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The Unification Warlords

The three warlords who ended the Sengoku era and the campaigns that consumed them.

6 articles

1

Lord Fool to Demon King: The Life and Personality of Oda Nobunaga

He threw incense at his father’s funeral, dressed like a vagrant, and befriended a Jesuit. From provincial fool to the man who nearly unified Japan, the life of the warlord who embraced Portuguese firearms, patronized the Jesuits, and declared himself a living god.

2

The Demon King and the Monks: Oda Nobunaga’s War on Buddhist Power

From the burning of Mount Hiei to the decade-long siege of the Ishiyama Honganji, how Nobunaga systematically dismantled the most powerful religious institutions in Japan, and why the Jesuits cheered him on.

3

The Monkey Who Became God: The Life and Personality of Toyotomi Hideyoshi

Born a nameless peasant, he talked, fought, and schemed his way to the summit of Japanese power, the most improbable biography in pre-modern Japan and one of the most extraordinary tales of social mobility in the early modern world.

4

The Warlord Descends: Hideyoshi’s 1587 Kyūshū Campaign

When Toyotomi Hideyoshi marched a quarter of a million men onto the island of Kyūshū, he came to crush a Japanese clan. What he found instead was a fortified Jesuit port city, an armed Portuguese galley, and a priest who thought he could broker a deal. The consequences would reshape the Nanban encounter.

5

The Imjin War: Hideyoshi’s Invasion of Korea and the War That Broke an Empire

In 1592, the most powerful man in Japan sent a quarter of a million soldiers to conquer China. Korea was in the way. The seven-year catastrophe involved Christian crusaders, a genius admiral, and Portuguese arms dealers.

6

The Battle of Sekigahara: Six Hours That Made the Shogunate

On a fog-choked morning in October 1600, Japan’s feudal warlords staked everything on a single engagement. When the smoke cleared, one man controlled the archipelago, and the fate of every Christian, Portuguese merchant, and Jesuit priest hung on his next move.

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