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Kunohe Rebellion

Kunohe Rebellion
Date 1591
Location Kunohe, Iwate, Japan
Coordinates: 40°16′00″N 141°18′13″E / 40.26667°N 141.30361°E / 40.26667; 141.30361
Result Toyotomi victory
Belligerents
forces of Toyotomi Hideyoshi forces of Kunohe Masazane
Commanders and leaders
Gamo Ujisato Kunohe Masazane
Strength
30,000 5,000

The Kunohe Rebellion (九戸政実の乱, Kunoe Masazane no Ran) was a battle which occurred in what is now Ninohe, Iwate in the northern Tōhoku region of Japan during the late Sengoku period. This was one of the final battles in Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s campaign to reunify Japan.

Kunohe Castle was held by Kunohe Masazane (1536–1591), from a branch line of the Nanbu clan who had ruled the region since the early Muromachi period. After the death of the 24th hereditary chieftain of the main Nanbu clan, Nanbu Harumasa in 1582, the clan split into several competing factions. In 1590, the Sannohe faction led by Nanbu Nobunao organized a coalition of most of the Nambu clans and pledged allegiance to Toyotomi Hideyoshi at the Siege of Odawara. In return, he was recognized as chieftain of the Nanbu clans, and confirmed as daimyō of his existing holdings in the northern districts of Mutsu Province. However, Kunohe Masazane, who felt that he had a stronger claim to the title of clan chieftain, immediately rose in rebellion.

With a large number of Nanbu samurai in the south serving in Hideyoshi’s forces against the Odawara Hōjō, the rebellion soon spread to many locations by 1591. Hideyoshi took the rebellion as a personal affront to his authority and efforts to bring the Sengoku period to a close, and by mid-year organized a retaliatory army to retake northern Tōhoku and to restore the area to Nanbu Nobunao’s control. The army had 60,000 troops and a cast of the most famous generals in the Sengoku period, including Toyotomi Hidetsugu, Tokugawa Ieyasu, Uesugi Kagekatsu, Maeda Toshiie, Ishida Mitsunari, Satake Yoshishige, Date Masamune, Mogami Yoshiaki, Tsugaru Tamenobu and others. The army quickly suppressed the rebellion in many locations and reached the gates of Kunohe Castle by 2 September 1591. Command of the attack on the castle itself was assigned to Gamo Ujisato, assisted by Asano Nagamasa.


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