Lady Otsuya

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Otsuya no Kata
おつやの方
Castellan of Iwamura castle
(De facto Toyama clan head)
Assumed office
1572
Preceded byTōyama Kagetō
Personal details
DiedDecember 1575
Spouse(s)Tōyama Kagetō
Akiyama Nobutomo
RelativesOda Nobunaga (nephew)
Oichi (niece)
Military service
Allegiance Oda clan
Takeda clan
Unit Toyama clan
Battles/warsSiege of Iwamura castle

Lady Otsuya (おつやの方 Otsuya no Kata) was a Japanese female samurai (onna-musha) from the Sengoku period. She was the aunt of the famous samurai Oda Nobunaga, the wife of Tōyama Kagetō and foster mother of Oda Katsunaga. She was the ruler of Iwamura Castle until the last days of her life.

Otsuya is best known for having conspired against the

Incident of Honnoji
.

Life

Otsuya no kata was the daughter of Oda Nobusada, a warlord in the country of Owari. She was the sister of Oda Nobuhide (Nobunaga's father). She married Tōyama Kagetō, the lord of Iwamura Castle and retainer of the Oda clan. The Iwamura Castle is one of Japan’s three major mountain castles located in Ena City, Gifu.

Iwamura is the highest castle in Japan built atop a 717-meter-high peak by taking advantage of the steepness of the mountain that has a 180-meter altitude difference. The castle has survived 700 years, which is unparalleled in Japan’s history. It is also known as the “Misty Castle” because even the climate worked in favor of the castle by hiding it from enemies with a blanket of fog. This castle is renowned for have been ruled by a woman, Lady Otsuya, described as possessing “unmatched beauty.”

Siege of Iwamura castle

The Iwamura Castle was a battlefield from 1572 to 1575. At the apex of the anti-Nobunaga coalition, in 1572,

province of Kai
as a hostage. In accordance with the surrender treaty, Lady Otsuya married Akiyama. Otsuya surrendered the castle to the Takeda and became a member of it and an enemy of Nobunaga. This caused the Takeda-Oda relationship to decline and Nobunaga started a campaign against the Takeda clan.

Remains of Iwamura castle.

On Januari 25, 1973 the Battle of Mikatagahara took place, On March 15, 800-soldiers led by Baba Nobuharu, who were attacking Iwamura Castle, attacked the Oda Army and Oda Nobunaga pulled 10,000 soldiers. When Nobunaga learned that the soldiers at Iwamura's castle, led by his aunt, had attacked the troops of the Oda clan, he decided to counterattack.[1] on April 12, 1573 Takeda Shingen died, and on December 22 of the same year, an event that led Lady Otsuya to lead the defense of Iwamura Castle once again.

In 1575 when Oda army defeated the army of Shingen's son, Takeda Katsuyori, in the Battle of Nagashino, Oda Nobutada and others surrounded Iwamura castle. Oda Nobunaga decided to attack and take his aunt's castle, but she defended it against Oda's fierce assault for a half a year. After six months of battle, she left the castle to respond to Oda's false plea for peace. However Nobunaga reneged on his word and had Otsuya and Nobutomo crucified as traitors on December 23, 1575.[2]

It is said that as she was dying, Lady Otsuya cursed Nobunaga, telling him that if he killed family, his punishment would be doubled. Seven years later, her prediction came true when a trusted general, Akechi Mitsuhide, turned on Nobunaga and killed him in the Honno-ji Incident.

Legacy

Since 1992, the residents living close to Iwamura, Ena City, Gifu Prefecture, have hung a short [split] curtain hung at the entrance of a room indicating the names of female members of each family to the memory of Otsuya no kata, who was the castellan of the area.

See also

References

  1. ^ "asahi.com(朝日新聞社):岩村城 結婚受け入れた女城主 - 東海の古戦場をゆく - トラベル". www.asahi.com. Retrieved 2019-04-06.
  2. ^ "Iwamura Castle | A Collection of Photographs of Japanese Castles". castle.jpn.org. Retrieved 2019-04-06.