Battle of Nagashino 1575

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  • @m3me_enthus14st8
    @m3me_enthus14st8 Před 3 lety +8356

    This footage from 1575 is still clearer than bank security cams.

  • @Deadman3913
    @Deadman3913 Před 3 lety +3653

    The thing I admire is not only did Nobunaga employ a superior technology, he had the presence of mind to train his troops to use it to its full potential. Genius.

    • @Haru-qh2qz
      @Haru-qh2qz Před 3 lety +183

      I think that's why guns were so effective. In comparison to everything else, they were easy to use without much training. It kinda became the weapon of the peasant soldier

    • @aniquinstark4347
      @aniquinstark4347 Před 2 lety +205

      @@Haru-qh2qz Same goes for the crossbow before it. Training a military archer takes literally over a decade because they have to start as a child in order to develop the necessary bone and tendon structure for a warbow. The crossbow, however, only requires aiming practice to use.

    • @hatdognialjur2070
      @hatdognialjur2070 Před 2 lety +49

      Also like bruh all the villages are literally militiamen that can go to war in any second

    • @dibi9692
      @dibi9692 Před 2 lety +21

      2000 years ago army use cross bow like that volley firing. Any normal people will use such formation to fire a vertical flying shooting weapons to increase fire efficiency.

    • @dibi9692
      @dibi9692 Před 2 lety +45

      @@Haru-qh2qz When Chinese 50 years later encountered Manchurian army in the heavy winter forest. We have much powerful guns than Japanese as Chinese had much advanced and larger casting tech and craftsmen but as we entered the deep forest cannon were left behind. The Manchurian army push heavy bullet proof shield wagon to charge forward without cannon matchlock are useless at all then the Manchurian army break the gunmen lines and into a close combat and followed by strong horsemen charge.

  • @CaptainZlex
    @CaptainZlex Před rokem +310

    The Takeda had no idea what they were riding into.
    "If one musket fires while another reloads, then continuous fire can be achieved."

    • @SCH292
      @SCH292 Před rokem +25

      The very very first encounter YEARS BEFORE Takeda was able to beat them using horse charging. Oda learned from his mistake and Oda was more well prepared this time. Takeda's son tried to do the same thing like his father did but failed hard.

    • @revbladez5773
      @revbladez5773 Před rokem +8

      @@SCH292 It was Tokugawa Ieyasu who was beaten by Takeda in Mikatagahara, with most of his troops also being his own. Oda Nobunaga was not present.

    • @SCH292
      @SCH292 Před rokem +4

      @@revbladez5773 Oda did send some troops to aid his buddy in that battle.

    • @revbladez5773
      @revbladez5773 Před rokem +3

      @@SCH292 Some yes but majority were Tokugawa and he did not go himself.

    • @douglassun8456
      @douglassun8456 Před měsícem +2

      Katsuyori had some idea, but he assumed that the rain that made the ground difficult for his cavalry would soak the Oda's fuses and render them useless. He didn't anticipate that the Oda would keep their fuses in water-tight storage the night before.

  • @TitusCastiglione1503
    @TitusCastiglione1503 Před 2 lety +627

    The parallels between this and some of the battles of the Italian Wars such as Cerignola and La Bicocca are striking. Mass arquebusiers in a strong defensive position will consistently trounce heavy infantry and cavalry.

    • @Ironmike2233
      @Ironmike2233 Před rokem +27

      Even in the history of Saudi arabia the founder king abdulaziz bin saud had fought a zealous religious group called the brotherhood was a mixture of tribal coalition they helped him ascend to the throne and secure many areas eventually there paths crossed and he fought them in a battle called al-spilla ironically they were massacred and blood were spelled even there leader was shot in a horse charge their weapons were outdated and they were relying on horses and camel charges to achieve victory while on the other hand the government troop were young in their structure and using machine guns and new model rifles and were holding a defensive position on that land

    • @TitusCastiglione1503
      @TitusCastiglione1503 Před rokem +11

      @@Ironmike2233 interesting. Reminds of the battle of Omdurman in 1898.

    • @Porter_28
      @Porter_28 Před 9 měsíci +7

      The history of all Japan is very interesting....

    • @GreatPolishWingedHussars
      @GreatPolishWingedHussars Před 5 měsíci

      However the Japanese also have this in common with the Germans, in addition to the defeat in World War II, that they massacred each other for 1000 years, just like the Germans did! Unfortunately, both nations then decided to massacre other nations in the 20th century.

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Ironmike2233that’s awesome and I didn’t know about it. Guns go boom

  • @ianpascual3381
    @ianpascual3381 Před 3 lety +5833

    "A weapon that kills without honor, without skill, but even so, it gives power and victory and Victory wipes away dishonor."

  • @hardcase1659
    @hardcase1659 Před 4 lety +12975

    No wonder the Japanese produce the best cameras in the world, their cameras from 1575 had better image quality that some of today's cameras.

  • @user-os2wq2ef1q
    @user-os2wq2ef1q Před 2 lety +68

    数ある大河ドラマの名場面の中でも間違いなく五指に入るであろう名場面。
    あの戦場の開戦前の緊迫感が御諏訪太鼓の演出とともに400百年の時を超えて伝わってくる。

  • @togurotoguro
    @togurotoguro Před rokem +464

    While these charges are often depicted as being cavalry charges, the recent rains, the flooded rice paddies between the Takeda and coalition lines would have meant that horse charges were impossible. It would have been too boggy. The Takeda troops too were slowed by the soft muddy rice paddies, then by the small Rengo River, and then forced to cross more rice paddies before reaching the hastily built log fences. Hardly any of them got that far

    • @ermac102
      @ermac102 Před 8 měsíci +5

      One word: cinema

    • @hansofaxalia
      @hansofaxalia Před 4 měsíci +10

      The Japanese would also not readily have access to the video equipment necessary to record this in the 1500s

    • @410cultivar
      @410cultivar Před 3 měsíci +2

      If I member correctly by mid day the ground dried up allowing for a major push with calvary, but ultimately failed

    • @finchvalor
      @finchvalor Před 2 měsíci +2

      Who knew cavalry charging straight into a solid wooden barrier defended by guns wouldn't have worked? It would have taken a psychic to determine that outcome for sure. I think they just got really unlucky.

    • @user-wi1ot2hk2r
      @user-wi1ot2hk2r Před 2 měsíci

      当時の火縄銃では三段撃ちは無理と‥
      NHKが数年前に゙検証結果を出しています‥
      鉄砲の他‥ 弓矢も使われていたそうです‥

  • @SrChr778
    @SrChr778 Před 2 lety +5003

    This battle was so significant that it changed the face of warfare henceforth.
    Oda's tactic of having multiple lines of riflemen, rotating between volleys, was brilliant at the time.

    • @nicholasmaximus3412
      @nicholasmaximus3412 Před 2 lety +257

      Learned well from them Dutchmen

    • @winningeleven49
      @winningeleven49 Před 2 lety +319

      It could be from the Chinese (crossbow tactics) or the Honganji rebels. The Dutch only used rank mode in the late 16th century.
      In the time of Nagashino (1575), the Dutch were easily defeated by Alva and Farnese and did not even have contact with Japan.

    • @mantchova
      @mantchova Před 2 lety +12

      It only works against melee tho.

    • @XxHiiaMaFrOGxX
      @XxHiiaMaFrOGxX Před 2 lety +86

      @@mantchova how do you think line battles worked?

    • @mantchova
      @mantchova Před 2 lety +10

      @@XxHiiaMaFrOGxX just like that

  • @herpyderpy2869
    @herpyderpy2869 Před 2 lety +2086

    "Using guns is dishonorable!"
    Oda Nobunaga seeing the Portuguese arquebuses: That...I want that

    • @aetius7139
      @aetius7139 Před 2 lety +265

      This thing is all over the place. And its a misconception that samurai shun guns. For 200+ year they fought at range using bows. When a portuguese ship wreck in tanegashima. They offer the local daimyo a gun to sell. After little demonstration he buy 2 and have artisans reverse engineered it and pretty soon. They make their own muskets.

    • @horsearcher6350
      @horsearcher6350 Před 2 lety +75

      Yep. Also the japanese have really improved firearm tactics, especially Oda of course.

    • @dwarvenmoray
      @dwarvenmoray Před 2 lety +127

      "Guns are dishonorable!"
      Said no samurai ever.

    • @l.c7665
      @l.c7665 Před 2 lety +24

      HE SAY... HE SAY... GUNS ARE GUNS ARE DISHONA- GUNS ARE DISHONA- * DIES OF LAUGHTER *

    • @thecommentguy9380
      @thecommentguy9380 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dwarvenmoray said the "samurai", aka: fucking weebs

  • @0rbital_nugget188
    @0rbital_nugget188 Před rokem +151

    Props to the cameraman for going back in time 500 years to witness this historical battle

    • @sven9900
      @sven9900 Před 2 měsíci +2

      the camera in 1500s is a banger of a quality

  • @CasualStone
    @CasualStone Před 8 měsíci +133

    Oda Nobunagas Line-Volley tactic has not only won him in the battle, but changed firearm warfare forever, with many countries using the tactic of trenches overlayed with vollery fire, It makes the perfect offense for cavarly and infantry while under the covers of a barrier.

    • @rumble2468
      @rumble2468 Před 2 měsíci +12

      Definitely in Japan, but allegedly the first use of volley fire was by the Ottoman janissaries at the Battle of Mohacs, after the Hungarian knights broke the first line of azabs.

    • @pistolsniper6281
      @pistolsniper6281 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Bro other nations developed this themselves he did not change it stop lying

    • @CasualStone
      @CasualStone Před měsícem +2

      @@pistolsniper6281 Were talking about in japan

    • @gregmasters8558
      @gregmasters8558 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@pistolsniper6281this is why other nations never tried conquering japan they would get decimated. First they have to fight the vicious storms at sea then arrive in the shores of japan and encounter samurais with guns lol.

    • @lagz_alot2452
      @lagz_alot2452 Před měsícem +4

      ​@@gregmasters8558 false, when the mongolians arrived to Japan, they decimated the Japanese forces, only retreated due to inability to resupply their forces at Japan, because of the typhoon as well

  • @vizytong
    @vizytong Před 4 lety +5926

    Imagine trained your half of your life as the finest cavalry in japan only to get kill by a gun on your first battle

    • @regiltube7932
      @regiltube7932 Před 4 lety +893

      😬😬 Just like attending 4 years college with degree and not getting a job for 2 years

    • @tombrydson781
      @tombrydson781 Před 4 lety +73

      Vicky Santoso painful

    • @thed542
      @thed542 Před 4 lety +26

      @@wijayapanjim9038 pertama kali di Internet ya mas?

    • @stevefg3067
      @stevefg3067 Před 4 lety +125

      @@regiltube7932
      FUCK, that's my life. 😂😫

    • @urthofthenewsun8465
      @urthofthenewsun8465 Před 3 lety +115

      Probably more like your entire life. I think Takeda Shingen must have been in a saddle since age 10, if not younger. His first victory in battle was apparently at age 15.

  • @badfoody
    @badfoody Před 4 lety +1646

    Hollywood and anime samurai: we don't use guns
    Actual Samurai: big stick go boom

    • @mrlonerstoner2211
      @mrlonerstoner2211 Před 3 lety +84

      Watch drifters its a cool anime that has samurai in it and they use guns

    • @ethanmcfarland8240
      @ethanmcfarland8240 Před 3 lety +136

      The samurai shot each other all the time in actual history

    • @badfoody
      @badfoody Před 3 lety +25

      @@ethanmcfarland8240 that's what i just said America

    • @ethanmcfarland8240
      @ethanmcfarland8240 Před 3 lety +13

      badfoody
      Sorry if that was rude

    • @Potatotenkopf
      @Potatotenkopf Před 3 lety +7

      @@mrlonerstoner2211 when I first watched I recognized Hannibal and Scipio, but I didn't know much other than elephants died on mountain and Scipio copy Hannibal. Now I know way more and their rivalry friendship is so nice.

  • @gamechanger8908
    @gamechanger8908 Před rokem +158

    Nobunaga was a very eccentric but a very open minded leader who was brilliant enough to employ early musket tactics, which was the beginning of early modern warfare in Japan. And by eccentric he had a fond taste for western art and culture(pretty much like Hideo Kojima before Hideo Kojima). And he freed an african slave to serve under as one of his right hand man.

    • @matheusexpedito4577
      @matheusexpedito4577 Před 6 měsíci

      Yamamoto if i am not mistaken

    • @xmanme9841
      @xmanme9841 Před 4 měsíci +11

      Yasuke

    • @BlazefireSaber
      @BlazefireSaber Před 3 měsíci +1

      not sure about the last one, he was nothing more than a court "jester" of sorts, and was immediately removed from the court once Oda died

    • @Isu908
      @Isu908 Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​@@BlazefireSaberJester is a stretch. He had a role in fighting for oda and even owned his own castle. While yes he was primarily around for display, he was a trained warrior and well respected by oda. Some accounts believe after his death he served Toyotomi Hideyoshi but its not confirmed

    • @roulo5516
      @roulo5516 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@BlazefireSaber Initially yes, he bought Yasuke for the sole purpose of being just a piece of display. Until eventually he recognized Yasuke's strength and potential. It was said that Yasuke fought in the Honnoji Incident, and was captured and sent back to the Italians.

  • @AManNamedHawk
    @AManNamedHawk Před rokem +40

    I absolutely love the soundtrack. So unsettling. So foreboding. It truly echoes Ennio Morricone’s work in the westerns.

  • @prs_81
    @prs_81 Před 3 lety +2425

    Not a single phone in sight, just people living the moment!

  • @EatitHarvey
    @EatitHarvey Před 2 lety +509

    Imagine the 12 year olds practicing their drumming and chanting for weeks just to see your side losing in like 5 minutes.

    • @surenotejas3163
      @surenotejas3163 Před 2 lety +61

      Kid drummer: they're dead, oh great leader
      Oh great leader: keep beating that drum!

    • @Ayutla-ui4cf
      @Ayutla-ui4cf Před rokem +50

      Those are actually priestess drummers that the Takeda used in battle.

    • @fenrirrising131
      @fenrirrising131 Před rokem +7

      @@Ayutla-ui4cf some good that did him, should have just used them as cannon fodder

    • @dannylo5875
      @dannylo5875 Před rokem +6

      Did the tweens die?! Specifically by being shot in the head.

    • @neglectfulsausage7689
      @neglectfulsausage7689 Před 8 měsíci +1

      they sound like 12. which isnt necessarily a problem *winky wink*
      @@Ayutla-ui4cf

  • @meteorsr2339
    @meteorsr2339 Před 2 lety +94

    3:53 That nanban dou gusoku is absolutely beautiful, judging from the shape and decoration the cuirass might very vell actually be an import from Europe rather than a domestic reproduction. Kinda wish western historical movies nowadays had such stunning and historically accurate armor.

    • @broadcastmyballs
      @broadcastmyballs Před 2 lety +13

      You have good taste! While as far as I know it is not identical to any known armor of Nobunaga's, it still absolutely fits him in style and very much is an armor he *could* have had. The arms and armor in this series and especially this Nagashino scene are all great.

    • @zerozertr555
      @zerozertr555 Před rokem +12

      Nobunaga really loved western stuff so it's probably not a surprise he had lots of stuff from merchants

    • @zarakdurrani7584
      @zarakdurrani7584 Před rokem +8

      Looks like the Holy Roman Empires coat of arms on the breastplate. The Imperial Eagle

  • @MadMamluk88
    @MadMamluk88 Před rokem +25

    5:44 is what makes this scene for me: you hear the odd arquebus fire and the crackling/popping of more guns from further down the line.

  • @TheSeanoops
    @TheSeanoops Před 3 lety +2440

    The Takeda clan lost 12,000 of their 15,000 men that day. That wasn’t a battle, that was slaughter.

    • @johnnymoreno5065
      @johnnymoreno5065 Před 3 lety +352

      And the great Takeda clan never recovered from this ever again

    • @junandeo12345
      @junandeo12345 Před 3 lety +177

      @@johnnymoreno5065 after that, katsuyori takeda and his retainers commit sepuko.

    • @EukalyptusBonBon
      @EukalyptusBonBon Před 3 lety +198

      @@johnnymoreno5065 this battle basicly the end of Takeda's role in Sengoku Jidai

    • @slowhand761
      @slowhand761 Před 3 lety +87

      If your enemy is stronger than you, retrate and aggravate him.
      If evenly matched fight but only on your terms.

    • @treybryant7863
      @treybryant7863 Před 3 lety +93

      Yes, it was a slaughter. The Takeda cavalry never broke through. And by now, they’re obsolete because of these new weapons on the battlefield. The arquebusiers totally dominated the battlefield that day.

  • @melmeki4422
    @melmeki4422 Před 2 lety +1001

    I live in Aichi Prefecture, where Nagashino is located.
    These fences have been recreated and still stands today.
    Two small museums near the battlefield collections of flintlock guns, armors, swords, and excavated bullets.
    Further the ruins of a castle a nearby hill, you can walk around Japanese style catle layout "Kuruwa".
    Unfotunately no buildings remain, but it's enough to give you a sense of the strength of the fortress on the high ground.
    Nagashino is still a great place for history fans.

    • @ammoniumphosphate
      @ammoniumphosphate Před 2 lety +36

      I’d love to visit those museums one day. They sound interesting!

    • @Eldritchinator
      @Eldritchinator Před rokem +8

      There's some pretty tremendous sense of gravity and history living by places like this. Those wooden palisades tell a story.

    • @markinglese3874
      @markinglese3874 Před rokem +12

      That's now on my bucket list off places to visit.

    • @EJAXK13
      @EJAXK13 Před rokem +16

      Flintlocks? I’m pretty sure they’re matchlocks.

    • @allopez8563
      @allopez8563 Před rokem +3

      Hi. Do you know why were the fences assaulted directly instead of being circumvented with the enemy's cavalry?

  • @tropicalslav931
    @tropicalslav931 Před 2 lety +19

    2:13 imagine just waiting for the hordes to charge looking at a blank fog for hours and jus thearing those distant chants of war, sends chills down my spine and made me honsety scared

  • @unsubme2157
    @unsubme2157 Před rokem +4

    I immediately recognized the nobunaga clan symbol and that felt good. Thanks nioh.

  • @itsunclemonty5206
    @itsunclemonty5206 Před 2 lety +1840

    So much is spoken about the battle but not the real hero: the cameraman. His dedication to filming throughout history, having studied advanced physics, going on to eventually invent the time-machine, for this task alone, is probably the greatest single human achievement, ever.
    Thank you, cameraman.

  • @FelipeJaquez
    @FelipeJaquez Před 3 lety +2284

    Samurai: "YOU CAN'T JUST KILL A WARRIOR WHO TRAINED HIS ENTIRE LIFE TO BE ONE WITH HIS SWORD!"
    Farmer: "haha blackpowder go boom"

    • @euminkong
      @euminkong Před 3 lety +127

      Your comment is very important. Guns upset the power balance.

    • @rnthro2k825
      @rnthro2k825 Před 3 lety +5

      @@euminkong ofc

    • @alexanderfilip113
      @alexanderfilip113 Před 3 lety +102

      Gunpowder firearms were taken in by the Japanese for the same reason they were by Europeans. It was easy to assemble a large group of people and train them in a relatively short amount of time (less than a month) to use the firearms. Sure they were prone to not work due to dampness and rain, but again you could easily have a large levy and unlike the melee or bow weapons that took much longer to gain proficiency this one was easy.

    • @JM-dy4ty
      @JM-dy4ty Před 3 lety +66

      Firearms kill dishonorably but victory, removes the shame of dishonor!

    • @thegoodwin
      @thegoodwin Před 3 lety +2

      "Doom Eternal"

  • @user-lp9ed3nr7o
    @user-lp9ed3nr7o Před rokem +5

    戦国期最強の武田騎馬軍を相手する側の緊張と恐怖の心理を間を使うことによって見事に演出。これは見応えありですね

  • @overtimeday5301
    @overtimeday5301 Před rokem +21

    海外で有名になってるのすげぇ

    • @atsukorichards1675
      @atsukorichards1675 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ゲームやアニメの影響も大きいでしょうね。

  • @AlexanderTheBloodraven
    @AlexanderTheBloodraven Před 3 lety +883

    The invention of the Three Line Formation. Nobunaga was a great strategist.

    • @sp10sn
      @sp10sn Před 3 lety +16

      gonna call that one a tactic

    • @AlexanderTheBloodraven
      @AlexanderTheBloodraven Před 3 lety +3

      What’s the difference?

    • @sp10sn
      @sp10sn Před 3 lety +98

      @@AlexanderTheBloodraven hmmm... in a nutshell, tactics is how to fight while strategy is choosing which fight

    • @spacemanapeinc7202
      @spacemanapeinc7202 Před 3 lety +22

      Nobunaga didn’t invent that tactic, it is was an invention by the Early Ming Dynasty.

    • @AlexanderTheBloodraven
      @AlexanderTheBloodraven Před 3 lety +4

      @sp10sn; Oh ok

  • @astridvallati4762
    @astridvallati4762 Před 2 lety +699

    The Portuguese introduced Matchlocks to Japan, and also the basic tactics in using them.
    Oda Nobunaga then had his own Blacksmiths forge Barrels, and made his own Powder ( all the ingredients were available) and had the Portuguese train his men in Musketry. The Musketeers were simple Bushi ( soldiers) drawn from the Peasantry, with Samurai commanding them.
    And it was a "whites of their eyes" battle
    ( 30 to 50 paces, ideal for volley fire with smoothbore guns.)
    And the Wooden palisades prevented mounted troops from overrunning the
    Musketeers ( another Iberian tactic developed in the 1500s in the various wars the Spaniards were involved in...a shallow ditch or trench, a low palisade or Stone Wall.
    Doc AV

    • @tiffles3890
      @tiffles3890 Před rokem +21

      It's not really an "Iberian tactic". It was Hussites who pioneered this way of fighting when they started using wagon forts to station firearms infantry and smaller artillery pieces on the battlefield, to keep them being overrun by charges from cavalry.
      Others adopted the basic idea from them and modified it.

    • @temasek65
      @temasek65 Před rokem +17

      And the Portuguese had overran Malacca earlier on.

    • @average_janitor367
      @average_janitor367 Před rokem +7

      SIUUUUUUU

    • @protocetus499
      @protocetus499 Před rokem +6

      @@temasek65 Malacca fall because of treachery, had those Javanese mercenary doesnt open the main gate its possible that Albuquerque wont succeed.

    • @Ihavpickle
      @Ihavpickle Před rokem +1

      Woah really

  • @BarnicleBillable
    @BarnicleBillable Před rokem +15

    I loved this movie before I knew it was actually a true game changer.

  • @kummer45
    @kummer45 Před rokem +13

    The quality of this battle and the logistics rivals any modern movie today. More over, this scene alone puts to shame complete industries of film makers and even James Cameron.
    This is a scene done by the book with accuracy. Rotating riflemen, riflemen with accuracy, protected riflemen with bunkers. Yes, Nobunaga troops redefined the current type of battlefield in simple terms.

  • @jemuelmongado5030
    @jemuelmongado5030 Před 4 lety +2566

    It didn't cross my mind that the traditional samurai-esque body armor and matchlock rifles existed in the same time period. Apparently samurai look a lot cooler with guns.

    • @america360able
      @america360able Před 4 lety +96

      Facts

    • @pcmld2267
      @pcmld2267 Před 4 lety +384

      @Jemuel Mongado
      Japan was the leading producer of firearms in the world in this era for many, *many* years.

    • @jemuelmongado5030
      @jemuelmongado5030 Před 4 lety +156

      @@pcmld2267 That's a really cool fact, contrasting Japan's laws and views on guns nowadays.

    • @RandomUser_online
      @RandomUser_online Před 4 lety +24

      @@pcmld2267 lol wheres your proof? I only know they produce good quality airsoft guns

    • @cebonvieuxjack
      @cebonvieuxjack Před 4 lety +95

      @@pcmld2267 I seriously doubt that given the number of armed conflicts that took place in Europe in the XVIth century. Where the powers where much more rich and had much more manpower than in Japan. And were also more developped in the pre-industrial sector.. What are your sources ?

  • @studentofthegr8art
    @studentofthegr8art Před 4 lety +1593

    Everybody gangsta till the trees start shooting.

    • @AlxzAlec
      @AlxzAlec Před 4 lety +1

      Sreesanth Unnithan no u

    • @kritische3959
      @kritische3959 Před 4 lety +11

      Sreesanth Unnithan
      The fences

    • @yanivgalmor1747
      @yanivgalmor1747 Před 4 lety +18

      An American at some point

    • @huuduyvu9714
      @huuduyvu9714 Před 4 lety +23

      Fact that Imperial Japanese in WW2 and Vietnamese People's Army during Vietnam War used basically the same tactics of camouflaging and ambushing, the Vietnamese took it to a whole new level by only engaging when there is confirmed that enemy fire supports don't reach fast enough, and usually retreat when American artilleries or bombers started firing; not "surrender in shame or die charging" like Japaneses.

    • @m.steward9146
      @m.steward9146 Před 4 lety +5

      Huu Duy Vu: Who do you think taught the Vietnamese how to use jungle guerrilla tactics?

  • @Texan8005
    @Texan8005 Před rokem +26

    If you go to the Alamo you can find a large granite stone that a Japanese man etched in Classical Chinese, it talks about how the battle of Nagashino Castle had similar events to the Alamo. Look it up

    • @blacklegion2531
      @blacklegion2531 Před 6 měsíci +1

      What does it have to do with it?
      Chinese

    • @blacklegion2531
      @blacklegion2531 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Chinese?

    • @shadowshots9393
      @shadowshots9393 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@blacklegion2531i think he meant "kanji" Which is basicaly chinese characters that was used in japan. Or that japanese guy wrote the thing so that other Immigrants from china could understand

  • @danielmcfadden521
    @danielmcfadden521 Před 2 lety +3

    Love this keep up the good work bro dayum this be god $%!t

  • @alonsocushing2398
    @alonsocushing2398 Před 4 lety +3084

    Whose brilliant idea was it to send cavalry against a fortified position.

    • @Adge1738
      @Adge1738 Před 4 lety +521

      Alonso Cushing it was the Takeda clan. Takeda Shingen, the old daimyo of the clan, created the first Calvary maneuvers of Japan, so of course the Takeda relied on Calvary

    • @alonsocushing2398
      @alonsocushing2398 Před 4 lety +327

      @@Adge1738 Didn't work out very well did it?

    • @Adge1738
      @Adge1738 Před 4 lety +258

      Alonso Cushing no sir it did not

    • @lild3838
      @lild3838 Před 4 lety +330

      Well at this battle shingen already dead and his not so brilliant son took his place... the oda use this, luck and fog element to destroy takeda once and for all

    • @ZyoAISim
      @ZyoAISim Před 4 lety +195

      The base had only one poor fence. Therefore, Takeda's army thought that it was possible to break through easily based on past experience. Takeda's army is very confident and, in fact, Japan's strongest so far.

  • @mitsuk6618
    @mitsuk6618 Před 2 lety +500

    This battle led to the destruction of the prestigious Takeda clan, who lasted about 500 years. If Katsuyori's father Shingen had lived a little longer, Nobunaga might have lost.

    • @johnbean4615
      @johnbean4615 Před rokem +12

      Isn’t the Takeda clan still about, I think they run or used to run a pharmaceutical company

    • @protocetus499
      @protocetus499 Před rokem +30

      @@johnbean4615 nah its their Vassal like Sanada clan i think. Takeda is common name.

    • @dannylo5875
      @dannylo5875 Před rokem

      Tires probably

    • @sebastian-FX357Z1
      @sebastian-FX357Z1 Před rokem +14

      Takeda destruction would not have happened had Katsuyori listened to his top commander, many of the top commander like Baba Nobuhara, Yamagata Masakage, Naito Masatoya & more felt like attacking Ieyasu & Nobunaga full forces is more like suicide attack.

    • @dustf1nger118
      @dustf1nger118 Před rokem +10

      @@protocetus499 The Takeda clan's main line is still in tact. It's the clan's power that waned which doesn't mean they were wiped.

  • @VearonTheOwl
    @VearonTheOwl Před 2 lety +5

    That music they were playing was great for the suspense hearing it get closer and closer.

  • @ghostdance92056
    @ghostdance92056 Před rokem +8

    "Even though we had a triple stockade, he must needs come charging upon us. It's a pity that he was a fool..."- Tokugawa Ieyasu on Shingen.

  • @Give_me_BIG1st_prize_right_now

    諏訪太鼓が緊張感を高めてるのよね。
    織田方にも、視聴者にも。

  • @AcceptYourDeath
    @AcceptYourDeath Před 3 lety +613

    Every sane person: "They have guns and are fortified, we shouldn`t simply launch a frontal attack
    Stubborn traditionalist: "We gonna ride to glooooo....... *HEADSHOT* ! "

    • @apalahartisebuahnama7684
      @apalahartisebuahnama7684 Před 3 lety +51

      Before this Takeda clan reign supreme against enemies even with guns until they fought this dude called Oda Nobunaga that simply put 3-5 row of men at formation.

    • @kazu9214
      @kazu9214 Před 3 lety +19

      guns to japan 1543. and then make japan' s origimal model next year.
      ten years later, samurai use 300,000 guns first in the world.

    • @justinwillingale2086
      @justinwillingale2086 Před 2 lety +7

      @@apalahartisebuahnama7684 also to the reason the takeda lost in the first place was because of the former leader passing away and leaving his incompetent son in charge of the battle strategy.

    • @aaroncutler6383
      @aaroncutler6383 Před 2 lety +1

      Lord shimura in a nutshell

    • @julian-p
      @julian-p Před 2 lety +2

      the guns are usual at that time. its known that its slow on reloading...nobunaga introduce the volley fire, and its change everything. its the same in imjin war, the korean underestimated the guns, and they are fucked

  • @user-hm5tt9oq1l
    @user-hm5tt9oq1l Před rokem +18

    1854年のバラクラヴァの戦いより300年前に信長が鉄砲の集中運用に成功させてるのが凄いわ

    • @6387presario
      @6387presario Před rokem

      これは、何の作品でしょうか?
      解りますか?

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Před rokem +1

      Pizza 🍕🧀🧀🧀🧀🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕🍕

  • @Way2Randomofficial
    @Way2Randomofficial Před rokem

    Wow great quality video for 1575!

  • @danielmclaughlin5546
    @danielmclaughlin5546 Před 3 lety +143

    This battle scene is realistic because it shows lots of horses being shot and killed. It is an old Hollywood trope that only the rider got hit in battle and not the thing he is riding on which is 4 times bigger. In fact, Infantrymen were trained to aim for the horse and not the rider because it is far easier to hit and knocking a rider off his horse during his charge either physically incapacitates him or renders him useless on the field. As for the Commander of the attacking army in the Battle of Nagashino, the movie omits the fact it was raining heavily and that is what led to his decision to charge. He thought the rain would render the muskets useless, which was not an irrational assumption to make in 1575 when firearms were rudimentary and required gun powder to be placed in a flintlock firing pan which was exposed to the elements.

    • @cetus4449
      @cetus4449 Před 3 lety +10

      It may surprise you, but this cinematic performance was not as realistic as you think.
      The reality is that the horse is a large, tough animal that could only be stopped at a gallop by a bullet that struck the heart or the brain. Otherwise, a horse will continue to run a further, on some distance. There are reports that even a horse with one leg broken by a cannonball continued to run forward.
      In that era (XVI-XVIIc), shooters were not trained to aiming. Only custom-made or hunting weapons had enough quality to use them precisely. Arquebusiers or musketeers simply sent a cloud of lead at the enemy, hoping the missile would hit somebody.

    • @cetus4449
      @cetus4449 Před 3 lety +4

      @Alvi Syahri That's what training is for. In Poland of XVI-XVIIc, horses intended for military service were tamed with the roar of firearms and with gunpowder smoke in everyday activities. In the battle were almost insensitive to firearms effect.
      On the other hand, Poles took advantage of the fact that the nomadic Tartar horses were not familiar with the effect of firearms and therefore used pistols intensively during battles with Tatars.

    • @normanacree1635
      @normanacree1635 Před rokem +6

      @@cetus4449 What you said about the 'cloud of lead' held true even into the 1800s. Rifling helped with accuracy making the 'cloud' unnecessary but the tactic still held on in European wars.

    • @maizen1403
      @maizen1403 Před rokem

      I think it's only early day Hollywood that has only the rider got hit and not their horse. Either they don't want to hurt the horses, haven't yet making the technique to overcoming that issue

    • @justinthebeau2590
      @justinthebeau2590 Před 11 měsíci +2

      You are correct about it raining at the battle there are 3 things I do want to point out alot don't know. 1) These are Japanese Arquebus not Flintlocks the flintlock didn't exist for another 30 years These were matchlock guns.
      2) Nobunaga knew the guns wouldn't work in the rain so his Arquebusiers constructed Lacquer over the actual Matchlock mechanism itself to weatherproof the system so to speak and notice how they reloaded their Arquebus from an angle instead of putting the gun on its buttstock and reloading it the traditional way.
      3) Nobunaga knew the terrain favored him and he knew Takedas cavalry would have to slow down their charge to go up a hill towards the camp so he funneled the cavalry into a kill zone where the Arquebus could rain hell on them and he had multiple volleys ay once so after the 3rd bolley fired the 1st Rank was ready to fire again.
      This battle cost Takeda 8/24 of his best and most experienced generals and 12,000 out of 15,000 men he ended up committing seppuku(ritual suicide) shortly afterwards

  • @leonapoleon3673
    @leonapoleon3673 Před 4 lety +649

    i like how each samurai commander has a different and unique helmet, each with their own cool emblem being displayed on the forehead

    • @sailorkek8672
      @sailorkek8672 Před 4 lety +24

      And yet I still couldn't tell them apart...

    • @michaelbandada9887
      @michaelbandada9887 Před 4 lety +83

      Honda Tadakatsu has antlers on his helmet while Date Masamune has a crescent moon on his helmet (the one which would be an inspiration for the helmet of Darth Vader). Takeda Shingen has a mane of hair and Kagetora (Uesugi Kesnhin) has a veil or cowl

    • @hollow7522
      @hollow7522 Před 4 lety +27

      @@sailorkek8672 u need a doctor then lmao

    • @oldman2477
      @oldman2477 Před 4 lety +8

      I just look at their mustaches most of the time

    • @MikeTheMGTOWMonk
      @MikeTheMGTOWMonk Před 4 lety +4

      @@sailorkek8672
      It's the eyes, don't feel bad bro

  • @jiaweichew3370
    @jiaweichew3370 Před rokem +41

    What I liked about this is that Oda Nobunaga basically eliminated the main weakness of the early muskets by having his men form 3 lines with a defensive barrier that made stabbing slightly harder (1 firing line, 1 standby line which can be used in an emergency and 1 reload line). Although the entire rank would fire less than if everyone were firing per volley but by doing this they could fire 3 times the speed with more reliance on accuracy over the amount of rounds shot to inflict more damage.

  • @hoangkimviet8545
    @hoangkimviet8545 Před 3 lety +498

    Yeah, Oda Nobunaga's army is actually the shoGUNS.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 Před 2 lety +27

      Did they use pump SHOGUNS or double-barrelled SHOGUNS??

    • @YouknowSay-gt6dx
      @YouknowSay-gt6dx Před 2 lety +19

      In the period when guns were transmitted from Europe, the guns did not spread in Japan because of the time when the reload took time and it was not possible to use it on the rainy day. But Oda Nobunaga
      the reload problem in ways of changing people every time he shot a gun.

    • @flyingsquirrel1135
      @flyingsquirrel1135 Před 2 lety +2

      @@chicoragub5031 r/wooosh also they are arquebuses not muskets

    • @chicoragub5031
      @chicoragub5031 Před 2 lety +2

      I think I have seen to much Age of Samurai Battle for Japan

    • @tshimura6478
      @tshimura6478 Před 2 lety +2

      笑える

  • @commanderdon4300
    @commanderdon4300 Před 5 lety +1240

    When someone researches gunpowder before you...

    • @markazain8996
      @markazain8996 Před 5 lety +34

      Gunpowder was introduced by Europeans

    • @rahadrahman2288
      @rahadrahman2288 Před 5 lety +177

      Gunpowder invented by Chinese btw

    • @makky6239
      @makky6239 Před 5 lety +41

      @@rahadrahman2288 and not used as well

    • @pitmezzari2873
      @pitmezzari2873 Před 5 lety +61

      @@rahadrahman2288 but the Chinese didn't invent guns.

    • @E-N-sy1mi
      @E-N-sy1mi Před 5 lety +3

      Since when the Chinese are Europan?

  • @harukaze4545
    @harukaze4545 Před rokem +5

    ラストサムライやスターウォーズEP1にも登場した霧から出てくる騎兵のモデルはこれ

  • @kevinfidler6287
    @kevinfidler6287 Před rokem +5

    Impressive use of smokeless powder in this era. All kidding aside, definitely an example of technology outpacing tactics. The attackers stood no chance.

  • @alexanderren1097
    @alexanderren1097 Před 2 lety +228

    Portuguese merchants: "Greetings Lord Nobunaga. We've received your inquiry about marchlock guns. How many would you like to purchase?"
    Oda Nobunaga: "All of them"

    • @jamesgoldring1052
      @jamesgoldring1052 Před 2 lety +17

      Portugese: s t o n k s

    • @EukalyptusBonBon
      @EukalyptusBonBon Před 2 lety +5

      I read from a book that Oda actually produce most of their own matchlocks after buying some example from the portuguese

    • @alexanderren1097
      @alexanderren1097 Před 2 lety

      @@EukalyptusBonBon Yes, in this period guns become extremely popular in Japan and they did begin manufacturing their own variations after they'd bought enough European made guns and reverse engineered how they were designed and worked

    • @butningstonemomin9708
      @butningstonemomin9708 Před 2 lety

      Even the ottomans used guns during 15th century can be seen in Magnificent century

  • @fpatrickmcallister9388
    @fpatrickmcallister9388 Před 4 lety +598

    Moral: Don’t take a knife to a gun fight!

  • @abrung73
    @abrung73 Před 2 lety +3

    Props to the camera man for going back in time and filming this

  • @user-tt2xk4fm6e
    @user-tt2xk4fm6e Před rokem +5

    Очень интересно. Многое знаю о Японии, но не достаточно. Об этой битве не знал. Всегда поражало самопожертвование и идти до конца, даже тогда, когда видно, что битва проиграна. Кодекс чести бусидо....

    • @user-kt8ro7ks8w
      @user-kt8ro7ks8w Před rokem

      хуйня всё это .. тупо рваться,в атаку где нет шансов даже на 10% для победы..

  • @crusaderofthelowlands3750
    @crusaderofthelowlands3750 Před 4 lety +540

    To be fair, the beginning was nerve wrecking as hell.
    Imagine waiting there, in the mist, and those hell-spawn children start screeching: "yaaaaaaaaaaaah!"
    And then out of nowhere, a massive cavalry charge comes storming right at you.

    • @Kunnaki
      @Kunnaki Před 4 lety +49

      I know, right? It was like 'the calm before the storm'. My own heart was beating, and I don't know if it was because of anticipation or not.

    • @STScott-qo4pw
      @STScott-qo4pw Před 4 lety +35

      i think the creepy af boy band was to taunt the defenders...

    • @Bruh-hq1hx
      @Bruh-hq1hx Před 4 lety +9

      Apperantly those ate female priests

    • @fishingthelist4017
      @fishingthelist4017 Před 3 lety +43

      Psychological warfare at its finest. Before this battle, most Japanese warriors already knew that when they heard those witches, death was about to ride down on them. It would be hard to stand your ground under those circumstances. If there are reinactors of this cavalry today, I wouldn't want to be standing across a fog shrouded field without a weapon knowing what was coming, even if they weren't trying to kill anyone.

    • @Bruh-hq1hx
      @Bruh-hq1hx Před 3 lety +7

      @@fishingthelist4017 except the cavalry got massacred

  • @harrygateaux
    @harrygateaux Před 4 lety +676

    Takeshi's castle has gotten a little extreme.

    • @michaelbandada9887
      @michaelbandada9887 Před 4 lety +13

      Kurogane -sensei that would inspire Takeshi Kitano to make the Russian Roulette scene in Sonatine...hehe

    • @xuagiang1313
      @xuagiang1313 Před 3 lety +2

      Sex umum webcam

    • @MFAWTKFDNS
      @MFAWTKFDNS Před 3 lety +11

      @@xuagiang1313 Yo. *WTF*

    • @amkn7939
      @amkn7939 Před 3 lety +1

      @@xuagiang1313 indon

    • @cr0sad3r70
      @cr0sad3r70 Před 3 lety +6

      This is the first time I found a person who watches Takeshi Castle

  • @GeraltofRivia22
    @GeraltofRivia22 Před rokem +2

    Man, old movies just look so much more real than modern ones.

  • @nax7716
    @nax7716 Před 2 lety +4

    Respect for the cameraman who went through time to record this

  • @YS-co6pz
    @YS-co6pz Před 2 lety +767

    Japan had a half of the guns owned by all the European countries in this century. One reason it became so popular, we had technology to make steals for Katana(sword). Nobunaga used 3,000 guns into 3 lines(1000 each), and lines changes after shots. He also set the wooden wall in the narrow path, and Takeda cavalry was trapped. Takedo which is the known as the strongest clan lost too many front line commanders. Nobunaga also the first human being who separated politics from religion before Europeans.

    • @mcj2219
      @mcj2219 Před 2 lety +45

      The only real influence Japan had from Europe was the Netherlands. Which does not surprise

    • @Aly_._
      @Aly_._ Před 2 lety +4

      @@mcj2219 what do you mean? Didn’t Germany influence them too?

    • @globial5329
      @globial5329 Před 2 lety +50

      @@Aly_._ not until later when Japan modernized its government under the Meiji restoration (they took inspiration from Germany whilst doing so)

    • @nilihcrevo9820
      @nilihcrevo9820 Před 2 lety +1

      Wym bro? There's a lot of people from different religion served under different allegiance, just look at the ottomans

    • @AA-jj1bc
      @AA-jj1bc Před 2 lety +27

      根拠の無いデタラメの説。更に銃そのものを作る技術は言うほど高度でもなかった。当時銃を自国生産していた国を知れば恥ずかしくて寝込むんちゃう?

  • @sexgravy9058
    @sexgravy9058 Před 3 lety +80

    Am i the only one who finds the drummers and the drumming bone chilling because of the fact that they're surrounded by the mist?

    • @user-ex5jr5to6q
      @user-ex5jr5to6q Před 2 lety +7

      It's comforting, relaxing and sets the mood for death. The women with their added screams or chanting just adds more to moment.

  • @ilikethiskindatube
    @ilikethiskindatube Před rokem +5

    From inside fortifications, the gun has no equal among weapons. It is the supreme weapon on the field before the ranks clash, but once swords are crossed the gun becomes useless

  • @zacharykoplin6543
    @zacharykoplin6543 Před rokem +1

    It gives a strange power armour vibe seeing samurai-like armour on people using guns. I like it

  • @didsmith3073
    @didsmith3073 Před 2 lety +125

    for foreigners
    In Japanese “UCHIJINI” means “Died in action”
    However, modern Japanese does not use this word, they use “SENSHI” in stead.
    From Japan ;)

    • @o0oABEL
      @o0oABEL Před 2 lety +5

      Officer down

    • @daifukusangokun
      @daifukusangokun Před 2 lety +3

      @@creist Japanese people use not only pure Japanese but also "kanji" of Chinese origin.
      The words "fighter" and "death in battle" are pronounced the same, "senshi," but have completely different meanings because of the different kanji applied to each.

  • @enlightenerofcryptozoology8761

    The key element of this battle is illustrated in this scene: the revolving volley of muskets. Which where a line of infantry with muskets in front fire when given the command to fire in volley when in range. Immediately then, another line of infantry with muskets moves in position to take the place of the previous line, with their muskets ready to fire. Meanwhile that first line takes the second line’s back position to reload. And this process repeats. This tactic allows for a continuous volley of fire to a mass offensive attack to cut down the force to devastating effect. Marking it as an important battle in history and in the use of early firearms.

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Před 4 lety +15

      Did the Chinese/Japanese use this tactic way before the Europeans?? It seems like you don't see Britain and France do that until 100 years later.

    • @joshuakusuma5953
      @joshuakusuma5953 Před 4 lety +34

      @@geordiejones5618 The Chinese did since the Han dynasty but not with muskets. They used crossbows instead. The Han dynasty used it extensively during their campaigns under Emperor Wu so much so that the crossbow became standard issue weaponry. Other dynasties after that, not so much.

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Před 4 lety

      @@joshuakusuma5953 thats awesome.

    • @ShanghaiRooster
      @ShanghaiRooster Před 4 lety +10

      @@geordiejones5618 It would have been a fairly standard tactic with relatively slow loading weapons such as crossbows and muskets (of whatever type). The Han Dynasty in China predates all of those others, so I'll agree with joshua kusuma that they were likely the first. There are easy to find European drill manuals from the 16th and 17th centuries describing the use of rotating ranks of musketeers. Greek and Roman warfare placed much more emphasis on close quarters fighting, and they tended to use quick moving light infantry skirmishers with javelins, slings etc rather than blocks of troops armed with bows.
      Placing missile troops behind a barrier likewise. During the Third Crusade in 1191, Richard the Lionheart arrayed his infantry (mixed spearmen and crossbowmen) behind a barrier to fend off Saladin's cavalry. His own mounted forces were placed behind and charged out at the climax to drive the saracens from the field. Fighting from behind portable barriers was a standard tactic of many Italian crossbowmen. Some of these were at Crécy, but due to the impatience of the French nobles they weren't allowed to retrieve and use them when ordered forward against the English line, so were routed by the faster firing longbows. The English themselves used to carry pointed stakes which they would set in front of their position to defend against cavalry.

    • @philipsmarbun890
      @philipsmarbun890 Před 4 lety +1

      The cavalry should had some waves of troops to use the delay time between two lines of msukets.. with that they can reach to the bars and stab them

  • @lecnac855
    @lecnac855 Před rokem

    Best spaghetti western i have seen in years.

  • @user-rr7yg9mu4y
    @user-rr7yg9mu4y Před rokem

    Πολύ καλή δουλειά!!

  • @silkkpilloww
    @silkkpilloww Před 2 lety +47

    Thank you for preserving the footage after all these years

  • @TheCheesiestNacho
    @TheCheesiestNacho Před 2 lety +704

    The face of the general at the end is the epitome of the expression "What have I done?"
    It's like he can't get to fully believe his eyes: an entire army massacred and they didn't even have to grab their swords.
    He got to experience first-hand a power far, FAR beyond what they could have ever imagined.
    He's terrified, not of the power these "Guns" have... But of what it'll mean to the future of the entire humanity.

    • @EchoLeague2
      @EchoLeague2 Před 2 lety +25

      They had them big sticks

    • @jont2576
      @jont2576 Před 2 lety +30

      then world war 1 happened.....

    • @TheCheesiestNacho
      @TheCheesiestNacho Před 2 lety +7

      @@jont2576 *O O F*

    • @angieroxy7550
      @angieroxy7550 Před 2 lety +15

      @@jont2576 Then ww2...

    • @donarthiazi2443
      @donarthiazi2443 Před rokem +23

      If he is a superbly trained warrior and has battlefield experience then he knows that future generals will adapt and fight accordingly. There will be those that do not of course... but the battlefield is where leaders are brutally separated by victory and defeat.
      It may be too late for him, but if he leads another army he'll be FAR more prepared. Too often though their civilian masters would punish/execute them for failure rather than glean the hard lessons they experienced and apply them.
      Hopefully he wouldn't forced with seppeku and his master will still use him.

  • @ellisnass6087
    @ellisnass6087 Před rokem +4

    Shoutout to the cameraman for going back 500 years in time and getting this footage❤❤❤

  • @hugonongbri8100
    @hugonongbri8100 Před rokem +3

    I must say, this is AMAZING video quality for 1575. Better than the two WWs

    • @EternalShadow1667
      @EternalShadow1667 Před rokem

      Yeah camera quality really started to dip by the mid 1800s. They tried to reinvent the wheel, the basic camera, known to humanity for thousands of years. Only recently have we rediscovered this technology used in 1575.

    • @fenrir4211
      @fenrir4211 Před rokem +1

      @@EternalShadow1667 -w h a t-

    • @d4rkpr1nc39
      @d4rkpr1nc39 Před rokem

      @@fenrir4211 y e s

  • @jsdf7200
    @jsdf7200 Před 4 lety +217

    こういう戦国時代の戦いを外国の人が見てくれるのは嬉しい

    • @9700k12
      @9700k12 Před 3 lety +22

      再生回数と英語のコメントが、スゴいですよね。ちょっとびっくり

    • @eightdragonkings
      @eightdragonkings Před 3 lety +25

      若い頃 私は“天と地”という映画を見た。上杉と武田の戦いは本当に面白いいと思いました。 あの映画のせいで日本の興味が始まった。日本人も結婚しましたし。。。

    • @jsdf7200
      @jsdf7200 Před 3 lety +4

      @@eightdragonkings 1970年代の大河ドラマですね!映画から興味がわき始めるというのはよくありますね!

    • @user-ff8jb9dt5y
      @user-ff8jb9dt5y Před 3 lety +1

      同じ日本人として嬉しく思う。

    • @user-eo4rp9ts4k
      @user-eo4rp9ts4k Před 2 lety +1

      @@eightdragonkings 私も見ました。今は亡き津川正彦さんが武田信玄役で、竹田城跡で春日山城のロケが敢行されたそうですね。

  • @thiagomenezes6850
    @thiagomenezes6850 Před 5 lety +773

    Most people dont understand guns were new at those times, and the Takeda was a proud mountain clan living behind the times... Cavalry was their ultimate weapon :P
    They knew guns were slow to reload so they bet on meat shields. The first row would sacrifice themselves and give a window for the guys behind, it wasnt just horses... Nobunaga arranged a huge number of muskets in 3 groups that would deny any sort of interval or window... So death shield fell after death shield.

    • @lordofthebeltsthereturnoft1127
      @lordofthebeltsthereturnoft1127 Před 5 lety +121

      Finally someone with some education, yes guns had been in Japan since the year 1270 from the Chinese who invented them. But these newer matchlock guns were only in Japan for 3 decades prior to this battle. The Japanese bought 2 off a Chinese Junk Ship off Portuguese traders, they took them apart and then started making new gun designs with the use of the matchlock mechanism. Older Japanese guns became redundant, by this time in Japan in the movies at least 100,000 Tanegashima guns existed. Nobunaga used them and so did a few other Daimyo. Some other Daimyo didn't think they would be that effective as they were used to the older guns not being that effective and used to being able to beat firearm squads with tactics like they used to. But the new matchlock mechanism did make the guns a lot better and shifted the battles even further into the firearm squad's side.

    • @zondor8123
      @zondor8123 Před 5 lety +31

      Singen Takeda could adapt to that situation and retreated if he still alive on that battlefield, poor takeda, your kids strategy and tactics is not as bright as their father.

    • @cambie16
      @cambie16 Před 5 lety +1

      excellent analysis !!

    • @pypy1986820
      @pypy1986820 Před 5 lety +46

      @@zondor8123 Shingen didn't expect himself to die at this point and he was taking his time to train his son. Shingen believes in old fashioned gradual take your time education to produce well rounded leaders and soldiers. He believed that a well rounded commander and a good lord of men needs to be a good soldier and learn the value of loyalty as a follower first so he focused his son to be trained as a front line soldier at this point and it back fired because of his unexpected death. The new leader of Takeda clan has little understanding of political shrewdness or military generalship.
      Long story short. This is what happens if you make front line soldier command an army with some basic officer school training: all of his "tactics" will likely be variants of brute force direct assault and his personal honor will never allow him to give order to retreat until it's too late.

    • @frankmueller2781
      @frankmueller2781 Před 5 lety +25

      Indeed, the Japanese of this era invented firearm tactics that the Western Europeans would take another 70 years to develop.

  • @leonidas231
    @leonidas231 Před 2 dny +1

    thank you camera man for surviving this long to bring us this footage

  • @joaoboiadeiro585
    @joaoboiadeiro585 Před rokem +4

    Esse filme é sensacional 👏👏

  • @r3d_d3d64
    @r3d_d3d64 Před 4 lety +1149

    Great camera quality for 1575

  • @MrEjidorie
    @MrEjidorie Před 3 lety +364

    Muskets were introduced to Japan by two Portuguese merchants who were on Ming`s ship in 1543. A warlord of Tanegashima where two Portuguese merchants arrived purchased two muskets, and ordered local blacksmiths to copy them. Japanese blacksmiths mastered a manufacturing technique quickly, and could produce muskets which were superior to European originals. Within a few decades, huge numbers of muskets which were superior both in quality and quantity were used in battlefields. However, after Japan was unified by Tokugawa Ieyasu, Japanese people had lost their enthusiasm to produce muskets, and its manufacturing technique was extinct.

    • @OfutebolistaOF
      @OfutebolistaOF Před 2 lety +38

      Japan's technology used to be superior
      Even in the ancient times

    • @miles2142
      @miles2142 Před 2 lety +70

      @@OfutebolistaOF literally untrue, the katana is a shit weapon

    • @Picanhadopapaimolusco
      @Picanhadopapaimolusco Před 2 lety

      @@miles2142
      キミの首で刀の試し斬りしてええか?
      そんクソ武器なら大丈夫やろ、死にはしないさ。

    • @sneeki8082
      @sneeki8082 Před 2 lety +30

      @@miles2142 and it was only used when shit hit the fan

    • @Perkeletricksterservantofrher
      @Perkeletricksterservantofrher Před rokem

      @@miles2142 aw sumbody angy they inferior.

  • @Heap_InnovatorsRBLX
    @Heap_InnovatorsRBLX Před rokem +1

    The camera man needs a raise for filming this battle in 1575

  • @aeroschmitt2150
    @aeroschmitt2150 Před rokem +2

    Portugese merchant to Nobunaga: "How many guns do you want?" - "Yes"

  • @Neuwey331
    @Neuwey331 Před 3 lety +406

    Takeda Clan: Our enemy has guns and a fortified position so yeah, let's charge at them with our cavalry.

    • @nicholasgutierrez9940
      @nicholasgutierrez9940 Před 3 lety +71

      Yes it was very dumb. But they had no choice. Katsuyori moved the vast majority of his army to mirror the Oda-Tokugawa army away from Nagashino. At the same time, a combined Oda-Tokugawa flanking force snuck by them and relieved the castle. The Takeda were sandwiched between the now reinforced castle and a huge army.
      The day before, it had rained so Katsuyori thought firearms would be useless. In addition, the majority of the Oda-Tokugawa force were conscripts with low moral and fighting ability. So he took a gamble that his elite cavalry could punch through. He was wrong. F.
      Funny enough, Uesugi Kenshin had a similar situation in the Tedori river in Kaga province. The Oda outnumbered him but only really had conscripts. It too had rained the day before. He tricked the Oda into charging across the river by feigning retreat. Kenshin then ordered the previously dammed river to be flooded, separating the attacking Oda vanguard from the rest. The Uesugi then slaughtered the vanguard in close quarters with elite samurai.

    • @luisgabrielmiranda7444
      @luisgabrielmiranda7444 Před 3 lety +5

      they have no choice to push forward

    • @victoraustria5763
      @victoraustria5763 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nicholasgutierrez9940 thanks for the additional info!

    • @berzec
      @berzec Před 3 lety

      It’s definitely better than training people with bows, that’s too dangerous

    • @Kikai155
      @Kikai155 Před 2 lety +5

      @@nicholasgutierrez9940 The reason wjy they blindly charge in the front is because they think that overwhelming attack can easily defeat the enemy in an instant, but it didn't work as it was plans thanks to nobunaga's tactical superiority in which of using the tanegashima rifles as an alternative counter against a full blown.
      With no information about the weapons that this soldiers used, their soldiers were easily destroyed due to their blind and flawed strategy.

  • @tamlandipper29
    @tamlandipper29 Před 2 lety +120

    Still better use of cavalry than the battle of Winterfell.

  • @maulrat588
    @maulrat588 Před rokem +3

    This is one of the battle film sequences in film that doesn't have a single flaw in it.

  • @Hinata.Sakaguchi
    @Hinata.Sakaguchi Před 2 lety

    The ancestor of invisible cameraman in japan capturing battles and wars.

  • @shuliu4804
    @shuliu4804 Před 4 lety +435

    “AND THE THE WINGED HUSSARS ARRIV-“
    the Oda: *no*
    (Bass maximum)

    • @Marcin1997konrad
      @Marcin1997konrad Před 3 lety +45

      funny thing (or not, depends) is that winged hussars basically died from the same reason

    • @shuliu4804
      @shuliu4804 Před 3 lety +3

      W-waht?

    • @geoplane3799
      @geoplane3799 Před 3 lety +4

      @@shuliu4804 yep😂😂😂

    • @geoplane3799
      @geoplane3799 Před 3 lety +22

      @@shuliu4804 Ottoman Farmers: hahahahahah guns and grenades go *boom*

    • @Kolchak_Enjoyer
      @Kolchak_Enjoyer Před 3 lety

      Okay?

  • @NiCK-ph7cn
    @NiCK-ph7cn Před 3 lety +845

    Props to the cameraman for filming this movie back in time.

    • @rickysanowara8254
      @rickysanowara8254 Před 3 lety +22

      He's a good guy
      Ps I was the camera

    • @canadianbacon2693
      @canadianbacon2693 Před 3 lety +10

      I told myself before I clicked the video that someone would comment this, and I was right.

    • @NiCK-ph7cn
      @NiCK-ph7cn Před 3 lety +9

      @@canadianbacon2693 Bruh XD

    • @rememberthatyoumustdie
      @rememberthatyoumustdie Před 3 lety +10

      I know it’s just a tv show but it feels like I’m watching ancient Japanese people fight to the death on screen.

    • @lawoull.6581
      @lawoull.6581 Před 2 lety +6

      Time machines are better now..than they used to be...

  • @ThinhZeroHP
    @ThinhZeroHP Před rokem +5

    "Matchlock don't kill people, dishonor people kill people."

  • @frenchmaverick3742
    @frenchmaverick3742 Před 3 lety +179

    fun fact : Takeda was one of the first clan to use artillery in japan... but they prefered to send cavalery

    • @bizybliztaverage9414
      @bizybliztaverage9414 Před 3 lety +20

      Those artillery are pretty unreliable and also their commanders incompetent

    • @user-hj2xf2gi5s
      @user-hj2xf2gi5s Před 2 lety +4

      はい

    • @aetius7139
      @aetius7139 Před 2 lety +11

      Historically. Cannons were not popular to use by the japanese. They are expensive. Quite cumbersome to transport. Not at all accurate. They are quite a tricky weaponry to use.

  • @SacredDaturana
    @SacredDaturana Před 2 lety +73

    When I clicked on the video titled "Battle of Nagashino" I sure didn't expect multiple minutes of a bunch of drummers going "nyehhhh" like a toad being squeezed lol

  • @KalebHernandez-ir6go
    @KalebHernandez-ir6go Před 2 měsíci

    The way I see it if u want rainbow and sun shine you gotta put up with the rain.this is a quote of the day.

  • @Dock284
    @Dock284 Před rokem +1

    mad respect for this mad lad

  • @YuuQ1717
    @YuuQ1717 Před 3 lety +73

    装束を身にした童子の声と諏訪太鼓。その背後から騎馬隊の旗影が見えた時、鳥肌の立つような気がした。まるで戦の神々に火縄の銃口を向けているかのような……。歴史ドラマはこの世代に製作されたものの方が演出が効いていて見応えある。

  • @holzmichl9795
    @holzmichl9795 Před 3 lety +255

    Portuges people in 1543 : This is a rifle.
    Japanese people: Nice. It's time to unite my folk.

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 Před 2 lety +8

      I thought dutch gave them this.

    • @lelaniemagto8235
      @lelaniemagto8235 Před 2 lety +2

      Correct me if I am wrong but I think only the Dutch are allowed to trade with them at that time.

    • @SDF-fr6bq
      @SDF-fr6bq Před 2 lety +31

      The first guns were brought to Tanega-Shima(Tanega island,Kyusyu) by Portuguese who boarded Chinese ship.

    • @diamantemine5493
      @diamantemine5493 Před 2 lety +2

      @@lelaniemagto8235 they were, after the Japanese stopped trade with Portugal because of Christian influence

    • @kiloklavdi1185
      @kiloklavdi1185 Před 2 lety +1

      **commits genocide**

  • @JonatasAdoM
    @JonatasAdoM Před 2 lety

    Ah, I love the sight of dead Takeda cavalry in the morning.

  • @admiralkanzakishiawase8448

    Damn, the new total war shogun 3 footage lookin fire 🔥

  • @user-zy2vh9zr1l
    @user-zy2vh9zr1l Před 4 lety +75

    これぞ本物の時代劇
    またこれくらい迫力のある演出が見たいよ…

    • @user-qk4pt4ut7i
      @user-qk4pt4ut7i Před 4 lety +10

      予算()

    • @user-pd4bo8xn3n
      @user-pd4bo8xn3n Před 4 lety +1

      安倍晋三 安倍さん、どうにかしてくれー

    • @SATOMEGULI
      @SATOMEGULI Před 3 lety +1

      @@user-qk4pt4ut7i アベノマスクの予算こっちに回せば良かったのに…

    • @KimJongun000
      @KimJongun000 Před 3 lety

      どこにでも居る人 それな

    • @keishuy2235
      @keishuy2235 Před 3 lety

      @@KimJongun000 お前が言うな

  • @CelestialSwann
    @CelestialSwann Před 3 lety +53

    10:05 favorite part, the reaction to getting shot and collapsing was so well done.

  • @jesse86jesse
    @jesse86jesse Před 2 měsíci +1

    Even in 1575, the cameraman never dies

  • @richnez2721
    @richnez2721 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Excellent cinematography considering it was almost 600 years ago.

  • @renzudesu1913
    @renzudesu1913 Před 3 lety +165

    Most Replayed Clip Tier List:
    1: Gun poking out of the fence
    2: The drum scene
    3: Offensive soldiers falling off their horses

  • @Sagar_Patelv28
    @Sagar_Patelv28 Před 3 lety +156

    For all those who thought why Takeda general charged its cavalry into suicide...
    Here is my opinion:
    1) Takeda Fire Cavalry was finest 👌🔥 of Japan during this era
    2) early firearms weren't much accurate that's why they used volleys and had good long reload time so few casualties while charging enemy was acceptable since cavalry would runover as soon as it reached the infantry rank.
    3) Give credit to Defending General since in those eras nobody ever thought pikewall and gunpowder line formation would he this effective. And later many would adopt this and use of cavalry will fade. (Just like the case in Battle of Agincourt 1415 where English longbows massacred armored french cavalry)

    • @marcoswillianl
      @marcoswillianl Před 2 lety +1

      Pike and Shot started to be used in the end of XV with the spanish Tercio.

    • @apalahartisebuahnama7684
      @apalahartisebuahnama7684 Před 2 lety +1

      @@w0lf667 that's true tho, cavalry were design like that ever since human use archery we use horse to outmanoeuvre them with speed. Guns during this era were shit so gunners need to use volleys so it can be effective but still without defensive formation and fortification(ex: Palisades, tercios) gunners were vulnerable until the invention of bayonet, real life example of its success would be this battle of nagashino while a failed example would be during Ottoman-mamluk war when Mamluks heavy cavalry and horse archers able to break even the elite Janisarry but stopped when ottomans cannons destroyed the cavalry charge.

    • @roblestako8221
      @roblestako8221 Před 2 lety +1

      I wonder if this was the inspiration for the final scene of the Last Samurai with tom cruise

    • @indokid5311
      @indokid5311 Před rokem +1

      @@w0lf667 ur the joke

    • @Lobster_Lars
      @Lobster_Lars Před rokem +1

      @@ASDF-ct1wc Takeda Shingen had a son. Whos name was also takeda. Because its a family name, silly