▲ | 609venezia 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Man of the people: > Ujiharu’s blind charges may actually have had a noble purpose. Japanese battles involving castles almost always turned into sieges, and those always ended the same way: with the nearby fields and peasant settlements being either destroyed to try and draw the lord out of the castle or looted to feed the occupying army. Some researchers believe that Ujiharu was trying to avoid a siege to save his subjects. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | Bost 5 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I wonder how he managed to reconquer his castle. By, uh... besieging it, maybe? Probably? Now repeat that eight times - and honestly, I’m struggling to see where and how exactly he tried to save his subjects. Sorry, but losing your castle nine times isn’t what capable military leaders do. | |||||||||||||||||
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