Masashige Kusunoki 1294 - 1336
The man who was
to become a legendary hero in Meiji era textbooks and a powerful symbol of
loyalty to the emperor was a relative unknown in the days before he
stepped into history's spotlight. In fact, little is known even now about
the Kusunoki or their roots. The Taiheiki records that Kusunoki was
descended from Tachibana Moroye, an influential nobleman and scholar, but
this, along with the Kusunoki's presumed Minamoto ties, has never been
either proved nor disproved. What is certain is that in 1331 Kusunoki
Masashige was a landowner of some modest standing in Kwatchi province who
responded to the Emperor Go-Daigo's plea for military support against the
Hojo. There were few other men of standing willing to cast in their lots
with the imperial cause, making Kusunoki's pledge of support all the more
noble. His first act was to fortify a hilltop position called Akasaka,
which he garrisoned with a total of 500 men. There he accepted the company
of Prince Morinaga, who had fled from the Enryakuji.
This was in October, and by the end of that very same month the Imperial
cause seemed lost. Emperor Go-Daigo had taken up at the Kasagi Temple
following his flight from Kyoto on 27 September; on 28 October Bakufu
forces captured Kasagi and forced Go-Daigo to flee. Within days Go-Daigo
was apprehended and confined in Rokuhara. As for Kusunoki and Prince
Morinaga, they had already cast their lots and had no choice but to
continue on their rebellious course. In November Bakufu troops arrived at
Akasaka and laid siege with forces that greatly outnumbered those of the
defenders. The battle lasted for about three weeks or so and in that time
Masashige and his men fought gallantly, creating an inordinate number of
Bakufu casualties around the walls of Akasaka and forested hillsides of
Mt. Kongo. The Bakufu forces managed to cut Akasaka's aqueduct, and all
but doomed the small garrison. Kusunoki, determined to carry on the fight
elsewhere, succeeded in faking his own death: he ordered the castle torched
and slipped out under cover of night, tricking the Hojo into believing
that he had committed suicide. Prince Morinaga parted ways with Kusunoki
at this point and went into hiding at Yoshino.
Go-Daigo was exiled to Oki in April of 1332 but resistance to the Hojo
continued in the Yamato region. Kusunoki assembled another band of men and
began a campaign of harassment against Bakufu forces in the Kinai while
Prince Morinaga appealed to other landowners and warriors to rally against
Kamakura.
According to the Taiheki (a work which one must always remember
to take with a grain of salt) Kusunoki won a number of minor victories
during the course of the year. In one of these actions, a 2,000-man force
under Kusunoki moved in the general direction of Kyoto, prompting the
Bakufu headquarters in the city to dispatch a contingent of 5,000 to face
him. The two enemy commanders leading the expedition, Suda and Takahashi,
were a bit over-zealous in their task and pressed straight on Kusunoki,
who was waiting for them beyond the Yodo River. By employing deceptive
maneuvers, Kusunoki convinced the Bakufu warriors that they had plunged
headlong into a trap and the attackers fled back across the Watanabe
Bridge in some disorder. Kusunoki's actions no doubt gave some substance
to the appeals to arms issued by Prince Morinaga. In early 1333 sizable
Bakufu forces had been deployed to the Kyoto region and these were divided
and sent against three targets - Chihaya, another Mt. Kongo fort defended
by Kusunoki; Yoshino, headquarters of Prince Morinaga; and Akasaka, now
under the control of Hirano Shogen. Akasaka and Yoshino had both fallen by
1 March, leaving Chihaya, which promised to be a much more formidable
redoubt. Unlike Akasaka, Kusunoki had had time to prepare Chihaya for a
prolonged resistance and the presence of an internal well meant that the
loss of this castle's aqueduct would not be fatal. The terrain was also
more formidable then Akasaka, and practically sheer on two sides. This
meant that Kusunoki could plan on where to meet any attacks and lay
elaborate counter-measures accordingly.
In March the forces that had reduced Akasaka and Yoshino converged on
Chihaya and the siege began in earnest. The early assaults were repulsed
with the greatest bloodshed. Kusunoki employed every possible device to
maximize the resistive capabilities of his men, to include rockslides,
boiling water, and pitfalls. Logs were rolled down on attacking Bakufu
troops, bowling over entire ranks of men and eroding morale. The causality
list literally grew exponentially, as the Taiheiki records, 'Lieutenant of
the Outer Palace Guards, Left Division, Nagasaki Shiro, being a marshal
and required to make eyewitness records of casualties, had to keep twelve
scribes plying their brushes without respite for three days and nights.'
Rather then continue to take losses of this magnitude, the Bakufu
commanders changed tactics and settled down for a siege. This tactic may
have ultimately succeeded but for orders that arrived from Kamakura
demanding that the campaign be brought to a speedy conclusion. Other
warriors were responding to Prince Morinaga's call, encouraged by
Masashige's heroic resistance. In addition, Go-Daigo had escaped Oki
Island on a fishing ship and was on his way to rally the supporters of his
cause.
The attackers ordered a large bridge hastily constructed and attempted
to span a ravine that separated Chihaya from a height controlled by the
Bakufu forces, only to lose more men when Kusunoki set it ablaze. At this
same time, events were transpiring that would make all of the Hojo efforts
at Chihaya wasted. To the east, two powerful Kamakura armies had been
dispatched from the Kanto, under
Ashikaga
Takauji and Nagaoshi Takaie. The latter was killed en route to the
Kinai, and his forces absorbed into Takauji's army. Now commanding the
most powerful of the Bakufu's field forces and noting that most of the
Bakufu's Kinai forces were engaged around Chihaya, Takauji revolted. To
everyone's surprise, Takauji marched into Kyoto and occupied the city in
the name of the emperor. Go-Daigo was able to return, and the siege of
Chihaya came to an abrupt end. In the east, Nitta
Yoshisada of Kozuke also declared against the Hojo and led an army
against Kamakura itself, forcing Hojo Takatoki, the last of the Hojo
Shikken, to commit suicide. Go-Daigo's Kemmu Restoration had been a
success, in no small way thanks to Kusunoki Masashige's efforts.
Unfortunately, but perhaps inevitably, peace was short-lived. Ashikaga
Takauji was dispatched to defeat a son of the late Takatoki, Tokiyuki, and
occupied Kamakura in 1335. Soon afterwards, he clashed with Nitta
Yoshisada, an old rival, and by 1336 had openly broke with Go-Daigo.
Takauji marched against Kyoto but suffering a defeat fled to the relative
safety of Kyushu. Once there, he drew together an army of supporters and
prepared for a return to the Kinai.
In May the Ashikaga army departed Kyushu and headed eastward, led by
Takauji, Ashikaga
Tadayoshi, Hosokawa Jozen, and Shoni Yorihisa. By this point, Nitta
Yoshisada had become Go-Daigo's top commander and he dispatched a
messenger calling for Kusunoki to join the loyalist army presently
readying for battle. Kusunoki objected to the decision to confront Takauji
in a straightforward battle. In fact, there are two versions of his
protest. According to the Taiheki Kusunoki suggested that Go-Daigo retreat
from Kyoto to Mt. Hiei and allow the loyalist forces time to harass and
tire Takauji's army until the time was right to do battle-the most popular
scenario. The Baisho Ron, compiled only 13 or 14 years after the
battle (albeit stilted in the Ashikaga's favor), records that Kusunoki
actually suggested that Go-Daigo kill Nitta and make peace with Takauji,
insinuating that Yoshisada was over-rated and bound to bring about the
doom of the loyalist cause. What makes this latter account intriguing is
that the Baisho Ron is not lacking in praise for Masashige, making
no attempt to discredit Go-Daigo's champion. Also, Nitta Yoshisada in
general comes off as a man determined more by personal ambitions or
motivations than by fealty to the emperor. That he was a military
incompetent, as many modern texts declare, is not as easy to determine,
but the upcoming battle certainly reinforces that view. At any rate, there
is an at least reasonable chance that Kusunoki's actual protest to Go-Daigo
ran somewhere in between the two accounts, and that the Taiheki's somewhat
more noble version was later embraced as it suited the near-godlike
stature Kusunoki was raised to after the Meji Restoration.
Go-Daigo seems to have vacillated on Kusunoki's suggestion initially
but in the end went along with Nitta's aggressive strategy. Reluctantly,
Masashige raised troops and prepared to join an army he believed was
doomed to defeat. Before he left he visited with his eleven-year old son,
a poignant moment celebrated in Japanese art. According to the Taiheki
Masashige urged the boy, Masatsura, to remain brave and never forget his
loyalty to the emperor, regardless of the outcome of the current conflict.
With that, Masashige departed.
The battle would take place on a hot and humid 5th of July at the
Minato River (or the Minatogawa) in Harima. The forces of Nitta Yoshisada,
Nitta Yoshisuke, and Kusunoki found themselves confronted by a force that
had divided itself into three parts. Ashikaga Tadayoshi and Shoni Yorihisa
advanced by land while Takauji and Hosokawa Jozen made their way to the
battleground via ship. A quick inspection of any map of the battle
arrangements will reveal a fundamental flaw in the loyalist's
dispositions. Kusuonki's forces were arrayed on the west bank of the
Minatogawa, with his flank secured to the south by Nitta, deployed on the
eastern side of the river. It is probable that the river was dry at this
time, but any movement on Nitta's behalf eastward would still run the risk
of leaving Kusunoki isolated, and in the course of the battle this was
just what happened. When the fighting started, Shoni attacked Nita's front
while Hosokawa sailed up and began landing to his rear. Nitta panicked and
pulled back, leaving Kusunoki's 700 men to face the full brunt of Ashikaga
Tadayoshi's army. Kusunoki and his men fought bravely but in the end were
overwhelmed. After almost six hours of fighting Masashige and his brother
Masasue committed suicide, joined by those Kusunoki retainers who had not
already been killed. The loyalist cause was doomed, and Nitta Yoshisada,
who escaped Minatogawa, was later killed.
The epilogue to the tragic story of Kusunoki Masashige comes in the
form of that very same son he met with before he departed for his final
battle-Masatsura. Twelve years after his father's death, Masatsura had an
audience with the emperor of the Southern Court, Go-Murakami, who praised
the Kusunoki's loyalty to his family. Soon afterwards, Masatsura was
killed at the Battle of Shijo Nawate on 4 February 1348. A poem he etched
on the door to the temple honoring Go-Daigo before he was killed survives
to this day and reads, 'I could not return, I presume/So I will keep my
name/Among those who are dead with bows.'
After the Meji Restoration, when a new government was searching for a
way to reconcile Japan's samurai past with her Imperial present, Kusunoki
Masashige came to the fore. A samurai loyal to the emperor, even to his
certain death, was a valuable symbol, and much exploited during the era of
Japanese Imperialism. This ended up with ugly connotations, with young men
hurling themselves futilely into American ships in World War II by
aircraft or fast boat, inspired by the exploits of Masashige.
Pre-war propaganda aside, Kusunoki Masashige stands as a soldier of the
first order, brave and unselfish, with honorable intentions and a
steadfast determination. His defense of Chihaya stands as a masterpiece of
Japanese defense work that was rarely repeated in the centuries to come.
Compiled
by F.W. Seal
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