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词条 Sieges of Kuromaru
释义

  1. Taiheiki

  2. Helmet of Yoshisada

  3. References

{{Infobox Military Conflict
|conflict=Battle of Fujishima
|partof=the Nanboku-chō Wars
|image=
|caption=
|date=August 1338
|place=Near Kuromaru fortress, Echizen Province, Japan
| coordinates = {{coord|36|5|17.84|N|136|12|33.43|E|region:JP-18|display=title}}
| map_type = Japan Fukui Prefecture#Japan
| map_relief =1
|casus=
|territory=
|result=Northern Court victory
|combatant1=Northern Court
|combatant2=Southern Court
|combatant3=
|commander1=Hosokawa Akiuji
|commander2=Nitta Yoshisada{{KIA}}
|commander3=
|strength1=Unknown
|strength2=50 horse
|strength3=
|casualties1=
|casualties2=
|casualties3=
|notes=
}}{{Infobox Military Conflict
|conflict=Siege of Kuromaru
|partof=
|image=
|caption=
|date=Autumn 1339
|place=Kuromaru fortress, Echizen Province
|casus=
|territory=
|result=Siege succeeds; fortress falls to Southern Court
|combatant1=Northern Court
|combatant2=Southern Court
|combatant3=
|commander1=Shiba Takatsune
|commander2=Wakiya Yoshisuke
|commander3=
|strength1=
|strength2=
|strength3=
|casualties1=
|casualties2=
|casualties3=
|notes=
}}{{Campaignbox Nanboku-chō Wars}}

The {{nihongo| Kuromaru |黒丸||}}, or "Black Fortress", was a fortress of the Kanrei Shiba Takatsune located in Echizen Province (present-day Nittazuka, Fukui, Fukui Prefecture) in the Hokuriku region of Japan. It was attacked twice during the Nanboku-chō Wars of the 14th century, during which it was likely both built and destroyed.

The fortress was first attacked in August 1338 by a small force under Nitta Yoshisada, numbering roughly fifty horse, in what would come to be known as the battle of Fujishima. Hosokawa Akiuji had been ordered by Ashikaga Takauji to aid Shiba Takatsune in the defense, and encountered Nitta's force a short distance from the fortress.[1]

The warrior monks of the Heisen-ji monastery, originally part of Nitta's force, were bribed by Shiba to abandon the attack, and Nitta's rush to fill the ensuing gap in his formations led to him and his horsemen running into Hosokawa's.

In the battle which followed, Nitta was mortally wounded by an arrow.[1][2]

The following year, upon his enthronement, Emperor Go-Murakami ordered the late Nitta's brother, Wakiya Yoshisuke, to lead another attack on the fortress. This assault was successful, and ended in Shiba's surrender.[1]{{rp|68}}

Taiheiki

Chapter 20 of the Taiheiki chronicles the events of the death of Yoshisada at Kuromaru. It states that an arrow wounded his horse, making it unable to jump over a ditch. It fell and trapped Yoshisada's left leg. An arrow in the flurry struck him between the brows, and he drew his sword and slit his throat. The resemblance to the death of Minamoto no Yoshinaka as described in the Heike Monogatari has led to questions about whether the account is factual.

Helmet of Yoshisada

In 1660, a farmer tilling the land near the site of the battle uncovered a kabuto helmet and presented it to Matsudaira Mitsumichi, daimyō of Fukui Domain. The construction of the helmet indicated that it had belonged to a high-ranking warrior, and the domain's chief military strategist, Inoue Banzaemon declared that it must have belonged to Nitta Yoshisada. In 1870, the imperial governor of Fukui, Matsudaira Mochiaki, built a Shinto shrine, the Fujishima Shrine on the site, as part of the Meiji government's drive to honour the history of the Kenmu Restoration and to promote loyalty to the Imperial family of Japan. The kabuto is preserved at the shrine, and is an Important Cultural Property.[3] The site of the battle itself was protected as a National Historic Site by the Japanese government in 1924. [4]

References

1. ^{{Cite book |last=Sansom |first=George |title=A History of Japan, 1334–1615 |publisher=Stanford University Press |year=1961 |ISBN=0804705259 |page=64}}
2. ^{{cite book|last=Turnbull|first=Stephen|title=The Samurai Sourcebook |publisher=Cassell & Co |date=1998 |pages=208 |isbn=1-85409-523-4}}
3. ^{{cite web |url= http://info.pref.fukui.jp/bunka/bunkazai/sitei/kougei/fujishimajinja-ginzogan.html |title= 福井県の文化財|trans-title= Fukui Prefecture Cultural Properties|language=Japanese |publisher=Fukui Prefecture |accessdate=}}
4. ^{{cite web |url=http://bunka.nii.ac.jp/heritages/detail/171955 |title=燈明寺畷新田義貞戦歿伝説地|language=Japanese |publisher=Agency for Cultural Affairs |accessdate=}}
  • Taiheiki (in Japanese)

8 : Sieges involving Japan|1330s in Japan|1338 in Asia|1339 in Asia|Conflicts in 1338|Conflicts in 1339|Echizen Province|Historic Sites of Japan

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