Battle of Aizu | |||||||
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Part of Boshin War | |||||||
Attack of the Aizu-Wakamatsu castle during the Battle of Aizu. |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Imperial faction: Satsuma Domain Chōshū Domain Tosa Domain Hiroshima Domain Ōgaki Domain Sadowara Domain |
Shogunate faction: Northern Alliance Aizu Domain |
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Kuroda Kiyotaka Saionji Kinmochi Yamagata Aritomo Itagaki Taisuke Ijichi Masaharu Nakamura Hanjirō |
Matsudaira Katamori Saigō Tanomo Yamakawa Hiroshi Kayano Gonbei Tanaka Tosa† Saitō Hajime Nakano Takeko† |
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Strength | |||||||
15,000 combatants | 5,000 combatants | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
unknown | unknown |
The Battle of Aizu (Japanese: 会津戦争, "War of Aizu") was fought in northern Japan in autumn 1868, and was part of the Boshin War.
Aizu was known for its martial skill, and maintained at any given time, a standing army of over 5000. It was often deployed to security operations on the northern fringes of the country, as far north as southern Sakhalin. Also, in the period immediately before, during, and after Commodore Perry's arrival, Aizu had a presence in security operations around Edo Bay.
During the tenure of the 9th generation lord Matsudaira Katamori, the domain deployed massive amounts of their troops to Kyoto, where Katamori served as Kyoto Shugoshoku. Earning the hatred of the Chōshū domain, and alienating his ally, the Satsuma domain, Katamori retreated with the shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu in 1868.
Though the Satsuma-Chōshū controlled Imperial Court, following Yoshinobu's resignation, called for the punishment of Katamori and Aizu as "enemies of the Court," he took great pains to beg for mercy, finally acquiescing to calls for war later in 1868, during the Boshin War. Though the Aizu forces fought as part of the greater efforts of the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei, they were eventually abandoned (after the loss at the Battle of Bonari Pass) by the forces of the former Bakufu under Ōtori Keisuke. Aizu, now fighting alone, had its forces besieged at Tsuruga Castle, the seat of the Aizu domain, in October 1868. This was the start of a month-long siege.
A detached unit from the Byakkotai ("White Tiger Company") — young, predominantly teenage, samurai — are famous for having committed seppuku (a form of ritual suicide) on Mount Iimori, overlooking the castle. Because of the smoke from the burning castle town, which was in between them and the castle itself, they mistakenly assumed that the castle had fallen. Their story is known because of the only one among them whose suicide was unsuccessful: Iinuma Sadakichi.