeat 335 00:25:46,002 --> 00:25:48,382 that he had suffered up to this point. 336 00:25:48,463 --> 00:25:53,643 And what it would mean is a complete halt to any kind of eastward expansion. 337 00:25:55,303 --> 00:26:00,393 [Meyer] Nobunaga also relies on this aura of fear, this aura of invincibility. 338 00:26:00,475 --> 00:26:04,015 If he starts developing a reputation as a man who can be beaten, 339 00:26:04,104 --> 00:26:07,984 it could become a real rallying point for opposition to his rule. 340 00:26:12,445 --> 00:26:14,905 [Ledbetter] Ieyasu was right and Nobunaga knew it. 341 00:26:15,490 --> 00:26:20,500 He sends a letter promising support along with a significant amount of gold, 342 00:26:20,579 --> 00:26:24,369 gathers his forces, and travels to meet with Ieyasu. 343 00:26:28,712 --> 00:26:30,762 [narrator] June, 1575. 344 00:26:31,548 --> 00:26:34,508 Nobunaga and Ieyasu combine forces 345 00:26:34,593 --> 00:26:37,303 and together they march to confront Katsuyori. 346 00:26:39,806 --> 00:26:44,596 Nobunaga and Ieyasu’s armies stop at the Plains of Shitaragahara, 347 00:26:44,686 --> 00:26:48,766 a few miles from where Katsuyori and his army are now encamped. 348 00:26:50,525 --> 00:26:52,645 Now, on the eve of the battle, 349 00:26:52,736 --> 00:26:55,776 Nobunaga begins to execute a bold plan 350 00:26:55,864 --> 00:27:00,494 that he hopes will help him beat the most formidable army he has ever faced. 351 00:27:11,838 --> 00:27:14,668 [Meyer] One of the fascinating things about Oda Nobunaga 352 00:27:14,758 --> 00:27:17,588 is that, for lack of a better term, he does his homework. 353 00:27:17,677 --> 00:27:20,177 He's well-prepared for the people he fights. 354 00:27:21,723 --> 00:27:24,643 The Takeda clan, militarily, is known for the speed 355 00:27:24,726 --> 00:27:26,806 with which they can redeploy their troops. 356 00:27:26,895 --> 00:27:28,725 If they’re left unchecked, 357 00:27:28,813 --> 00:27:32,403 they can move their forces around extremely rapidly, something that 358 00:27:32,484 --> 00:27:35,784 can be damaging if you’re not prepared for it on the battlefield. 359 00:27:37,113 --> 00:27:41,453 [Auslin] To try and blunt the attack, Nobunaga builds a series of palisades 360 00:27:41,534 --> 00:27:44,124 that he hopes will slow down the enemy forces. 361 00:27:45,330 --> 00:27:50,460 These obstacles were placed so that as the Takeda moved forward, 362 00:27:50,543 --> 00:27:52,553 their advance would be disrupted. 363 00:27:52,629 --> 00:27:59,259 The entire point was to lure the Takeda into what essentially would be kill zones. 364 00:27:59,344 --> 00:28:03,144 Once they were there, these obstacles would disrupt their movement. 365 00:28:05,558 --> 00:28:10,188 And that’s where the Oda and the Tokugawa gunners would do their damage. 366 00:28:12,565 --> 00:28:17,315 [Bender] However, one of the big weaknesses of muskets in this era 367 00:28:17,404 --> 00:28:21,204 is that reloading times are very long, 368 00:28:21,282 --> 00:28:25,042 and according to the traditional account, 369 00:28:25,120 --> 00:28:29,540 Nobunaga invented this great technique to mitigate that, 370 00:28:29,958 --> 00:28:32,378 uh, in what is known as the three-shot volley. 371 00:28:34,045 --> 00:28:37,715 [Ledbetter] There would be units of arquebuses 372 00:28:37,799 --> 00:28:40,299 combined with two or three archers. 373 00:28:41,136 --> 00:28:43,846 While the arquebuses were reloading, 374 00:28:43,930 --> 00:28:47,850 the bowman could cover that dead time. 375 00:28:47,934 --> 00:28:52,904 Because those would be staggered times, you get the effect of a rotating fire. 376 00:28:54,566 --> 00:28:56,986 [Bender] And behind Nobunaga's gunners, 377 00:28:57,068 --> 00:29:03,618 he has troops who are equipped with pikes to get the rider off of the horse, 378 00:29:03,700 --> 00:29:07,500 who could then be attacked with swords or spears. 379 00:29:08,663 --> 00:29:12,753 [in Japanese] Oda’s troops are here. If we attack from this direction, 380 00:29:12,834 --> 00:29:14,134 we can win. 381 00:29:15,044 --> 00:29:17,304 [Ledbetter] The Takedas' typical tactic 382 00:29:17,380 --> 00:29:20,430 was to try to move around their opponent, 383 00:29:20,508 --> 00:29:23,008 encircle them, and then defeat them from all sides. 384 00:29:24,179 --> 00:29:28,269 [Bender] Katsuyori was convinced that he could win this encounter, 385 00:29:28,349 --> 00:29:30,059 as did his followers. 386 00:29:30,143 --> 00:29:36,233 They had faced the Tokugawa before and had won this spectacular victory. 387 00:29:38,693 --> 00:29:40,153 On the eve of the battle, 388 00:29:40,236 --> 00:29:43,616 it’s still fair to say that it could have gone either way. 389 00:29:45,867 --> 00:29:48,367 [Meyer] A defeat could have been very damaging 390 00:29:48,453 --> 00:29:51,413 for Nobunaga's image around Japan. 391 00:29:51,498 --> 00:29:54,208 He's made a lot of enemies by the mid-1570s. 392 00:29:54,292 --> 00:29:59,302 If he loses, it could become a real rallying point for opposition to his rule. 393 00:30:02,258 --> 00:30:04,508 When the two sides would clash in the morning, 394 00:30:05,220 --> 00:30:10,680 this would be one of the most decisive and landmark battles in Japanese history. 395 00:30:10,767 --> 00:30:12,767 [wind whistling] 396 00:30:14,854 --> 00:30:16,114 [crow caws] 397 00:30:19,692 --> 00:30:21,532 [horse neighs] 398 00:30:21,611 --> 00:30:23,991 On the morning of the battle, the Takeda advance 399 00:30:24,072 --> 00:30:28,332 and take up an attack position on the ridgeline facing the Oda positions. 400 00:30:29,077 --> 00:30:31,077 [horse neighs] 401 00:30:31,246 --> 00:30:34,746 [Ledbetter] Everything's silent, except for the movement of horses. 402 00:30:38,837 --> 00:30:42,087 Katsuyori can see the Oda positions, but… 403 00:30:42,173 --> 00:30:46,553 he's not real sure at this point exactly what he's facing. 404 00:30:52,058 --> 00:30:54,308 [in Japanese] Troops ready? Charge! 405 00:30:57,480 --> 00:30:59,610 [Ledbetter] Imagine you're a Takeda troop, 406 00:30:59,691 --> 00:31:01,111 you see the enemy in front, 407 00:31:01,192 --> 00:31:02,782 -you charge. -[soldiers yelling] 408 00:31:02,861 --> 00:31:04,491 [in Japanese] Fire! 409 00:31:06,364 --> 00:31:09,124 [Ledbetter] You start to get hit with musket fire. 410 00:31:12,245 --> 00:31:14,405 -[groans] -And then arrow fire. 411 00:31:15,582 --> 00:31:16,712 [in Japanese] Charge! 412 00:31:17,375 --> 00:31:21,585 [Ledbetter] Leaders are encouraging you, and you reach the first line of obstacles, 413 00:31:21,671 --> 00:31:24,761 and there are barricades that you have to maneuver around. 414 00:31:25,341 --> 00:31:26,381 [in Japanese] Now! 415 00:31:27,594 --> 00:31:30,224 [Ledbetter] Meanwhile, the gunfire is getting more intense. 416 00:31:30,305 --> 00:31:32,265 The arrows are starting to hit home. 417 00:31:32,348 --> 00:31:35,388 Your compatriots to your left and your right are getting hit. 418 00:31:36,603 --> 00:31:40,063 The only way to get through this is to get through these obstacles 419 00:31:40,148 --> 00:31:43,228 and engage with the enemy and go hand-to-hand. 420 00:31:44,277 --> 00:31:45,357 [in Japanese] Attack! 421 00:31:45,445 --> 00:31:46,275 [soldier yells] 422 00:31:46,362 --> 00:31:48,362 -[soldiers battling] -[arquebuses firing] 423 00:31:51,451 --> 00:31:54,001 [Meyer] Katsuyori keeps sending troops forward. 424 00:31:54,621 --> 00:31:57,121 As long as he keeps up that frontal attack, 425 00:31:57,206 --> 00:32:00,286 his enveloping maneuver still has a chance of succeeding. 426 00:32:00,376 --> 00:32:01,876 [soldiers yelling] 427 00:32:03,922 --> 00:32:07,382 You have bullets and arrows flying all over the place. 428 00:32:08,676 --> 00:32:11,846 Smoke obscuring views, getting in your eyes. 429 00:32:13,014 --> 00:32:14,564 [soldiers yelling] 430 00:32:23,691 --> 00:32:28,201 They get hit from the side with an onslaught 431 00:32:28,279 --> 00:32:31,029 of Oda foot soldiers coming at them. 432 00:32:31,824 --> 00:32:34,544 With their spears, their pikes. 433 00:32:34,619 --> 00:32:36,449 The Takeda are torn to shreds. 434 00:32:37,705 --> 00:32:41,665 This speaks to the fact that Nobunaga's plan was to suck them in 435 00:32:41,751 --> 00:32:44,171 and basically hold them in this kill zone. 436 00:32:48,925 --> 00:32:51,715 Katsuyori is unwilling at this point to give up. 437 00:32:51,803 --> 00:32:53,893 So he sends in the next wave. 438 00:32:53,972 --> 00:32:59,192 This happens three, four, five times, and it's tearing the Takeda up. 439 00:32:59,727 --> 00:33:02,647 -[yells] -[Ledbetter] This is pure slaughter. 440 00:33:09,529 --> 00:33:10,819 [in Japanese] Keep going! 441 00:33:11,364 --> 00:33:14,244 [Meyer] As the day goes on, it becomes clearer and clearer 442 00:33:14,325 --> 00:33:15,785 to the Takeda clan retainers, 443 00:33:15,868 --> 00:33:17,038 they won't win. 444 00:33:17,120 --> 00:33:18,540 [soldiers yelling] 445 00:33:19,414 --> 00:33:22,294 [Meyer] And so, many of them start to fall back, 446 00:33:22,375 --> 00:33:23,375 to retreat, 447 00:33:23,459 --> 00:33:28,549 and this really is the most dangerous moment in any battle across human history, 448 00:33:28,631 --> 00:33:32,181 because when one side turns and starts to run from the other, 449 00:33:32,260 --> 00:33:34,140 that's when the real killing starts. 450 00:33:36,264 --> 00:33:38,524 [Ledbetter] Katsuyori doesn't want to retreat. 451 00:33:38,599 --> 00:33:40,439 He’s committed to fighting or dying. 452 00:33:41,477 --> 00:33:43,227 But as his forces disintegrate… 453 00:33:43,312 --> 00:33:44,402 [in Japanese] Charge! 454 00:33:44,480 --> 00:33:48,780 …his subordinate commanders plead with him to escape, 455 00:33:48,860 --> 00:33:51,700 until one of them puts him on his horse, 456 00:33:52,447 --> 00:33:53,407 shoves him north, 457 00:33:54,198 --> 00:34:00,538 and Katsuyori is able to get back to his own lands with a handful of his forces. 458 00:34:03,291 --> 00:34:05,041 [laughs] 459 00:34:05,126 --> 00:34:09,296 [Ledbetter] Over the course of the battle, 10,000 soldiers 460 00:34:09,380 --> 00:34:12,300 of Katsuyori's are left dead on the battlefield. 461 00:34:12,383 --> 00:34:14,643 Many of the Takeda leadership… 462 00:34:16,179 --> 00:34:19,519 the generals that had served Shingen for so long, 463 00:34:19,599 --> 00:34:23,479 were lying dead with their troops. 464 00:34:28,775 --> 00:34:34,025 Nagashino is often seen as a watershed battle in global history 465 00:34:34,113 --> 00:34:40,083 because of Nobunaga’s supposed technique of rotating volley fire. 466 00:34:40,161 --> 00:34:41,331 [groans] 467 00:34:41,412 --> 00:34:45,832 [Ledbetter] What’s really impressive is Nobunaga’s organization 468 00:34:45,917 --> 00:34:47,837 to develop this plan, 469 00:34:48,503 --> 00:34:52,923 to effectively use obstacles in a way that modern armies train today, 470 00:34:53,633 --> 00:34:56,473 and put all this together into one plan 471 00:34:56,552 --> 00:34:59,472 designed to completely annihilate his enemy. 472 00:35:03,184 --> 00:35:06,314 [Bender] The Battle of Nagashino was a resounding success 473 00:35:06,395 --> 00:35:13,105 for Nobunaga and Ieyasu because it dealt this very severe blow to… 474 00:35:14,195 --> 00:35:17,735 one of the three major remaining eastern daimyo, 475 00:35:17,824 --> 00:35:23,454 and the one who was closest to Nobunaga's domains. 476 00:35:25,248 --> 00:35:28,578 [Ledbetter] Katsuyori has been so psychologically traumatized 477 00:35:28,668 --> 00:35:29,538 by this event… 478 00:35:29,627 --> 00:35:30,837 [in Japanese] Leave now. 479 00:35:32,463 --> 00:35:34,673 …that this is really the last time 480 00:35:34,757 --> 00:35:37,837 he ventures out of his own territory in force. 481 00:35:40,847 --> 00:35:44,017 [Bender] It took a few years to fully eliminate the Takeda, 482 00:35:44,100 --> 00:35:47,480 but the writing was on the wall, so to speak. 483 00:35:47,562 --> 00:35:53,692 They're never able to pose a serious threat to Nobunaga after Nagashino. 484 00:36:00,199 --> 00:36:03,579 [Auslin] However, while this was a resounding victory for Ieyasu, 485 00:36:03,995 --> 00:36:07,075 his success is undermined when he finds out that his own wife, 486 00:36:07,165 --> 00:36:09,415 Tsukiyama, has been plotting to betray him. 487 00:36:25,266 --> 00:36:27,226 [Downer] These letters were discovered. 488 00:36:28,019 --> 00:36:32,939 The story is that Nobunaga had inserted some spies into Ieyasu's household. 489 00:36:33,024 --> 00:36:35,194 This is totally credible. 490 00:36:35,276 --> 00:36:38,066 Everybody had spies in every household, friend or foe. 491 00:36:38,154 --> 00:36:41,244 And the maid of Lady Tsukiyama, it is said, 492 00:36:41,324 --> 00:36:45,664 found these letters and passed them on to Oda Nobunaga. 493 00:36:49,290 --> 00:36:54,590 [in Japanese] There wasn’t much evidence, and it was largely speculation, 494 00:36:54,670 --> 00:36:57,220 but they could not ignore the issue. 495 00:36:57,298 --> 00:37:02,138 Therefore, Nobunaga ordered Ieyasu to find a solution. 496 00:37:02,762 --> 00:37:03,642 Leave. 497 00:37:11,437 --> 00:37:12,647 [Tsukiyama gasps] 498 00:37:12,730 --> 00:37:15,690 [Kitagawa] Tokugawa Ieyasu had to get rid of Lady Tsukiyama. 499 00:37:15,775 --> 00:37:16,975 [in Japanese] Let me go! 500 00:37:17,818 --> 00:37:18,738 Let me go! 501 00:37:18,819 --> 00:37:20,949 [Kitagawa] So Ieyasu decided to expel her. 502 00:37:21,030 --> 00:37:25,410 But if she still survives, then she might have done something more. 503 00:37:28,329 --> 00:37:30,329 [cries] 504 00:37:38,881 --> 00:37:40,471 -[blade slashes] -[body thuds] 505 00:37:49,433 --> 00:37:51,143 Ieyasu takes it a step further. 506 00:37:51,227 --> 00:37:54,307 Ieyasu suspects his son might attempt to do 507 00:37:54,397 --> 00:37:59,317 what a respectful, loyal son is supposed to do and avenge his mother. 508 00:37:59,402 --> 00:38:02,862 So he orders his son to be placed under house arrest. 509 00:38:06,742 --> 00:38:10,082 [Turnbull] But nevertheless, under pressure from Nobunaga, 510 00:38:10,162 --> 00:38:14,922 Ieyasu was required to force his own son to commit suicide. 511 00:38:17,420 --> 00:38:20,720 [Downer] Nobunaga at this point was a very strong warlord, 512 00:38:20,798 --> 00:38:22,588 and Ieyasu had to do what he said. 513 00:38:22,675 --> 00:38:25,215 Also, Ieyasu needed to maintain that alliance. 514 00:38:25,303 --> 00:38:26,803 It was absolutely vital. 515 00:38:26,887 --> 00:38:29,637 So, no matter what he thought, um, 516 00:38:29,724 --> 00:38:34,154 if Nobunaga ordered him to execute his own son, he had to do so. 517 00:38:37,732 --> 00:38:41,152 [Turnbull] It was the most dreadful thing that could be asked of him, 518 00:38:41,235 --> 00:38:44,655 and it affected his relationship with Nobunaga 519 00:38:44,739 --> 00:38:46,569 for the rest of their days together. 520 00:38:51,662 --> 00:38:55,542 [narrator] The victory at Nagashino makes Nobunaga the most powerful warlord 521 00:38:55,624 --> 00:38:56,714 in the nation. 522 00:39:00,463 --> 00:39:03,553 Most of Central Japan is now under his control. 523 00:39:06,302 --> 00:39:10,972 His dream of uniting all of the nation under his own banner is closer than ever. 524 00:39:12,767 --> 00:39:14,517 But it has come at a price. 525 00:39:14,602 --> 00:39:19,322 Increasingly paranoid, Nobunaga now sees enemies everywhere. 526 00:39:23,402 --> 00:39:25,702 [Turnbull] The betrayal by Lady Tsukiyama 527 00:39:25,780 --> 00:39:31,830 did nothing but add to the fears Nobunaga had of enemies all around him, 528 00:39:31,911 --> 00:39:37,671 which amounted almost to a paranoid feeling that everyone wanted rid of him. 529 00:39:40,127 --> 00:39:45,167 [Ashmore] Put yourself into Nobunaga’s position once he realizes this. 530 00:39:48,969 --> 00:39:50,889 [imperceptible] 531 00:39:52,098 --> 00:39:56,478 [Ashmore] Anyone tilling a field, anyone walking down the streets, 532 00:39:56,560 --> 00:40:02,150 any one of the maids in his service could be preparing poison for a drink. 533 00:40:02,233 --> 00:40:06,903 It’s a very sobering thought to realize that you are not safe. 534 00:40:10,491 --> 00:40:14,581 [Turnbull] In fact, there had been several attempts on Nobunaga's life. 535 00:40:15,788 --> 00:40:19,208 The attempted assassin came from the province of Iga. 536 00:40:20,292 --> 00:40:24,052 And Iga Province was one of the smallest provinces in Sengoku Japan. 537 00:40:27,216 --> 00:40:31,926 [Ashmore] For 150 years, these people had governed themselves, 538 00:40:32,012 --> 00:40:36,272 keeping out any and all intruders into their domain. 539 00:40:38,352 --> 00:40:39,772 [Turnbull] When they fought, 540 00:40:39,854 --> 00:40:42,944 they joined together in self-governing communes, 541 00:40:43,023 --> 00:40:44,943 almost as a guerrilla army. 542 00:40:45,568 --> 00:40:51,198 And as such, they had raided Nobunaga's lines of communication for several years. 543 00:40:51,282 --> 00:40:56,332 They were so good at these techniques of irregular warfare, 544 00:40:56,412 --> 00:41:01,332 that this is what gave rise to the legends of the ninja of Iga. 545 00:41:03,085 --> 00:41:07,335 They proved to be a thorn in Oda Nobunaga's side. 546 00:41:08,757 --> 00:41:11,927 They had to go, by any means necessary. 547 00:41:12,011 --> 00:41:14,761 Nobunaga could not permit them to exist, 548 00:41:15,514 --> 00:41:20,024 for the sake of his own reputation and the sake of his own security. 549 00:41:22,897 --> 00:41:25,317 [Turnbull] And it should have been a pushover, 550 00:41:25,983 --> 00:41:29,823 but it turned out to be one of the most vicious and bloody campaigns 551 00:41:29,904 --> 00:41:31,704 of Nobunaga's career. 552 00:41:38,162 --> 00:41:40,162 [closing theme plays]