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{{Short description|1582 assassination of Oda Nobunaga in Kyoto, Japan}}
{{Refimprove|date=September 2007}}

{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Siege of Kyoto
| conflict = Honnō-ji Incident
|partof=the [[Sengoku period]]
| partof = the [[Sengoku period]]
|image= [[Image:Honnoj.jpg|300px]]
| image = Honnoj.jpg
| image_size = 300px
|caption=Incident at Honnō-ji, Meiji era print
| caption = Incident at Honnō-ji, [[Meiji era|Meiji-era]] print
|date=June 1582
| date = 21 June 1582
|place=[[Honnō-ji]] temple and [[Nijo Palace]], [[Kyoto]], [[Japan]]
| place = [[Honnō-ji]] and Nijō Palace, [[Kyoto]], [[Japan]]
|result=Akechi victory; Oda Nobunaga and Oda Nobutada commit suicide
| coordinates = {{Coord|35.005833|N|135.753889|E|display=inline,title}}
|combatant1=Oda forces under [[Akechi Mitsuhide|Akechi Mitsuhide's]] command
| result = Akechi victory
|combatant2=Inhabitants and garrison of Honnō-ji, courtiers, merchants, artists, and servants of [[Oda Nobunaga]]
* Death of [[Oda Nobunaga]] and [[Oda Nobutada]]
|commander1=Akechi Mitsuhide<br> Akechi Hidemitsu
* Beginning of Akechi's short-lived reign
|commander2=Oda Nobunaga[[Killed in Action|†]]<br> Oda Nobutada[[Killed in Action|†]]
| combatant1 = Oda forces under [[Akechi Mitsuhide]]'s command
|strength1=A massive amount of Akechi troops.
| combatant2 = Inhabitants and garrison of Honnō-ji, courtiers, merchants, artists, and servants of [[Oda Nobunaga]]
|strength2=Nobunaga, Nobutada, [[Mori Ranmaru]], and a handful of other Nobunaga's retainers<ref>Naramoto, pp. 296-305</ref>small garrison of Kyoto
| commander1 = {{Plainlist|
|casualties1= Unknown, but not excessive.
* [[Akechi Mitsuhide]]
|casualties2= [[Oda Nobunaga]], [[Mori Ranmaru]], [[Oda Nobutada]], and many others
* [[Akechi Hidemitsu]]
* [[Akechi Mitsutada]]
* [[Ise Sadaoki]]
* [[Saitō Toshimitsu]]}}
| commander2 = {{Plainlist|
* [[Oda Nobunaga]]{{KIA}}
* [[Oda Nagamasu]]
* [[Oda Nobutada]]{{KIA}}
* [[Oda Katsunaga]]{{KIA}}
* [[Mori Ranmaru]]{{KIA}}
* [[Murai Sadakatsu]]{{KIA}}
* [[Maeda Gen'i]]
}}
}}
| strength1 = 13,000
{{Campaignbox Campaigns of Oda Nobunaaga
| strength2 = 70<ref>Naramoto, pp. 296–305</ref>
| casualties1 = Unknown, presumably minimal
| casualties2 = [[Oda Nobunaga]], [[Mori Ranmaru]], [[Oda Nobutada]], and many others
}}
{{Campaignbox Campaigns of Oda Nobunaga}}
[[File:Oda Udaijin Taira no Nobunaga in Flames at the Temple Honnoji LACMA M.84.31.116.jpg|thumb|An ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' by [[Tsukioka Yoshitoshi|Yoshitoshi]] depicting Nobunaga fighting in the Honnō-ji Incident.]]


The '''{{nihongo|Honnō-ji Incident|本能寺の変|Honnō-ji no Hen}}''' was the assassination of Japanese [[daimyo]] [[Oda Nobunaga]] at [[Honnō-ji]] temple in [[Kyoto]] on 21 June 1582 (2nd day of the sixth month, [[Tenshō (Momoyama period)|Tenshō]] 10). Nobunaga was on the verge of unifying the country, but died in the unexpected rebellion of his vassal [[Akechi Mitsuhide]].<ref name="toyokeizai167293">{{cite web| url = https://toyokeizai.net/articles/-/167293| title =本能寺の変、「本当の裏切り者」は誰なのか 教科書が教えない「明智光秀」以外の真犯人| last = Yamagishi | first = Ryoji | author-link =| date = 1 May 2017 | orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Toyo Keizai Online| publisher = [[Toyo Keizai]]| language = ja| trans-title = Honnō-ji Incident, Who is the "real traitor"? The real culprit other than "Akechi Mitsuhide" that textbooks do not teach.| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref><ref name="rekishikaido3962">{{cite web| url = https://shuchi.php.co.jp/rekishikaido/detail/3962| title =本能寺の変、信長の遺体はどこへ行ったのか?| last = | first = | author-link =| date = 2 June 2017| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Web Rekishi Kaido | publisher = PHP Institute, Inc.| language = ja| trans-title = Where did Nobunaga's body go after the Honnoji Incident?| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref><ref name="jbpress54295">{{cite web| url = https://jbpress.ismedia.jp/articles/-/54295| title =本能寺の変、死を覚悟した信長がとった最期の行動| last =Owada| first =Yasutsune| author-link =| date = 16 October 2018| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = JBpress | publisher = Japan Business Press Co., Ltd.| language = ja| trans-title = The Honnoji Incident, Nobunaga's last act after preparing to die| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref>
The '''{{nihongo|Honnō-ji Incident|本能寺の変|Honnō-ji no Hen}}''' refers to the [[forced suicide]] on June 21, 1582 of [[Japan]]ese [[daimyo]] [[Oda Nobunaga]] at the hands of his [[samurai]] general [[Akechi Mitsuhide]]. This occurred in [[Honnō-ji]], a temple in [[Kyoto]], ending Nobunaga's quest to consolidate centralized power in Japan under his authority.


Nobunaga only had a few guards and retainers with him when he was attacked, ending his [[Sengoku period]] campaign to unify Japan under his power.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/><ref name="Cassell">{{cite book|last1=Turnbull|first1=Stephen|title=The Samurai Sourcebook|date=2000|publisher=Cassell & C0|location=London|isbn=1854095234|page=231}}</ref>
==Context==
Nobunaga's death was avenged two weeks later when his retainer [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] defeated Mitsuhide in the [[Battle of Yamazaki]], paving the way for Hideyoshi to complete the unification of Japan.
Oda Nobunaga was at the height of his power, having [[Battle of Temmokuzan|destroyed]] the [[Takeda family]] earlier that year. He had central Japan firmly under his control, and his only rivals were the [[Mōri clan]], the [[Uesugi clan]], and the [[Late Hōjō clan]], each weakened by internal affairs. After the death of [[Mōri Motonari]], his grandson, [[Mōri Terumoto]] only strived to maintain the status quo, aided by his two uncles, as per Motonari's will. [[Hōjō Ujiyasu]], a renowned strategist and domestic manager, had also died, leaving his less prominent son [[Hōjō Ujimasa|Ujimasa]] in place. Finally, the death of [[Uesugi Kenshin]], arguably [[Sengoku period]]'s most formidable general, left the Uesugi clan, devastated also by an internal conflict between his two adopted sons, weaker than before.


Mitsuhide's motive for assassinating Nobunaga is unknown, though there are multiple theories for his betrayal.
It was at this point that Oda Nobunaga began sending his generals aggressively into all directions to continue his military expansion. He ordered [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi|Hashiba Hideyoshi]] to attack the Mori clan; [[Niwa Nagahide]] to prepare for an invasion of [[Shikoku]]; [[Takigawa Kazumasu]] to watch the Hōjō clan from [[Kozuke province]] and [[Shinano province]]; and [[Shibata Katsuie]] to invade [[Echigo province]], the home domain of the Uesugi clan.


== Background ==
At the same time, Nobunaga also invited his ally, [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] to tour the [[Kansai]] region in celebration of the demise of the Takeda clan. Around this time, Nobunaga received a request for reinforcements from Hashiba Hideyoshi, whose forces were stuck at the [[Siege of Takamatsu]]. Nobunaga then parted way with Ieyasu, who went on to tour the rest of Kansai while Nobunaga himself made preparations to aid Hashiba in the frontline. He ordered [[Akechi Mitsuhide]] also to go to Hideyoshi's aid, and travelled to Honnō-ji, his usual resting place when he stopped by in Kyoto. The only people he had around him were court officials, merchants, upper-class artists, and dozens of servants.
By 1582, [[Oda Nobunaga]] was the most powerful daimyo in Japan and was continuing a sustained campaign of unification in the face of the ongoing political upheaval that characterized Japanese history during the Sengoku period. Nobunaga had destroyed the [[Takeda clan]] earlier that year at the [[Battle of Tenmokuzan]] and had central Japan firmly under his control, with his only rivals, the [[Mōri clan]] and the [[Uesugi clan]], both weakened by internal affairs. The death of [[Uesugi Kenshin]] left the Uesugi clan devastated also by an internal conflict between his two adopted sons, weaker than before. The nearly decade-long [[Ishiyama Hongan-ji War]] also had already ended with the conclusion of peace.<ref name="nippon.com06905">{{cite web| url = https://www.nippon.com/ja/japan-topics/b06905/| title = 天下統一を夢見た織田信長| last = Kawai| first = Atsushi| author-link =| date = 3 January 2020| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = | publisher = Public Interest Incorporated Foundation, Nippon.com| language = ja| trans-title = Oda Nobunaga, who dreamed of unifying the country| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref> The Mori clan was also in a situation where defeat was almost inevitable and had presented a peace proposal to Hashiba Hideyoshi, offering the cession of five provinces.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bizgate.nikkei.com/article/DGXZQOLM310N2031052022000000|title=5カ国割譲を核とする講和案を秀吉に提示した。その交渉中に本能寺の変が起きた。|publisher=Nikkei Biz Gate|access-date=June 25, 2024}}</ref>


It was at this point that Nobunaga began sending his generals aggressively in all directions to continue his military expansion. Nobunaga ordered [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi|Hashiba Hideyoshi]] to attack the Mōri clan in the [[Chūgoku region]]; [[Niwa Nagahide]] to prepare for an invasion of [[Shikoku]]; [[Takigawa Kazumasu]] to watch the Hōjō clan from [[Kōzuke Province]] and [[Shinano Province]]; and [[Shibata Katsuie]] to invade [[Echigo Province]], the home domain of the Uesugi clan.<ref name="nippon.com06905"/>
==Akechi's treachery==
Upon receiving the order, Mitsuhide returned to [[Sakamoto Castle]] and moved to his base in [[Tamba province]]. Around this time, he had a session of [[Renga]] with several prominent poets, where he made clear his intentions to rebel.


Nobunaga, confident of unifying the country after destroying the Takeda clan, returned to [[Azuchi, Shiga|Azuchi]] in high spirits. [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] also came to [[Azuchi Castle]] to thank Nobunaga for giving him the [[Suruga province]]. However, around this time, the Mōri clan launched a large-scale counteroffensive in the Chūgoku region, and Nobunaga received a request for reinforcements from Hashiba Hideyoshi, whose forces were stuck [[Siege of Takamatsu|besieging the Mōri-controlled Takamatsu Castle]].<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/>
Mitsuhide saw an opportunity to act, when not only was Nobunaga resting in Honnō-ji and unprepared for an attack, but all the other major daimyo and the bulk of Nobunaga's army were occupied in other parts of the country.


Nobunaga immediately ordered Akechi Mitsuhide to go to the Chugoku region to support Hideyoshi, and he himself was to follow soon after.<ref name="nippon.com06905"/> Nobunaga began his preparations and headed for [[Honnō-ji]] temple in Kyoto, his usual resting place when he stopped by in the capital.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/>
Mitsuhide led his army toward Kyoto, claiming that Nobunaga wanted to show a procession. It was not the first time that Nobunaga had demonstrated his modernized and well-equipped troops in Kyoto, so this excuse was not doubted. Finally, when getting near to Honnō-ji, Mitsuhide announced, {{nihongo|"The enemy awaits at Honnō-ji!"|敵は本能寺にあり|Teki wa Honnō-ji ni ari!}}.


Nobunaga was unprotected at Honnō-ji, deep within his territory, with the only people he had around him being court officials, merchants, upper-class artists, and dozens of servants. Having dispatched most of his soldiers to take part in various campaigns, only a small force was left to protect his person and there was little fear that anyone would dare strike Nobunaga; security measures were weak. Taking advantage of this opening, Mitsuhide suddenly turned against his master.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/>
Before dawn, the Akechi army had Honnō-ji surrounded in a [[coup d'état|coup]]. Nobunaga and his servants and bodyguards resisted, but they realized it was futile against the overwhelming numbers of Akechi troops. Nobunaga committed suicide, reportedly his last words were, "Ran, don't let them come in..." (Referring to his young [[page (occupation)|page]], Mori Ranmaru who set the temple on fire as Nobunaga requested so that no one would be able to get his head). Ranmaru then followed suit. His loyalty and devotion makes him a revered figure in history. Nobunaga's remains were not found, a fact often speculated about by writers and historians.


== Mitsuhide's betrayal ==
After capturing Honnō-ji, Mitsuhide attacked [[Oda Nobutada|Nobutada]], eldest son and heir of Nobunaga. Nobutada committed suicide.
Upon receiving the order, Mitsuhide returned to [[Sakamoto Castle]] and moved to his base in [[Tanba Province]]. He engaged in a session of ''[[renga]]'' with several prominent poets, using the opportunity to make clear his intentions of rising against Nobunaga. Mitsuhide saw an opportunity to act, when Nobunaga was not only resting in Honnō-ji and unprepared for an attack, but all the other major ''daimyō'' and the bulk of Nobunaga's army were occupied in other parts of the country. Mitsuhide led his army toward Kyoto under the pretense of following the order of Nobunaga. It was not the first time that Nobunaga had demonstrated his modernized and well-equipped troops in Kyoto, so the march toward Kyoto did not raise any suspicion from Mitsuhide's men. Before dawn, Mitsuhide, leading 13,000 soldiers, suddenly changed course in the middle of his march and attacked Honnō-ji Temple, where Nobunaga was staying.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/><ref name="nippon.com06905"/>

There's a legend that when crossing the [[Katsura River]], Mitsuhide announced to his troops that {{nihongo|"The enemy awaits at Honnō-ji!"|敵は本能寺にあり|Teki wa Honnō-ji ni ari}}.
However, this story appeared first in ''Oda Nobunaga-fu'' ({{lang|zh|織田信長譜}}) by [[Hayashi Razan]] (1583 – 1657)<ref>林羅山 Razan, Hayashi, (compiled around 1641; published in 1658) 《織田信長譜》 (''Oda Nobunaga-fu''), "vol. 1"; quote: (光秀曰'''敵在本能寺'''); [https://websv.aichi-pref-library.jp/wahon/pdf/1105087860-001.pdf Aichi Prefectural Library's copy], p. 49 of 52, 9th column from right.</ref> then in ''[[Nihon Gaishi]]'' by [[Rai San'yō]], a [[kangaku]]sha of the late Edo period, and is most likely a creation, not a statement by Akechi himself.<ref>日本外史 (''Nihon Gaishi''), [[:zh:s:日本外史/卷之十四|"vol. 14"]] quote: (光秀乃擧鞭東指。颺言曰。'''吾敵在本能寺矣'''。); rough translation: "Mitsuhide lifted his whip, pointed eastward, and spoke loudly: 'My enemy is at Honnoji.'")</ref><ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.cyzo.com/2021/01/post_264587_entry.html| title =明智光秀「敵は本能寺にあり!」とは言っていない?| last = Horie| first = Hiroki| author-link =| date = 10 January 2021| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Nikkan Caizo | publisher = Caizo| language = ja| trans-title = Didn't Mitsuhide Akechi say, "The enemy is at Honnoji!"?| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref>
According to [[Luís Fróis]]'s "History of Japan" and testimonies from surviving soldiers, Mitsuhide was only the commander of the Oda Army's area forces, and since it was the [[Oda clan]] to whom the soldiers owed allegiance, Mitsuhide did not reveal his purpose to anyone except his officers, fearing that informants might appear. Even when the attack actually began, the soldiers did not know whom they were attacking, and some thought it was Ieyasu.{{citation needed|date=June 2024}}

=== Chronology of the incident ===
The situation at the time was recorded by Gyū-ichi Ota, the author of "[[Shinchō Kōki]]", who interviewed the [[lady-in-waiting|ladies-in-waiting]] who were at the scene soon after the incident.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://toyokeizai.net/articles/-/648453| title =信長の人物像を形作った「信長公記」執筆の背景 本能寺での最期の様子も現場の侍女に聞き取り| last = Ito | first = Gaichi | author-link =| date = 9 February 2023| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Toyo Keizai Online| publisher = [[Toyo Keizai]]| language = ja| trans-title = Background of the writing of "Shincho Koki" that shaped the character of Nobunaga Interviews with waiting maids at the scene of Nobunaga's final days at Honnō-ji.| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref>

Nobunaga had come to Kyoto to support Hashiba Hideyoshi and stayed at Honnō-ji on this day. This was because Nobunaga had not dared to build a castle in Kyoto in order to maintain a distance from the Imperial Court.<ref name="jbpress54295"/> Moreover, Nobunaga had ordered his generals to go into battle, so only about 150 men were escorting him at Honnō-ji. Akechi Mitsuhide, on the other hand, was leading 13,000 fully armed soldiers. This was a perfect opportunity for Mitsuhide.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/><ref name="jbpress54295"/>
Honnō-ji was a fortified temple with stone walls and a moat, and it had a reasonable defense capability, but it was helpless when surrounded by a large army.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/><ref name="jbpress54295"/>

On that day, Kyoto seemed to be in the midst of bad weather due to the combination of abnormal weather and the rainy season. The attack began early in the morning. Mitsuhide's forces finished encircling Honnō-ji around 6:00&nbsp;a.m. and began to invade the temple from all sides.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/><ref name="jbpress54295"/>

According to Shinchō Kōki, Nobunaga and the pages at first thought that someone had started a fight in the street. But when the enemy raised a [[battle cry]] and started shooting, they realized it was a rebellion. Nobunaga asked, "Whose scheme is this?", [[Mori Ranmaru]] replied, "It appears to be Akechi's". Nobunaga did not ask back, but simply said, {{nihongo|"There is no need to discuss the pros and cons./There is no choice."|是非に及ばず|Zehi ni oyobazu}}, and began to fight back with [[Bow and arrow|bows and arrows]] at the edge of the palace. When the bowstring broke, he kept shooting arrows while changing bows, and when he ran out of spare bows, he fought with his [[spear]]. When Nobunaga was eventually unable to fight after being hit in the elbow by an enemy spear, he retreated and told the nyōbō-shū{{efn|name="nyōbō"|Court ladies.}} there, "I don't care, you ladies hurry up and get out of here".<ref>{{cite web| url = https://goetheweb.jp/lifestyle/more/20210212-nobunaga25| title = 本能寺の変で信長が最後に発したひと言とは?| last = Ishikawa| first = Takuji | author-link =| date = 12 February 2021| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = GOETHE| publisher = [[Gentosha]]| language = ja| trans-title = What was Nobunaga's last words at the Honnoji Incident?| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref><ref name="goethe20210306">{{cite web| url = https://goetheweb.jp/lifestyle/more/20210306-nobunaga26| title = 本能寺の変で信長が最後に発したひと言とは?| last = Ishikawa| first = Takuji | author-link =| date = 6 March 2021| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = GOETHE| publisher = [[Gentosha]]| language = ja| trans-title = Nobunaga's last words to Nyōbō at the Honnoji Incident| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref> It was said that Nobunaga then entered the back room of the palace, closed the door of the storage room, and committed [[seppuku]] in the burning temple.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/><ref name="nippon.com06905"/><ref name="goethe20210306"/> The Akechi forces lifted the siege around 8:00&nbsp;a.m.<ref name="jbpress54295"/>

Meanwhile, Oda Nobutada, who was at Myōkaku-ji Temple, received news of Mitsuhide's rebellion and attempted to go to Honnō-ji Temple to rescue his father. However, just as he was leaving the temple, [[Murai Sadakatsu]] and his sons rushed in and stopped him. Murai said that Honnō-ji had already burned down and the enemy would soon attack us, and advised Nobutada to hunker down in the fortified Nijō Gosho. Upon entering the Nijō Gosho, Nobutada orders [[Maeda Geni]] to flee with his infant son, Sanpōshi ([[Oda Hidenobu]]), going from [[Gifu Castle]] in Mino to [[Kiyosu Castle]] in Owari. Nobutada had all the people escape, including the kugyō and the nyōbō-shū,{{efn|name="nyōbō"}} and then he began his war council. Some advised Nobutada to escape and head for Azuchi, but he said, "An enemy who has committed such a rebellion will not let us escape so easily. It would be a disgrace for me to be killed by common soldiers while fleeing", and decided to stay in Kyoto and fight. In the meantime, Akechi completed the siege of Nijō Gosho, making it impossible to escape. Later, Nobutada also committed seppuku.<ref name=Cassell/>{{rp|69}}<ref name="nippon.com06905"/><ref name="jbpress54295"/> Kamata Shinsuke, who assisted Nobutada in his suicide, hid his head and body according to his instructions.{{citation needed|date=June 2024}}

== Aftermath ==
Akechi Mitsuhide was eager to find Nobunaga's body in the burnt ruins of Honnō-ji, but he was unable to locate it. Nobunaga's body not being found meant that no one knew if he was alive or dead and created a problem for Mitsuhide. If, by any chance, Nobunaga was alive, the probability of Mitsuhide's defeat increased, and even if it remained unclear whether he is alive or dead, Mitsuhide would find it very difficult to gain support from those who feared Nobunaga's retaliation. In fact, Hideyoshi sent a letter to Nobunaga's vassals that falsely claimed that Nobunaga was still alive to request their cooperation in defeating Mitsuhide. If Mitsuhide had obtained Nobunaga's head, he could have made his death known to the public, and some forces might have followed him. If that had happened, he might have been able to defeat Hideyoshi.<ref name="rekishikaido3962"/><ref name="jbpress54295"/> Meanwhile, Mitsuhide also tried to persuade Oda vassals in the vicinity of Kyoto to recognize his authority after the death of Nobunaga. Then, Mitsuhide entered Nobunaga's [[Azuchi Castle]] east of Kyoto and began sending messages to the [[Imperial Court in Kyoto|Imperial Court]] to boost his position and force the court to recognize his authority as well. However, no one responded to Mitsuhide's call.{{citation needed|date=June 2024}}

Hashiba Hideyoshi received the first news the day after the incident. Hideyoshi immediately made peace with the Mōri clan, kept Nobunaga's death under wraps, and returned to the [[Kinai region]] with an ultra-fast, forced march known as Chūgoku Ōgaeshi (the Great Return from the Chugoku Region). After returning in about a week with an army of nearly 30,000 troops for a total distance of 200&nbsp;km, Hideyoshi joined forces with Niwa Nagahide and [[Oda Nobutaka]] in Osaka and headed for Kyoto. With this momentum, Hideyoshi defeated Mitsuhide in the [[Battle of Yamazaki]]. While on the run, Mitsuhide was killed as a victim of an [[ochimusha]]gari.{{efn|name="ochimusha-gari"|A medieval Japanese custom in which local samurai, farmers and bandits hunt fleeing samurai for bounty and the valuables they wear.}}<ref name="TH">{{cite book|last1=Turnbull|first1=Stephen|title=Toyotomi Hideyoshi|url=https://archive.org/details/toyotomihideyosh00turn|url-access=limited|date=2010|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|isbn=9781846039607|page=[https://archive.org/details/toyotomihideyosh00turn/page/n27 26]-29}}</ref>

The Kiyosu Conference was then held to determine the successor to the Oda clan, and four vassals of the Oda clan, Shibata Katsuie, Niwa Nagahide, [[Ikeda Tsuneoki]], and Hashiba Hideyoshi, attended the conference. Three names were mentioned as possible successors: [[Oda Nobukatsu|Nobukatsu]], the second son; Nobutaka, the third son; and [[Oda Hidenobu|Hidenobu]] (Sanhōshi), Nobutada's eldest son, or Nobunaga's grandson, who was only three years old.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.excite.co.jp/news/article/Japaaan_187384/|title =本能寺の変、織田信忠の自害… 織田家の衰退がなかったらその後の「天下取り」はどうなった?| last = | first = | author-link =| date = 31 October 2022 | orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = excite nesw| publisher =Excite Japan| language = ja| trans-title = Honnoji Incident, Oda Nobutada's suicide... If the Oda family hadn't declined, what would have happened to the unification of Japan?| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref>

=== Nobunaga's corpse ===
After defeating Mitsuhide, Hideyoshi also searched for Nobunaga's body, but it still could not be found. In October 1582, Hideyoshi held Nobunaga's funeral at [[Daitoku-ji]] Temple in Kyoto. In place of his missing body, Hideyoshi had a life-size wooden statue of Nobunaga cremated and put it in an urn in place of his ashes.<ref name="jbpress54295"/>

There is no doubt that what Nobunaga feared most when he prepared to die was not dying but what would happen after death: in other words, how his body would be treated. Nobunaga must have understood that if his body had fallen into Mitsuhide's hands, his severed head would surely have been gibbeted, and he would have been disgraced as a criminal and that Mitsuhide would use Nobunaga's death to justify his rebellion by making it public. In such a situation, Nobunaga had a few possible options. He would have the body burned so that it could not be identified as Nobunaga's, or he would have it buried so that Mitsuhide could not find it inside Honnō-ji, or he would have someone he trusted carry it out of Honnō-ji, even at the risk of being stolen by Mitsuhide on the way.<ref name="jbpress54295"/> There are several theories regarding the fact that no bodies were found in the burnt ruins of Honnō-ji. One theory is that Nobunaga could not be identified because the bodies were too badly damaged, another that there were too many burned bodies to identify, and a third that the fire was so intense that his body was completely consumed.{{efn|The missionary Luis Frois wrote in his "History of Japan" that even the bones were burned to ashes.}}<ref name="jbpress54295"/>

There are also several stories that Nobunaga's body and head were carried out from Honnō-ji. There are a number of tombs in various parts of Japan that are said to be Nobunaga's, but there is no evidence that his body or ashes are buried in any of them.<ref name="jbpress54295"/>

== Tokugawa escape to Mikawa ==
{{Cleanup|section|date=May 2024|reason=Grammar and language}}
Tokugawa Ieyasu heard the news in [[Hirakata]], [[Osaka]], but at the time, he had only a few companions with him. The Iga province track was also in danger of the ''[[Ochimusha|Ochimusha-gari]]'', or "Samurai hunters" gang. During the [[Sengoku period]], particularly dangerous groups called [[:jp:落ち武者狩り|"Ochimusha-gari"]] or "fallen warrior hunter" groups emerged. These groups consisted of peasant or [[Rōnin]] who dispossessed by war formed self-defense forces. However, in reality they often resorted to hunting and robbing defeated Samurai's or soldiers during conflicts.<ref name="SAMURAI HUNTER1">{{cite book |author1=Fujiki Hisashi |title=刀狩り: 武器を封印した民衆 |date=2005 |publisher=岩波書店 |isbn=4004309654 |page=29・30 |language=Ja |quote=[[Kunio Yanagita]] “History of Japanese Farmers”}}</ref><ref name="SAMURAIHUNTER2">{{cite book |author1=Kirino Sakuto |title=真説本能寺 (学研M文庫 R き 2-2) |date=2001 |publisher=学研プラス |isbn=4059010421 |pages=218–219 |language=Ja |quote=Tadashi Ishikawa quote}}</ref><ref name="SAMURAIHUNTER3">{{Cite book|author= Akira Imatani |date= 1993 |pages=152–153, 157–158,、167 |quote=Akira Imatani“Practice of attacking fallen warriors”; 2000; p.153 chapter 4 |title=天皇と天下人|publisher=新人物往来社|isbn=4404020732}}</ref> These outlaw groups were particularly rampant on the route which Ieyasu took to return to Mikawa.<ref name="SAMURAIHUNTER3"/>

Ieyasu and his party, therefore, chose the shortest route back to the Mikawa province by crossing the [[Iga Province]], which was different in many versions according to primary sources such as the records of ''Tokugawa Nikki'' or ''Mikawa Todai-Hon'':

* The ''Tokugawa Nikki'' theory stated that Ieyasu took the roads to Shijonawate and Son'enji and then followed the stream of the Kizu river until they spent the night at Yamaguchi castle. The next day they reached a stronghold of the[[Kōka ikki]] clan of the Tarao who allowed them to take refuge for the night. Then on the last day, the Ieyasu group used a ship from Shiroko to reach [[Okazaki Castle]].<ref name="THE NINJA BOOK: The New Mansenshukai">{{cite book |author1=Yamada Yuji |translator=Atsuko Oda |title=THE NINJA BOOK: The New Mansenshukai |date=2017 |publisher=Mie University Faculty of Humanities, Law and Economics |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2FwUDgAAQBAJ |access-date=10 May 2024 |language=En |chapter=7. Tokugawa Ieyasu's passing through Iga}}</ref> However, the ''Tokugawa Nikki'' theory was doubted by modern historians, since it was not the shortest route for Ieyasu to reach Mikawa from his starting position at [[Sakai]],<ref name="IetadaNikkiIgacross">{{Cite web |author=Masahiko Iwasawa |date=1968 |title=家忠日記の原本について |trans-title=(Editorial) regarding the original diary of Ietada |url=https://www.hi.u-tokyo.ac.jp/publication/syoho/02/syoho0002-iwazawa.pdf |access-date=2022-11-16 |website=東京大学史料編纂所報第2号 |language=ja}}</ref> while on the other hand, it was also considered by history researchers as a very risky path due to the existence of [[Iga ikki]] groups which were hostile to the Oda and Tokugawa clans.<ref name="Igacrossing1">{{cite book |title=(みちものがたり)家康の「伊賀越え」(滋賀県、三重県)本当は「甲賀越え」だった?忍者の末裔が唱える新説 |trans-title=(Michi-monogatari) Ieyasu's "Iga's crossing (Shiga Prefecture, Mie Prefecture) Was it really "Koka-goe"? A new theory advocated by a ninja descendant |date=2020 |publisher=Asahi Shimbun |url=https://www.asahi.com/articles/DA3S14509491.html |access-date=19 May 2024 |language=Ja}}</ref><ref name="fujita" />
* The ''Mikawa Toda-Hon'' stated that Ieyasu went north from Ogawadate, crossed Koka, and entered Seishu Seki (from Shigaraki, passed through Aburahi and entered Tsuge in Iga.)<ref name="fujita" /> This theory was supported by Modern Japanese historians such as Tatsuo Fujita from [[Mie University]], who takes this material to formulate three different theories about the details of Ieyasu's trek that he propagated.<ref>{{cite web |author1=Tatsuo Fujita |title=Lecture No.1: Fact about "Shinkun Iga Goe" (1st Term) : Fact about "Shinkun Iga Goe" (1st Term) (summary) |url=https://www.human.mie-u.ac.jp/en/projects/iga/lecture/2015/2015-1.html |website=Faculty of Humanities, Law and Economics & Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences |access-date=6 June 2024 |language=En}}</ref><ref name="fujita" /> This theory is also supported by a group of history researchers of Mie city, which happened to be the descendants of the [[Kōka ikki]] clans. They stated that by taking this path, before the Ieyasu group reached the Kada pass where they could be escorted by the Kōka clan [[Jizamurai]], Ieyasu mostly depended for protection with his high-rank vassals, particularly the four [[Shitennō (Tokugawa clan)]] generals of the Tokugawa clan, rather than the popular theory about the help of the "Iga Ninja" clans. <ref name="Igacrossing1" /> In 2023, during the conference of the "International Ninja Society" at [[Chubu Centrair International Airport]], a passionate debate occurred which involved Chris Glenn (a D.J. and Japanese history enthusiast and author), Uejima Hidetomo (a history book author from Nara), Watanabe Toshitsune (former chairman of the Koga Ninjutsu Research Society) and Sakae Okamoto (Mayor of Iga city). In this conference, Toshitsune challenged the common theory about the Iga route which is stated by Hidetomo and who propagated the theory about Ieyasu taking the Kōka route which he viewed as more plausible. <ref name="Kenshiro Kawanishi; International Ninja conference">{{cite web |author1=Kenshiro Kawanishi (川西賢志郎) |title=家康「伊賀越え」議論白熱 中部国際空港で初の国際忍者学会 |trans-title=Ieyasu "Iga Cross" Discussion Hikari Central Airport's first international ninja society|url=https://www.sankei.com/article/20230912-ZR35DPFBYBN5VIRNC7WC676QLU/ |website=Sankei online |publisher=The Sankei Shimbun |access-date=24 June 2024 |language=Ja |date=2023}}</ref>

[[File:国道25号.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Kada pass, is believed to be the road which was taken by Ieyasu Tokugawa to return into Mikawa province.<ref name="fujita">{{Cite journal |author=Tatsuo Fujita (藤田達生) |title=「神君伊賀越え」再考 |journal=愛知県史研究 |volume=9 |publisher=愛知県 |date=2005 |pages= 1–15|doi=10.24707/aichikenshikenkyu.9.0_1 |url=https://doi.org/10.24707/aichikenshikenkyu.9.0_1}}</ref>]]

Regardless, whichever theory is true, historians agreed that the track ended at Kada (a mountain pass between [[Kameyama, Mie|Kameyama]] town and Iga), and that the Tokugawa group suffered a last attack by the Ochimusha-gari outlaws at the Kada pass where they reached the territory of the [[Kōka ikki]] clans of [[Jizamurai]] which are friendly to the Tokugawa clan. The Koka ikki Jizamurai assisted Ieyasu in eliminating the threats of the Ochimusha-gari outlaws and escorted them until they reached the[[Iga Province]], where they were further protected by other friendly groups of [[Iga ikki]] which accompanied the Ieyasu group until they safely reached Mikawa.<ref name="SAMURAIHUNTER3" /> There are 34 recorded Tokugawa vassals who survived this journey, such as Sakai Tadatsugu, Ii Naomasa, and Honda Tadakatsu, [[Sakakibara Yasumasa]] and many others.<ref name="SAMURAIHUNTER2" /> Other than those four [[Shitennō (Tokugawa clan)|Shitennō generals]] [[Matsudaira Ietada (Fukōzu)|Matsudaira Ietada]] recorded in his journal, ''Ietada nikki'' (家忠日記), the escorts of the Ieyasu during the journey in Iga consisted of:<ref>{{cite book |author1=Fumitaka Kawasaki |title=徳川家康・伊賀越えの危難 |trans-title=Tokugawa Ieyasu and the danger of crossing Iga |date=1985 |publisher=鳥影社 |isbn=4795251126 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9nNNAAAAMAAJ |access-date=24 May 2024}}</ref>

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
* [[Ishikawa Kazumasa]]
* [[Honda Masamori]]
* Ishikawa Yasumichi
* [[Hattori Hanzō|Hattori Masanari]]
* Hiromasa Takagi
* [[Torii Tadamasa]]
* [[Suganuma Sadamitsu]]
* Hisano shūchō
* Honda Nobutoshi
* [[Abe Masakatsu]]
* Makino Yasunari
* Miyake Masatsugu
* [[Kōriki Kiyonaga]]
* [[Ōkubo Tadasuke]]
* [[Watanabe Moritsuna]]
* Naruse Masatora
* Tada Miyoshi
* Hanai Yoshitaka
* Torii Omatsu
* Naitō Shingorō
* Tsudzuki Kamezō
* Matsudaira Harushige
* Suganuma Sadatoshi
* [[Nagai Naokatsu]]
* Nagata Sebei
* Matsushita mitsutsuna
* Tsuzuki Chozaburo
* Miura Okame
* Aoki Chōzaburō
* [[Ōkubo Tadachika]]
}}


Ietada Nikki also recorded that the escorts of Ieyasu suffered around 200 casualties during their journey.<ref>{{Cite web|url= https://www.hi.u-tokyo.ac.jp/publication/syoho/02/syoho0002-iwazawa.pdf |title=(Editorial) Regarding the original of Ietada's diary |author= Masahiko Iwasawa |website= 東京大学史料編纂所報第2号 |date=1968 |access-date= 2022-11-16 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|author=Morimoto Masahiro |url=https://www.amazon.co.jp/%E5%AE%B6%E5%BA%B7%E5%AE%B6%E8%87%A3%E3%81%AE%E6%88%A6%E3%81%A8%E6%97%A5%E5%B8%B8-%E6%9D%BE%E5%B9%B3%E5%AE%B6%E5%BF%A0%E6%97%A5%E8%A8%98%E3%82%92%E3%82%88%E3%82%80-%E8%A7%92%E5%B7%9D%E3%82%BD%E3%83%95%E3%82%A3%E3%82%A2%E6%96%87%E5%BA%AB-%E7%9B%9B%E6%9C%AC-%E6%98%8C%E5%BA%83-ebook/dp/B0BHL5SPG3|title=
After trying to persuade Oda vassals in the vicinity to recognize him as the new master of former Oda territories, Akechi entered [[Azuchi Castle]] and began sending messages to the [[Court (royal)|imperial court]] to boost his position and force the court to recognize him as well.
家康家臣の戦と日常 松平家忠日記をよむ (角川ソフィア文庫) Kindle Edition|publisher=KADOKAWA|date=1999|access-date=10 May 2024}}</ref>


However, not all of the escaping parties managed to escape alive. [[Anayama Nobutada]], a former [[Twenty-Four Generals of Takeda Shingen]] member who was now an ally to the Tokugawa and Nobunaga clan, was ambushed by the Ochimusha-gari during the journey, and killed along with some of his retainers.<ref name="SAMURAIHUNTER3" />
==Reasons for the coup==
Akechi Mitsuhide's reasons for the coup are a mystery that has been a source of controversy and speculation. Although there have been several theories, the most common ones maintain that Mitsuhide bore a personal grudge, acted out of fear, had the ambition to take over Japan, was simply acting to protect the imperial court whose authority was not respected by Nobunaga, or was trying to remove the iconoclastic revolutionary. Many think it was a combination of at least some of the above assumed reasons.


=== Iga Ninja theory's controversy ===
When Nobunaga invited Tokugawa Ieyasu over to [[Azuchi Castle]], Akechi was the official in charge of catering to the needs of Ieyasu's group. Subsequently, he was removed from this post for some reason. One story spoke of Nobunaga yelling at him in front of the guests for serving rotten fish.
It was reported by Edo period traditional records that [[Hattori Hanzō]], a Tokugawa vassal from Iga, negotiated with [[Iga ikki|Iga ninjas]] to hire them as guards along the way to avoid the ochimusha-gari.{{efn|name="ochimusha-gari"}} The local Koka-Ikki ninjas and Iga-Ikki ninjas under Hanzo who helped Ieyasu to travel into safety consisted of 300 Ninjas.<ref name="THE NINJA BOOK: The New Mansenshukai" /> Furthermore, Uejima Hidetomo, a researcher of Iga Ninja history, has stated there is research which revealed that Hattori Yasuji, one of the ninjas who accompanied Ieyasu on his journey in Iga province, also served as a bodyguard and espionage officer under Muromachi Shogun [[Ashikaga Yoshiaki]].<ref name="Uejima Hidetomo; Hattori Yasuji">{{cite web |author1=Kenshiro Kawanishi (川西賢志郎) |title=「伊賀越え」同行忍者の経歴判明 家康と足利義昭の二重スパイか |trans-title="Iga Cross" The history of the accompanying ninja is known to Ieyasu and Yoshiaki Ashikaga? |url=https://www.sankei.com/article/20230926-5WHL72CRVBOOHJ2HTTRLE27TDI/ |website=Sankei online |publisher=The Sankei Shimbun |access-date=24 June 2024 |language=Ja |date=2023}}</ref>


However, a modern scholar such as Tatsuo Fujita doubted the credibility of Hattori Hattori Hanzō's ninja army theory, since it was first appeared in ''Iga-sha yuishogaki'' record which circulated in [[Edo period]] during the rule of Shogun [[Tokugawa Yoshimune]].<ref name="fujita" /> During his rule, Yoshimune were known for establishing the [[Oniwaban]] secret police institution whose members hailed from the confederation clans of Koka and Iga.<ref name="Ninja Ancient Shadow Warriors of Japan (The Secret History of Ninjutsu); Oniwaban">{{cite book |author1=Kacem Zoughari, Ph.D. |title=Ninja Ancient Shadow Warriors of Japan (The Secret History of Ninjutsu) |date=2013 |publisher=Tuttle Publishing |isbn=9781462902873 |page=65 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EvvPAgAAQBAJ |access-date=10 May 2024 |language=En}}</ref><ref name="Samurai An Encyclopedia of Japan's Cultured Warriors; Oniwaban">{{cite book |title=Samurai An Encyclopedia of Japan's Cultured Warriors |date=2019 |isbn=9781440842719 |page=203 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0BjHEAAAQBAJ |access-date=10 May 2024 |ref=Constantine Nomikos Vaporis Ph.D. |language=En}}</ref><ref name="Ninja Unmasking the Myth; Oniwaban">{{cite book |author1=Stephen Turnbull |author1-link=Stephen Turnbull (historian) |title=Ninja Unmasking the Myth |date=2017 |publisher=Pen & Sword Books |isbn=9781473850439 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=c9hgDwAAQBAJ |access-date=10 May 2024 |language=En}}</ref> It has been argued that the circulation of the myth about Hattori Hanzō ninja army helping Ieyasu was created as propaganda to increase the prestige of the Iga and Koka clan confederations in Tokugawa Shogunate.<ref name="fujita" />
Another story said that when Nobunaga gave Akechi the order to assist Hashiba Hideyoshi, it was somehow hinted that Akechi would lose his current territories and would have to fight for land which was not even under Oda control yet. As Nobunaga had sent two senior retainers under him, [[Sakuma Nobumori]] and [[Hayashi Hidesada]], into exile for poor performance, Akechi might have thought that he could suffer a similar fate. Akechi was already in his early fifties, and some believe he might have felt insecure about such a grim future.


On the other hand, Chaya Shirōjirō, a wealthy merchant in Kyoto, wrote that he went ahead and gave silver coins to local people and asked them to guide and escort the group, which is highly likely to be true since it also appears in Jesuit historical documents of the same period.{{citation needed|date=May 2024}} However, the existence of Chaya Shirōjirō during this period itself is also doubted by historians, since it was recorded that Shirōjirō was born in 1600, so it was unlikely he existed during Ieyasu's travels in Iga province in 1582.<ref>{{NDLDC|778970/37}}{{cite book |author1=Ogawa Tokichi |author2=Uno Kijiro |title=渡会の光 |trans-title=Light of Watari |date=1900 |publisher=古川小三郎 |access-date=18 May 2024 |pages=60–61|language=Ja |url=https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/books/R100000002-I000000434442}} 角屋七郎次郎|朝日日本歴史人物事典</ref>
Furthermore, when invading [[Tamba province]], Akechi Mitsuhide supposedly sent his mother as a hostage into the hostile [[Yagami Castle]] to convince the [[Hatano Hideharu|Hatano clan]] to surrender. Nobunaga, however, had the [[Hatano Hideharu|Hatano]] brothers executed, an act that caused former Hatano retainers to kill Akechi's mother. Akechi Mitsuhide felt humiliated and depressed by this and eventually decided to kill his master. This story, however, only began to circulate during the [[Edo period]], and is of dubious historical origin.


== Mitsuhide's betrayal theories ==
[[Luís Fróis]] wrote that Mitsuhide liked to use treachery and diversion as his strategy. He also suggested daimyos disliked Mitsuhide because he did not belong to the [[Fudai]] clan which had served his master's clan for a long time. Many books said Nobunaga insulted and kicked, or even forced Mitsuhide to drink [[sake]] at a party, even though he was not a heavy drinker.
{{Cleanup|section|date=May 2024|reason=Grammar and language}}
The Honnō-ji Incident is a major historical event, but no definitive conclusion has been reached regarding Akechi Mitsuhide's motives, and the truth remains unknown. More than 50 theories have been proposed over the years, and new theories emerge with each discovery of a new historical document or announcement of the results of an excavation.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/>


=== Betrayal motivation ===
Whatever the reason, before Akechi began his march toward [[Kyoto]], he held a ''[[renga]]'' session with several prominent poets. One line he said was as follows:
Several theories regarding the motivation:


* Mitsuhide was abused by Nobunaga, including being humiliated and dismissed as a receptionist for Tokugawa Ieyasu.{{efn|name="Fróis"|In the "History of Japan" compiled by Luís Fróis, it is suggested that this is because Nobunaga, who did not like Mitsuhide's reception of Tokugawa Ieyasu, gave him a kick.}} The prevailing theory during the Edo period was that the incident was caused by Mitsuhide's resentment of various unreasonable punishments he received from Nobunaga. The main reasons were as follows.<ref name="bizgate20180713">{{cite web| url = https://bizgate.nikkei.com/article/DGXMZO3285436011072018000000| title =「本能寺の変」のフェイクニュースに惑わされる人々| last = Goza| first = Yuichi | author-link =| date = 13 July 2018 | orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Nikkei BizGate | publisher = [[Nikkei, Inc.]]| language = ja| trans-title = People Misled by Fake News About the "Honnoji Incident".| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref> However, historian [[Tetsuo Owada]] considered such history, including alleged Mitsuhide's letter to [[Kobayakawa Takakage]] to express his feeling about Nobunaga as unreliable.<ref name="Akechi Mitsuhide motivation; Sengoku-his" />
''Toki wa ima, ame ga shitashiru satsukikana.''
* Nobunaga had treated him unfairly.{{efn|name="Fróis"}} His fiefdom in the San'in region was unilaterally confiscated. Such theory includes the idication of preferential treatment for Oda Nobunaga's relatives. The theory is that Mitsuhide felt threatened by the fact that Nobunaga, who had previously adopted a merit-based system for his vassals and had appointed them according to their abilities regardless of their origins, began to favor his relatives.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://kadobun.jp/feature/readings/az2h7inhq60w.html| title = 光秀謀反の動機が見えた! 日本史最大の謎、信長暗殺の真相に迫る。| last = Hashiba| first = Akira| author-link = | date = 21 July 2020| orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Kadobun| publisher = [[KADOKAWA]]| language = ja| trans-title = The motive for Mitsuhide's rebellion is revealed! We will get to the bottom of the greatest mystery in Japanese history, the assassination of Nobunaga.| access-date = 10 July 2023| archive-date = 15 July 2023| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230715060622/https://kadobun.jp/feature/readings/az2h7inhq60w.html| url-status = dead}}</ref> Furthermore, there is an opinion that Nobunaga forcibly transferring Mitsuhide from his territory control of Sakamoto and Tanba into the yet to be conquered region of Izumo and Iwami. However, This theory also dismissed by Owada as It was usual custom for Nobunaga to bestow a non pacified territories yet to his vassals as promise.<ref name="Akechi Mitsuhide motivation; Sengoku-his" />
(時は今 雨がした滴る皐月かな)
* His mother, who was a hostage of Hatano clan, was killed because of Nobunaga. During the siege of Yakami Castle in 1579 , Mitsuhide offered his mother as hostage to the Hatano clan, in an effort to convince Hatano Hideharu to submit to Nobunaga. However, Nobunaga instead executed Hideharu and his brother with [[crucifixion]], prompting the Hatano clan to exact retaliation by crucified Mitsuhide's mother in response. However, there is no such mention in "Nobunaga Koki" a primary source. According to the book, Mitsuhide besieged Yakami Castle for a year, starving the enemy, and eventually captured the three Hatano brothers, but there is no mention of his mother being crucified afterwards. Furthermore, recent research has shown that she had died of natural cause before the siege of Yakami.<ref name="Akechi Mitsuhide motivation; Sengoku-his">{{cite web |author1=Pinon |title=本能寺の変「怨恨説」~ 信長に対する不満・恨みが引き金だった!? |trans-title=The Honnoji Incident "Grudge Theory" - Was it triggered by dissatisfaction and resentment towards Nobunaga? |url=https://sengoku-his.com/852 |website=戦国ヒストリーのサイトロゴ |publisher=sengoku-his.com |access-date=2 July 2024 |language=Ja |date=2019}} References from:


* [[Tetsuo Owada]], Akechi Mitsuhide: The Rebel Who Was Created, PHP Institute, 1998.
Literally, it translates to, "The time is now, the fifth month when the rain falls." However, there are several [[homonym]]s in the line, such that it could be taken as a [[double entendre]]. An alternate meaning, without changing any of the pronunciations, would be: 土岐は今 天が下治る 皐月かな. In this case, the word ''Toki'', which means "time" in the first version, sounds identical to Akechi's ancestral family name, "[[Toki clan|Toki]]". The whole phrase could be construed as "Toki [clan] shall now rule the realm under the sky".
* Tetsuo Owada, Akechi Mitsuhide and the Honnoji Incident, PHP Institute, 2014.
* Tatsuo Fujita, "Solving the Mystery of the Honnoji Incident", Kodansha, 2003.
* Taniguchi Katsuhiro, "Verification of the Honnoji Incident," Yoshikawa Kobunkan, 2007.
* Akechi Kenzaburo, "The Honnoji Incident: The Truth 431 Years Later," Bungeishunju Bunko, 2013.</ref> Modern historian Watanabe Daimon also explained this theory was traced from Toyama Nobuharu's work "Sōkenki" written around 1658; "Kashiwazaki Monogatari"; and also "Nobunaga-ki" ([[Shinchō Kōki]]); which Daimon also doubted their credibilities due to many embellishments and additions which was not found in primary sources found.<ref name="Akechi Mitsuhide motivation; Watanabe Daimon">{{cite web |author1=Watanabe Daimon |title=明智光秀の母と波多野三兄弟 あまりに残虐だった光秀による丹波八上城攻略の真実 |trans-title=Akechi Mitsuhide's mother and the Hatano brothers: The truth behind Mitsuhide's brutal attack on Yakami Castle in Tanba |url=https://sengoku-his.com/2413 |website=戦国ヒストリーのサイトロゴ |publisher=sengoku-his.com |access-date=2 July 2024 |language=Ja |date=2024}}</ref>


Thus, these stories were largely deemed by historians as unreliable,<ref name="bizgate20180713"/><ref>{{cite web| url = https://wedge.ismedia.jp/articles/-/27526 | title =茶道を人心掌握に活用した織田信長と荒稼ぎの千利休| last = Hashiba| first = Akira| author-link =| date = 10 August 2022 | orig-date = | editor-last = | editor-first = | website = Wedge Online | publisher = Wedge| language = ja| trans-title = Oda Nobunaga, who used the tea ceremony to control people's minds, and Sen no Rikyū, who made a fortune.| access-date = 10 July 2023}}</ref> including the story of Mitsuhide betrayal from "Akechi-gunki" and "[[Kōyō Gunkan]]".<ref name="Akechi Mitsuhide motivation; Sengoku-his" />
==After the incident==
Quickly making peace with the [[Mōri clan]], Hideyoshi returned from the [[Chūgoku region]] within ten days. He quickly absorbed remnants of Nobunaga's army along the way, and met up with [[Niwa Nagahide]] and [[Oda Nobutaka]] in [[Sakai, Osaka|Sakai]]. Marching toward Kyoto, he defeated Mitsuhide at the [[Battle of Yamazaki]], and Mitsuhide himself was killed while fleeing back to his castle.


Other new theories from 20th century historians which involve the Ashikaga Shogunate also emerged:
Ieyasu with the help of his retainer and ninja leader [[Hattori Hanzō]], at first touring Sakai, fled through several provinces and crossed the mountains of [[Iga province|Iga]], finally reaching the shore in [[Ise province|Ise]]. He returned to his home [[Mikawa province]] by sea, and it took him so long that by the time he consolidated his position, Hideyoshi had already had most of Nobunaga's territories under firm control.


* There also emerged the theory that Mitsuhide was a loyalist to the imperial court or a shogunate vassal of the Ashikaga shogunate. Historian Kuwata Tadachika put forth the reason that Mitsuhide had a personal grudge, and there was another theory that Mitsuhide did not enjoy the cruelty of Nobunaga.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/><ref name=Sato/>{{rp|242}} Another indication was when Mitsuhide began his march toward [[Chugoku]], he held a ''[[renga]]'' session at the [[Atago Shrine (Kyoto)|shrine]] on [[Mount Atago]]. The beginning line, ''Toki wa ima, ame ga shita shiru satsuki kana'' ({{lang|ja|時は今 雨がした滴る皐月かな}}), translates to "The time is now, the fifth month when the rain falls." However, there are several [[homonym]]s in the line, such that it could be taken as a [[double entendre]]. An alternate meaning, without changing any of the pronunciations, would be: {{lang|ja|時は今 天が下治る 皐月かな}}. Thus it has also been translated as "Now is the time to rule the world: It's the fifth month!" In this case, the word ''toki'', which means "time" in the first version, sounds identical to Akechi's ancestral family name, "[[Toki clan|Toki]]" ({{lang|ja|土岐}}).<ref name="Sato">{{cite book|last1=Sato|first1=Hiroaki|title=Legends of the Samurai|date=1995|publisher=Overlook Duckworth|location=New York|isbn=9781590207307|page=241,245}}</ref>
[[Takigawa Kazumasu]] suddenly faced the assault of the [[Late Hōjō clan|Hōjō clan]] and lost most of his land there, a defeat that cost him his previous prestige in the Oda clan.
* Ashikaga Shogunate restoration, Tatsuo Fujita points out that Mitsuhide's handwritten letter addressed to the Kishu daimyo named Shigeharu Dobashi shows that Mitsuhide had a clear plan to welcome Yoshiaki to Kyoto after the Honnoji Incident and restore the Muromachi Shogunate.<ref>{{Cite web|url= http://nlab.itmedia.co.jp/nl/articles/1709/12/news088.html |title=本能寺の変、目的は室町幕府の再興だった? 明智光秀直筆の書状から分析 |trans-title=The Honnoji Incident: Was the purpose the revival of the Muromachi Shogunate? Analysis from a letter handwritten by Akechi Mitsuhide |publisher=ねとらぼ |year=2017|accessdate=2017-09-13 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170912080020/http://nlab.itmedia.co.jp/nl/articles/1709/12/news088.html |archivedate=2017-09-12 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.asahi.com/articles/ASK9C45WPK9CONFB00F.html?iref=sp_cultop_feature5_list_n |title=本能寺の変後、光秀の直筆手紙 紀州の武将宛て |trans-title=After the Honnoji Incident, Mitsuhide's handwritten letter to a lord in Kishu |publisher=『朝日新聞』 |year=2017|accessdate=2017-09-13 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170912151816/http://www.asahi.com/articles/ASK9C45WPK9CONFB00F.html?iref=sp_cultop_feature5_list_n |archivedate=2017-09-12 }}</ref>


=== Alleged collaborators ===
[[Shibata Katsuie]] and his forces in the north were bogged down by an Uesugi counterattack in [[Echizen province]], and remained unable to act for quite a while. He would later fall in the [[Battle of Shizugatake]] against Hideyoshi a year later.


The mastermind theory that someone behind the incident manipulated Mitsuhide Akechi to carry out Nobunaga's assassination is surprisingly new and has emerged since the 1990s. It all started when the well-known medieval historian Akira Imatani published a book advocating a conflict between the Imperial Court and Nobunaga. The theory is that the existence of an emperor with high authority was becoming a hindrance to Nobunaga, who wanted to be an absolute monarch. At the time, when the new emperor was about to ascend to the throne, the emperor system was the subject of much debate in the historical academia. Although Imatani himself did not claim that the Imperial Court was involved in the Honnō-ji Incident, various conspiracy theories were developed, mainly by influential historical researchers who were inspired by Imatani's theory.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/>
The fact that no one else had the chance, resources, or ability to act decisively ensured Hashiba Hideyoshi's supremacy and spiritual inheritance of Oda Nobunaga's legacy.


There are several theories about the collaborator of Mitsuhide's act in Honnō-ji:
==Popular culture==
* Hashiba (Toyotomi) Hideyoshi theory<ref name="militaryhistory">{{cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Steven R. |date=1977 |title=The Samurai: A Military History |location=New York |publisher=MacMillan Publishing Company |isbn=9780026205405 |page=164}}</ref>
*''Incident at Honnō-ji'' is one of the key stages in the ''[[Samurai Warriors]]'' video game series and [[Onimusha 3: Demon Siege]]. In the former game, it is one of the turning points of the game with one of its associated cutscenes appearing during the story modes of many characters not present at the battle and is the climax of Nobunaga's story.
** The reason is that Hideyoshi's Chugoku Ogaeshi was too fast. However, only the cavalry warriors were able to turn back at breakneck speed, and the infantry arrived late. Many of the soldiers did not make it in time for the "Battle of Yamazaki" with Mitsuhide.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/> While it might be a stretch to designate Hideyoshi as the mastermind, many historians have pointed out the strong possibility that he anticipated this situation.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://gendai.media/articles/-/76614?page=4|title=織田家臣団のなかで生き残りを懸けて光秀との派閥抗争の渦中にあった秀吉が、本能寺の変を事前に想定していた可能性は十分にある|date=25 October 2020 |publisher=KODANSHA LTD|access-date=30 April 2024}}</ref>
* Tokugawa Ieyasu theory<ref name="militaryhistory"/>
** The reason is: "Nobunaga, who was on the verge of unifying the country, felt that Ieyasu, his ally, stood in his way. He planned to kill Ieyasu first. However, Mitsuhide, who was becoming increasingly dissatisfied with Nobunaga's policies, conversely informed Ieyasu of the plot and drew him into his side, thus killing Nobunaga by surprise." It is a leap of faith to assume that Mitsuhide and Ieyasu, who had not interacted with each other before, were able to conspire in Nobunaga's city, Azuchi Castle Town, and there is no historical support for this idea.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/>
* Ankokuji Ekei (the Mōri) theory
** The theory is that Ankokuji Ekei, a diplomatic monk of the Mōri, which was facing an existential crisis as Nobunaga himself was about to launch a full-scale offensive, arranged for Nobunaga's assassination on condition of the Mōri's full cooperation with Mitsuhide and Hideyoshi, and had it carried out.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/>
* Buddhist power theory
**The theory that Buddhist powers such as Hiei-zan Enryaku-ji and Ishiyama Hongan-ji, which were suppressed by Nobunaga and held a strong grudge against him, were the masterminds behind the situation.<ref name="toyokeizai167293"/>
* Imperial Court/Kuge power theory
** This is the theory that Prince Masahito, Konoe Sakihisa, Yoshida Kanemi, and others forced Mitsuhide to defeat Nobunaga because Nobunaga forced Emperor Ōgimachi to abdicate. In reality, however, the Imperial Court was rather desperate to curry the favor of its sponsor, Nobunaga, since Nobunaga's financial support had dramatically improved their financial situation, which was in danger. Emperor Ōgimachi was also unable to abdicate due to a lack of funding for the abdication ceremony.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/>
* Ashikaga Shogun (Muromachi Shogunate) theory
** The theory is that Ashikaga Yoshiaki, the 15th shogun, exiled by Nobunaga, formed the Nobunaga siege by Mori Terumoto, Uesugi Kagakatsu, and other powerful Daimyo, and forced Mitsuhide to stage a coup d'état. However, the Shogun did not have much authority at the time, and Uesugi and Mori did not cooperate with Akechi.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/>
* Jesuit theory
** The theory is that the Jesuits of the Catholic Church, which dispatched missionaries to Japan, were the masterminds. The Jesuits supported Nobunaga militarily and economically, and Nobunaga also protected Christianity, but Nobunaga tried to become independent from the Jesuits by deifying himself, so the Jesuits had Mitsuhide defeat Nobunaga and then had Hashiba (Toyotomi) Hideyoshi defeat Mitsuhide, according to this theory. However, while it is true that Nobunaga protected Christianity, there is no historical record of the Jesuits assisting Nobunaga on either the Japanese or Jesuit side, and in fact, the finances of the Japanese branch of the Jesuits were so tight that they could not afford to do so.<ref name="bizgate20180713"/>


In the 2010s, a Shikoku theory was proposed that Mitsuhide, who valued his relationship with Chōsokabe Motochika, rose up to avoid Nobunaga's attack on Shikoku. Mitsuhide was entrusted by Nobunaga to negotiate with Chōsokabe, and the Akechi family and Chōsokabe had deep ties in relation to marriage.<ref name="nippon.com06905"/><ref>{{cite news |url= http://sankei.jp.msn.com/west/west_life/news/140623/wlf14062321240026-n1.htm |title=謎に迫る新史料 光秀、四国攻め回避で決起か 林原美術館が明らかに|date=23 June 2014 |newspaper=[[Sankei Shimbun]] |access-date= 10 July 2023 |location=Tokyo |via=[[MSN]]|quote= New Historical Documents Reveal Mystery: Did Mitsuhide rise up to avoid the attack on Shikoku? Hayashibara Museum Revealed. |archive-date= 23 June 2014|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140623184430/http://sankei.jp.msn.com/west/west_life/news/140623/wlf14062321240026-n1.htm |url-status=live |ref=none}}</ref> In 2020, [[NHK]] aired a program called "Honnoji Incident Summit 2020". Seven historians debated various theories, with the "Shikoku theory" garnering the most support.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://biz-journal.jp/journalism/post_147718.html|title=信長の四国出兵の日に、本能寺の変は起きた。研究者の多くがこの説が有力であると首肯した。|publisher=Business Journal|access-date=30 April 2024}}</ref>
* Kamenashi Kazuya (member of KAT-TUN) has a solo song named ''1582''. The song allegedly refers to Oda Nobunaga and the incident at Honnō-ji. Oda Nobunaga is also Kamenashi's favourite historical figure.


== Popular culture ==
* In the manga Flame of Recca Chapter 328, Kurei, the head of the Hokage ninja, was the person who set the temple ablaze using his flames and who thereafter killed Oda Nobunaga in revenge for his annihilation of the Hokage ninja clan
* ''[[Honnōji Hotel]]'' is a 2017 comedy mystery drama that takes places around the Honnō-ji Incident
* [[Tainei-ji incident]] – a similar coup in 1551 where a powerful daimyō of western Japan was forced to commit suicide


== Appendix ==
*In ''[[Sengoku Basara]]'', Mitsuhide betrays Nobunaga by taking his own soldiers against his former master, although too late. He was killed by Katakura who pins him on the burning house with his own scythe.
=== Footnotes ===
{{Notelist}}


==Notes==
=== References ===
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist}}


=== Bibliography ===
==References==
* de Lange, William (2020). ''Samurai Battles: The Long Road to Unification''. Toyo Press. {{ISBN|9789492722232}}.
* Naramoto Tatsuya (1994). ''Nihon no Kassen''. Tokyo: Shufu to Seikatsusha.
* Naramoto Tatsuya (1994). ''Nihon no Kassen''. Tokyo: Shufu to Seikatsusha.


{{Authority control}}
{{coord missing|Japan}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Incident at Honnjo-ji}}
[[Category:1582 in Japan]]
[[Category:1582 in Japan]]
[[Category:Feudal Japan]]
[[Category:16th-century coups d'état]]
[[Category:Battles of the Sengoku period|Honnoji]]
[[Category:Battles of the Sengoku period]]
[[Category:Azuchi–Momoyama period]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1582]]
[[Category:History of Kyoto]]
[[Category:Military coups in Japan]]
[[Category:Assassinations in Japan]]
[[Category:Attacks on religious buildings and structures in Japan]]
[[Category:Religious building and structure arson fires]]

Latest revision as of 17:45, 7 January 2025

Honnō-ji Incident
Part of the Sengoku period

Incident at Honnō-ji, Meiji-era print
Date21 June 1582
Location
Honnō-ji and Nijō Palace, Kyoto, Japan
35°00′21″N 135°45′14″E / 35.005833°N 135.753889°E / 35.005833; 135.753889
Result

Akechi victory

Belligerents
Oda forces under Akechi Mitsuhide's command Inhabitants and garrison of Honnō-ji, courtiers, merchants, artists, and servants of Oda Nobunaga
Commanders and leaders
Strength
13,000 70[1]
Casualties and losses
Unknown, presumably minimal Oda Nobunaga, Mori Ranmaru, Oda Nobutada, and many others
An ukiyo-e by Yoshitoshi depicting Nobunaga fighting in the Honnō-ji Incident.

The Honnō-ji Incident (本能寺の変, Honnō-ji no Hen) was the assassination of Japanese daimyo Oda Nobunaga at Honnō-ji temple in Kyoto on 21 June 1582 (2nd day of the sixth month, Tenshō 10). Nobunaga was on the verge of unifying the country, but died in the unexpected rebellion of his vassal Akechi Mitsuhide.[2][3][4]

Nobunaga only had a few guards and retainers with him when he was attacked, ending his Sengoku period campaign to unify Japan under his power.[2][5] Nobunaga's death was avenged two weeks later when his retainer Toyotomi Hideyoshi defeated Mitsuhide in the Battle of Yamazaki, paving the way for Hideyoshi to complete the unification of Japan.

Mitsuhide's motive for assassinating Nobunaga is unknown, though there are multiple theories for his betrayal.

Background

[edit]

By 1582, Oda Nobunaga was the most powerful daimyo in Japan and was continuing a sustained campaign of unification in the face of the ongoing political upheaval that characterized Japanese history during the Sengoku period. Nobunaga had destroyed the Takeda clan earlier that year at the Battle of Tenmokuzan and had central Japan firmly under his control, with his only rivals, the Mōri clan and the Uesugi clan, both weakened by internal affairs. The death of Uesugi Kenshin left the Uesugi clan devastated also by an internal conflict between his two adopted sons, weaker than before. The nearly decade-long Ishiyama Hongan-ji War also had already ended with the conclusion of peace.[6] The Mori clan was also in a situation where defeat was almost inevitable and had presented a peace proposal to Hashiba Hideyoshi, offering the cession of five provinces.[7]

It was at this point that Nobunaga began sending his generals aggressively in all directions to continue his military expansion. Nobunaga ordered Hashiba Hideyoshi to attack the Mōri clan in the Chūgoku region; Niwa Nagahide to prepare for an invasion of Shikoku; Takigawa Kazumasu to watch the Hōjō clan from Kōzuke Province and Shinano Province; and Shibata Katsuie to invade Echigo Province, the home domain of the Uesugi clan.[6]

Nobunaga, confident of unifying the country after destroying the Takeda clan, returned to Azuchi in high spirits. Tokugawa Ieyasu also came to Azuchi Castle to thank Nobunaga for giving him the Suruga province. However, around this time, the Mōri clan launched a large-scale counteroffensive in the Chūgoku region, and Nobunaga received a request for reinforcements from Hashiba Hideyoshi, whose forces were stuck besieging the Mōri-controlled Takamatsu Castle.[2]

Nobunaga immediately ordered Akechi Mitsuhide to go to the Chugoku region to support Hideyoshi, and he himself was to follow soon after.[6] Nobunaga began his preparations and headed for Honnō-ji temple in Kyoto, his usual resting place when he stopped by in the capital.[2]

Nobunaga was unprotected at Honnō-ji, deep within his territory, with the only people he had around him being court officials, merchants, upper-class artists, and dozens of servants. Having dispatched most of his soldiers to take part in various campaigns, only a small force was left to protect his person and there was little fear that anyone would dare strike Nobunaga; security measures were weak. Taking advantage of this opening, Mitsuhide suddenly turned against his master.[2]

Mitsuhide's betrayal

[edit]

Upon receiving the order, Mitsuhide returned to Sakamoto Castle and moved to his base in Tanba Province. He engaged in a session of renga with several prominent poets, using the opportunity to make clear his intentions of rising against Nobunaga. Mitsuhide saw an opportunity to act, when Nobunaga was not only resting in Honnō-ji and unprepared for an attack, but all the other major daimyō and the bulk of Nobunaga's army were occupied in other parts of the country. Mitsuhide led his army toward Kyoto under the pretense of following the order of Nobunaga. It was not the first time that Nobunaga had demonstrated his modernized and well-equipped troops in Kyoto, so the march toward Kyoto did not raise any suspicion from Mitsuhide's men. Before dawn, Mitsuhide, leading 13,000 soldiers, suddenly changed course in the middle of his march and attacked Honnō-ji Temple, where Nobunaga was staying.[2][6]

There's a legend that when crossing the Katsura River, Mitsuhide announced to his troops that "The enemy awaits at Honnō-ji!" (敵は本能寺にあり, Teki wa Honnō-ji ni ari). However, this story appeared first in Oda Nobunaga-fu (織田信長譜) by Hayashi Razan (1583 – 1657)[8] then in Nihon Gaishi by Rai San'yō, a kangakusha of the late Edo period, and is most likely a creation, not a statement by Akechi himself.[9][10] According to Luís Fróis's "History of Japan" and testimonies from surviving soldiers, Mitsuhide was only the commander of the Oda Army's area forces, and since it was the Oda clan to whom the soldiers owed allegiance, Mitsuhide did not reveal his purpose to anyone except his officers, fearing that informants might appear. Even when the attack actually began, the soldiers did not know whom they were attacking, and some thought it was Ieyasu.[citation needed]

Chronology of the incident

[edit]

The situation at the time was recorded by Gyū-ichi Ota, the author of "Shinchō Kōki", who interviewed the ladies-in-waiting who were at the scene soon after the incident.[11]

Nobunaga had come to Kyoto to support Hashiba Hideyoshi and stayed at Honnō-ji on this day. This was because Nobunaga had not dared to build a castle in Kyoto in order to maintain a distance from the Imperial Court.[4] Moreover, Nobunaga had ordered his generals to go into battle, so only about 150 men were escorting him at Honnō-ji. Akechi Mitsuhide, on the other hand, was leading 13,000 fully armed soldiers. This was a perfect opportunity for Mitsuhide.[2][4] Honnō-ji was a fortified temple with stone walls and a moat, and it had a reasonable defense capability, but it was helpless when surrounded by a large army.[2][4]

On that day, Kyoto seemed to be in the midst of bad weather due to the combination of abnormal weather and the rainy season. The attack began early in the morning. Mitsuhide's forces finished encircling Honnō-ji around 6:00 a.m. and began to invade the temple from all sides.[2][4]

According to Shinchō Kōki, Nobunaga and the pages at first thought that someone had started a fight in the street. But when the enemy raised a battle cry and started shooting, they realized it was a rebellion. Nobunaga asked, "Whose scheme is this?", Mori Ranmaru replied, "It appears to be Akechi's". Nobunaga did not ask back, but simply said, "There is no need to discuss the pros and cons./There is no choice." (是非に及ばず, Zehi ni oyobazu), and began to fight back with bows and arrows at the edge of the palace. When the bowstring broke, he kept shooting arrows while changing bows, and when he ran out of spare bows, he fought with his spear. When Nobunaga was eventually unable to fight after being hit in the elbow by an enemy spear, he retreated and told the nyōbō-shū[a] there, "I don't care, you ladies hurry up and get out of here".[12][13] It was said that Nobunaga then entered the back room of the palace, closed the door of the storage room, and committed seppuku in the burning temple.[2][6][13] The Akechi forces lifted the siege around 8:00 a.m.[4]

Meanwhile, Oda Nobutada, who was at Myōkaku-ji Temple, received news of Mitsuhide's rebellion and attempted to go to Honnō-ji Temple to rescue his father. However, just as he was leaving the temple, Murai Sadakatsu and his sons rushed in and stopped him. Murai said that Honnō-ji had already burned down and the enemy would soon attack us, and advised Nobutada to hunker down in the fortified Nijō Gosho. Upon entering the Nijō Gosho, Nobutada orders Maeda Geni to flee with his infant son, Sanpōshi (Oda Hidenobu), going from Gifu Castle in Mino to Kiyosu Castle in Owari. Nobutada had all the people escape, including the kugyō and the nyōbō-shū,[a] and then he began his war council. Some advised Nobutada to escape and head for Azuchi, but he said, "An enemy who has committed such a rebellion will not let us escape so easily. It would be a disgrace for me to be killed by common soldiers while fleeing", and decided to stay in Kyoto and fight. In the meantime, Akechi completed the siege of Nijō Gosho, making it impossible to escape. Later, Nobutada also committed seppuku.[5]: 69 [6][4] Kamata Shinsuke, who assisted Nobutada in his suicide, hid his head and body according to his instructions.[citation needed]

Aftermath

[edit]

Akechi Mitsuhide was eager to find Nobunaga's body in the burnt ruins of Honnō-ji, but he was unable to locate it. Nobunaga's body not being found meant that no one knew if he was alive or dead and created a problem for Mitsuhide. If, by any chance, Nobunaga was alive, the probability of Mitsuhide's defeat increased, and even if it remained unclear whether he is alive or dead, Mitsuhide would find it very difficult to gain support from those who feared Nobunaga's retaliation. In fact, Hideyoshi sent a letter to Nobunaga's vassals that falsely claimed that Nobunaga was still alive to request their cooperation in defeating Mitsuhide. If Mitsuhide had obtained Nobunaga's head, he could have made his death known to the public, and some forces might have followed him. If that had happened, he might have been able to defeat Hideyoshi.[3][4] Meanwhile, Mitsuhide also tried to persuade Oda vassals in the vicinity of Kyoto to recognize his authority after the death of Nobunaga. Then, Mitsuhide entered Nobunaga's Azuchi Castle east of Kyoto and began sending messages to the Imperial Court to boost his position and force the court to recognize his authority as well. However, no one responded to Mitsuhide's call.[citation needed]

Hashiba Hideyoshi received the first news the day after the incident. Hideyoshi immediately made peace with the Mōri clan, kept Nobunaga's death under wraps, and returned to the Kinai region with an ultra-fast, forced march known as Chūgoku Ōgaeshi (the Great Return from the Chugoku Region). After returning in about a week with an army of nearly 30,000 troops for a total distance of 200 km, Hideyoshi joined forces with Niwa Nagahide and Oda Nobutaka in Osaka and headed for Kyoto. With this momentum, Hideyoshi defeated Mitsuhide in the Battle of Yamazaki. While on the run, Mitsuhide was killed as a victim of an ochimushagari.[b][14]

The Kiyosu Conference was then held to determine the successor to the Oda clan, and four vassals of the Oda clan, Shibata Katsuie, Niwa Nagahide, Ikeda Tsuneoki, and Hashiba Hideyoshi, attended the conference. Three names were mentioned as possible successors: Nobukatsu, the second son; Nobutaka, the third son; and Hidenobu (Sanhōshi), Nobutada's eldest son, or Nobunaga's grandson, who was only three years old.[15]

Nobunaga's corpse

[edit]

After defeating Mitsuhide, Hideyoshi also searched for Nobunaga's body, but it still could not be found. In October 1582, Hideyoshi held Nobunaga's funeral at Daitoku-ji Temple in Kyoto. In place of his missing body, Hideyoshi had a life-size wooden statue of Nobunaga cremated and put it in an urn in place of his ashes.[4]

There is no doubt that what Nobunaga feared most when he prepared to die was not dying but what would happen after death: in other words, how his body would be treated. Nobunaga must have understood that if his body had fallen into Mitsuhide's hands, his severed head would surely have been gibbeted, and he would have been disgraced as a criminal and that Mitsuhide would use Nobunaga's death to justify his rebellion by making it public. In such a situation, Nobunaga had a few possible options. He would have the body burned so that it could not be identified as Nobunaga's, or he would have it buried so that Mitsuhide could not find it inside Honnō-ji, or he would have someone he trusted carry it out of Honnō-ji, even at the risk of being stolen by Mitsuhide on the way.[4] There are several theories regarding the fact that no bodies were found in the burnt ruins of Honnō-ji. One theory is that Nobunaga could not be identified because the bodies were too badly damaged, another that there were too many burned bodies to identify, and a third that the fire was so intense that his body was completely consumed.[c][4]

There are also several stories that Nobunaga's body and head were carried out from Honnō-ji. There are a number of tombs in various parts of Japan that are said to be Nobunaga's, but there is no evidence that his body or ashes are buried in any of them.[4]

Tokugawa escape to Mikawa

[edit]

Tokugawa Ieyasu heard the news in Hirakata, Osaka, but at the time, he had only a few companions with him. The Iga province track was also in danger of the Ochimusha-gari, or "Samurai hunters" gang. During the Sengoku period, particularly dangerous groups called "Ochimusha-gari" or "fallen warrior hunter" groups emerged. These groups consisted of peasant or Rōnin who dispossessed by war formed self-defense forces. However, in reality they often resorted to hunting and robbing defeated Samurai's or soldiers during conflicts.[16][17][18] These outlaw groups were particularly rampant on the route which Ieyasu took to return to Mikawa.[18]

Ieyasu and his party, therefore, chose the shortest route back to the Mikawa province by crossing the Iga Province, which was different in many versions according to primary sources such as the records of Tokugawa Nikki or Mikawa Todai-Hon:

  • The Tokugawa Nikki theory stated that Ieyasu took the roads to Shijonawate and Son'enji and then followed the stream of the Kizu river until they spent the night at Yamaguchi castle. The next day they reached a stronghold of theKōka ikki clan of the Tarao who allowed them to take refuge for the night. Then on the last day, the Ieyasu group used a ship from Shiroko to reach Okazaki Castle.[19] However, the Tokugawa Nikki theory was doubted by modern historians, since it was not the shortest route for Ieyasu to reach Mikawa from his starting position at Sakai,[20] while on the other hand, it was also considered by history researchers as a very risky path due to the existence of Iga ikki groups which were hostile to the Oda and Tokugawa clans.[21][22]
  • The Mikawa Toda-Hon stated that Ieyasu went north from Ogawadate, crossed Koka, and entered Seishu Seki (from Shigaraki, passed through Aburahi and entered Tsuge in Iga.)[22] This theory was supported by Modern Japanese historians such as Tatsuo Fujita from Mie University, who takes this material to formulate three different theories about the details of Ieyasu's trek that he propagated.[23][22] This theory is also supported by a group of history researchers of Mie city, which happened to be the descendants of the Kōka ikki clans. They stated that by taking this path, before the Ieyasu group reached the Kada pass where they could be escorted by the Kōka clan Jizamurai, Ieyasu mostly depended for protection with his high-rank vassals, particularly the four Shitennō (Tokugawa clan) generals of the Tokugawa clan, rather than the popular theory about the help of the "Iga Ninja" clans. [21] In 2023, during the conference of the "International Ninja Society" at Chubu Centrair International Airport, a passionate debate occurred which involved Chris Glenn (a D.J. and Japanese history enthusiast and author), Uejima Hidetomo (a history book author from Nara), Watanabe Toshitsune (former chairman of the Koga Ninjutsu Research Society) and Sakae Okamoto (Mayor of Iga city). In this conference, Toshitsune challenged the common theory about the Iga route which is stated by Hidetomo and who propagated the theory about Ieyasu taking the Kōka route which he viewed as more plausible. [24]
Kada pass, is believed to be the road which was taken by Ieyasu Tokugawa to return into Mikawa province.[22]

Regardless, whichever theory is true, historians agreed that the track ended at Kada (a mountain pass between Kameyama town and Iga), and that the Tokugawa group suffered a last attack by the Ochimusha-gari outlaws at the Kada pass where they reached the territory of the Kōka ikki clans of Jizamurai which are friendly to the Tokugawa clan. The Koka ikki Jizamurai assisted Ieyasu in eliminating the threats of the Ochimusha-gari outlaws and escorted them until they reached theIga Province, where they were further protected by other friendly groups of Iga ikki which accompanied the Ieyasu group until they safely reached Mikawa.[18] There are 34 recorded Tokugawa vassals who survived this journey, such as Sakai Tadatsugu, Ii Naomasa, and Honda Tadakatsu, Sakakibara Yasumasa and many others.[17] Other than those four Shitennō generals Matsudaira Ietada recorded in his journal, Ietada nikki (家忠日記), the escorts of the Ieyasu during the journey in Iga consisted of:[25]

Ietada Nikki also recorded that the escorts of Ieyasu suffered around 200 casualties during their journey.[26][27]

However, not all of the escaping parties managed to escape alive. Anayama Nobutada, a former Twenty-Four Generals of Takeda Shingen member who was now an ally to the Tokugawa and Nobunaga clan, was ambushed by the Ochimusha-gari during the journey, and killed along with some of his retainers.[18]

Iga Ninja theory's controversy

[edit]

It was reported by Edo period traditional records that Hattori Hanzō, a Tokugawa vassal from Iga, negotiated with Iga ninjas to hire them as guards along the way to avoid the ochimusha-gari.[b] The local Koka-Ikki ninjas and Iga-Ikki ninjas under Hanzo who helped Ieyasu to travel into safety consisted of 300 Ninjas.[19] Furthermore, Uejima Hidetomo, a researcher of Iga Ninja history, has stated there is research which revealed that Hattori Yasuji, one of the ninjas who accompanied Ieyasu on his journey in Iga province, also served as a bodyguard and espionage officer under Muromachi Shogun Ashikaga Yoshiaki.[28]

However, a modern scholar such as Tatsuo Fujita doubted the credibility of Hattori Hattori Hanzō's ninja army theory, since it was first appeared in Iga-sha yuishogaki record which circulated in Edo period during the rule of Shogun Tokugawa Yoshimune.[22] During his rule, Yoshimune were known for establishing the Oniwaban secret police institution whose members hailed from the confederation clans of Koka and Iga.[29][30][31] It has been argued that the circulation of the myth about Hattori Hanzō ninja army helping Ieyasu was created as propaganda to increase the prestige of the Iga and Koka clan confederations in Tokugawa Shogunate.[22]

On the other hand, Chaya Shirōjirō, a wealthy merchant in Kyoto, wrote that he went ahead and gave silver coins to local people and asked them to guide and escort the group, which is highly likely to be true since it also appears in Jesuit historical documents of the same period.[citation needed] However, the existence of Chaya Shirōjirō during this period itself is also doubted by historians, since it was recorded that Shirōjirō was born in 1600, so it was unlikely he existed during Ieyasu's travels in Iga province in 1582.[32]

Mitsuhide's betrayal theories

[edit]

The Honnō-ji Incident is a major historical event, but no definitive conclusion has been reached regarding Akechi Mitsuhide's motives, and the truth remains unknown. More than 50 theories have been proposed over the years, and new theories emerge with each discovery of a new historical document or announcement of the results of an excavation.[2]

Betrayal motivation

[edit]

Several theories regarding the motivation:

  • Mitsuhide was abused by Nobunaga, including being humiliated and dismissed as a receptionist for Tokugawa Ieyasu.[d] The prevailing theory during the Edo period was that the incident was caused by Mitsuhide's resentment of various unreasonable punishments he received from Nobunaga. The main reasons were as follows.[33] However, historian Tetsuo Owada considered such history, including alleged Mitsuhide's letter to Kobayakawa Takakage to express his feeling about Nobunaga as unreliable.[34]
  • Nobunaga had treated him unfairly.[d] His fiefdom in the San'in region was unilaterally confiscated. Such theory includes the idication of preferential treatment for Oda Nobunaga's relatives. The theory is that Mitsuhide felt threatened by the fact that Nobunaga, who had previously adopted a merit-based system for his vassals and had appointed them according to their abilities regardless of their origins, began to favor his relatives.[35] Furthermore, there is an opinion that Nobunaga forcibly transferring Mitsuhide from his territory control of Sakamoto and Tanba into the yet to be conquered region of Izumo and Iwami. However, This theory also dismissed by Owada as It was usual custom for Nobunaga to bestow a non pacified territories yet to his vassals as promise.[34]
  • His mother, who was a hostage of Hatano clan, was killed because of Nobunaga. During the siege of Yakami Castle in 1579 , Mitsuhide offered his mother as hostage to the Hatano clan, in an effort to convince Hatano Hideharu to submit to Nobunaga. However, Nobunaga instead executed Hideharu and his brother with crucifixion, prompting the Hatano clan to exact retaliation by crucified Mitsuhide's mother in response. However, there is no such mention in "Nobunaga Koki" a primary source. According to the book, Mitsuhide besieged Yakami Castle for a year, starving the enemy, and eventually captured the three Hatano brothers, but there is no mention of his mother being crucified afterwards. Furthermore, recent research has shown that she had died of natural cause before the siege of Yakami.[34] Modern historian Watanabe Daimon also explained this theory was traced from Toyama Nobuharu's work "Sōkenki" written around 1658; "Kashiwazaki Monogatari"; and also "Nobunaga-ki" (Shinchō Kōki); which Daimon also doubted their credibilities due to many embellishments and additions which was not found in primary sources found.[36]

Thus, these stories were largely deemed by historians as unreliable,[33][37] including the story of Mitsuhide betrayal from "Akechi-gunki" and "Kōyō Gunkan".[34]

Other new theories from 20th century historians which involve the Ashikaga Shogunate also emerged:

  • There also emerged the theory that Mitsuhide was a loyalist to the imperial court or a shogunate vassal of the Ashikaga shogunate. Historian Kuwata Tadachika put forth the reason that Mitsuhide had a personal grudge, and there was another theory that Mitsuhide did not enjoy the cruelty of Nobunaga.[33][38]: 242  Another indication was when Mitsuhide began his march toward Chugoku, he held a renga session at the shrine on Mount Atago. The beginning line, Toki wa ima, ame ga shita shiru satsuki kana (時は今 雨がした滴る皐月かな), translates to "The time is now, the fifth month when the rain falls." However, there are several homonyms in the line, such that it could be taken as a double entendre. An alternate meaning, without changing any of the pronunciations, would be: 時は今 天が下治る 皐月かな. Thus it has also been translated as "Now is the time to rule the world: It's the fifth month!" In this case, the word toki, which means "time" in the first version, sounds identical to Akechi's ancestral family name, "Toki" (土岐).[38]
  • Ashikaga Shogunate restoration, Tatsuo Fujita points out that Mitsuhide's handwritten letter addressed to the Kishu daimyo named Shigeharu Dobashi shows that Mitsuhide had a clear plan to welcome Yoshiaki to Kyoto after the Honnoji Incident and restore the Muromachi Shogunate.[39][40]

Alleged collaborators

[edit]

The mastermind theory that someone behind the incident manipulated Mitsuhide Akechi to carry out Nobunaga's assassination is surprisingly new and has emerged since the 1990s. It all started when the well-known medieval historian Akira Imatani published a book advocating a conflict between the Imperial Court and Nobunaga. The theory is that the existence of an emperor with high authority was becoming a hindrance to Nobunaga, who wanted to be an absolute monarch. At the time, when the new emperor was about to ascend to the throne, the emperor system was the subject of much debate in the historical academia. Although Imatani himself did not claim that the Imperial Court was involved in the Honnō-ji Incident, various conspiracy theories were developed, mainly by influential historical researchers who were inspired by Imatani's theory.[33]

There are several theories about the collaborator of Mitsuhide's act in Honnō-ji:

  • Hashiba (Toyotomi) Hideyoshi theory[41]
    • The reason is that Hideyoshi's Chugoku Ogaeshi was too fast. However, only the cavalry warriors were able to turn back at breakneck speed, and the infantry arrived late. Many of the soldiers did not make it in time for the "Battle of Yamazaki" with Mitsuhide.[33] While it might be a stretch to designate Hideyoshi as the mastermind, many historians have pointed out the strong possibility that he anticipated this situation.[42]
  • Tokugawa Ieyasu theory[41]
    • The reason is: "Nobunaga, who was on the verge of unifying the country, felt that Ieyasu, his ally, stood in his way. He planned to kill Ieyasu first. However, Mitsuhide, who was becoming increasingly dissatisfied with Nobunaga's policies, conversely informed Ieyasu of the plot and drew him into his side, thus killing Nobunaga by surprise." It is a leap of faith to assume that Mitsuhide and Ieyasu, who had not interacted with each other before, were able to conspire in Nobunaga's city, Azuchi Castle Town, and there is no historical support for this idea.[33]
  • Ankokuji Ekei (the Mōri) theory
    • The theory is that Ankokuji Ekei, a diplomatic monk of the Mōri, which was facing an existential crisis as Nobunaga himself was about to launch a full-scale offensive, arranged for Nobunaga's assassination on condition of the Mōri's full cooperation with Mitsuhide and Hideyoshi, and had it carried out.[2]
  • Buddhist power theory
    • The theory that Buddhist powers such as Hiei-zan Enryaku-ji and Ishiyama Hongan-ji, which were suppressed by Nobunaga and held a strong grudge against him, were the masterminds behind the situation.[2]
  • Imperial Court/Kuge power theory
    • This is the theory that Prince Masahito, Konoe Sakihisa, Yoshida Kanemi, and others forced Mitsuhide to defeat Nobunaga because Nobunaga forced Emperor Ōgimachi to abdicate. In reality, however, the Imperial Court was rather desperate to curry the favor of its sponsor, Nobunaga, since Nobunaga's financial support had dramatically improved their financial situation, which was in danger. Emperor Ōgimachi was also unable to abdicate due to a lack of funding for the abdication ceremony.[33]
  • Ashikaga Shogun (Muromachi Shogunate) theory
    • The theory is that Ashikaga Yoshiaki, the 15th shogun, exiled by Nobunaga, formed the Nobunaga siege by Mori Terumoto, Uesugi Kagakatsu, and other powerful Daimyo, and forced Mitsuhide to stage a coup d'état. However, the Shogun did not have much authority at the time, and Uesugi and Mori did not cooperate with Akechi.[33]
  • Jesuit theory
    • The theory is that the Jesuits of the Catholic Church, which dispatched missionaries to Japan, were the masterminds. The Jesuits supported Nobunaga militarily and economically, and Nobunaga also protected Christianity, but Nobunaga tried to become independent from the Jesuits by deifying himself, so the Jesuits had Mitsuhide defeat Nobunaga and then had Hashiba (Toyotomi) Hideyoshi defeat Mitsuhide, according to this theory. However, while it is true that Nobunaga protected Christianity, there is no historical record of the Jesuits assisting Nobunaga on either the Japanese or Jesuit side, and in fact, the finances of the Japanese branch of the Jesuits were so tight that they could not afford to do so.[33]

In the 2010s, a Shikoku theory was proposed that Mitsuhide, who valued his relationship with Chōsokabe Motochika, rose up to avoid Nobunaga's attack on Shikoku. Mitsuhide was entrusted by Nobunaga to negotiate with Chōsokabe, and the Akechi family and Chōsokabe had deep ties in relation to marriage.[6][43] In 2020, NHK aired a program called "Honnoji Incident Summit 2020". Seven historians debated various theories, with the "Shikoku theory" garnering the most support.[44]

[edit]
  • Honnōji Hotel is a 2017 comedy mystery drama that takes places around the Honnō-ji Incident
  • Tainei-ji incident – a similar coup in 1551 where a powerful daimyō of western Japan was forced to commit suicide

Appendix

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Court ladies.
  2. ^ a b A medieval Japanese custom in which local samurai, farmers and bandits hunt fleeing samurai for bounty and the valuables they wear.
  3. ^ The missionary Luis Frois wrote in his "History of Japan" that even the bones were burned to ashes.
  4. ^ a b In the "History of Japan" compiled by Luís Fróis, it is suggested that this is because Nobunaga, who did not like Mitsuhide's reception of Tokugawa Ieyasu, gave him a kick.

References

[edit]
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Bibliography

[edit]
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  • Naramoto Tatsuya (1994). Nihon no Kassen. Tokyo: Shufu to Seikatsusha.