Siege of Ueda
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ueda 1600}}
Category:Sieges of the Sengoku period
Category:Attacks on castles in Japan
Category:Military history of Nagano Prefecture
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Siege of Ueda
| partof = the Sengoku period
| image =
| caption =
| date = 1600
| place = Ueda Castle, Shinano province, Japan
| coordinates = {{WikidataCoord|display=it}}
| map_type = Japan Nagano Prefecture#Japan
| map_relief = y
| map_size =
| map_marksize =
| map_caption =
| map_label =
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| casus =
| territory = Siege abandoned
| result = Sanada clan garrison victory
| combatant1 = Forces of Tokugawa clan
| combatant2 = Forces of Sanada clan
| commander1 = Tokugawa Hidetada
Sakakibara Yasumasa
Honda Masanobu
Sengoku Hidehisa
Okudaira Nobumasa
Ōkubo Tadachika
Koriki Tadafusa
| commander2 = Sanada Masayuki
Sanada Yukimura
| strength1 = 38,000
| strength2 = 2,000
| casualties1 =
| casualties2 =
| notes =
}}
{{Campaignbox Sekigahara Campaign}}The siege of Ueda was staged in 1600 by Tokugawa Hidetada, son and heir of the warlord Tokugawa Ieyasu, against Ueda castle garrison in Shinano province, which was controlled by the Sanada family.
Hidetada came across the castle as he marched his army along the Nakasendō (central mountain road) from Edo to rendezvous with his father's forces. Sanada Masayuki resisted, and Sanada Yukimura, second son of Masayuki, was able to fight Hidetada's 38,000 men with only 2,000. However, when the castle did not fall as quickly as Hidetada had hoped and expected, he gave up and abandoned the siege and hurried to meet up with his father. As a result of this delay, Hidetada missed the battle of Sekigahara, the decisive victory in his father's unification of Japan.
References
- Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.
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