Yamada Arinobu
Yamada Arinobu (山田 有信, 1544 – June 15, 1609) was a retainer of the Shimazu clan during the Edo period. He served under Shimazu Takahisa and then under Shimazu Yoshihisa. On 1568, he became a Karō for his services.
Yamada Arinobu | |
---|---|
Born | 1544 |
Died | June 15, 1609 |
Allegiance | Shimazu clan |
Rank | Karō |
Battles/wars | Battle of Mimigawa Kyūshū campaign |
He was known as a skilled commander in battle. On 1578, Ōtomo Yoshishige attacked the Shimazu clan and Arinobu gathered 500 troops to hold ground at Takajo Castle. In the Battle of Mimigawa that followed, the Shimazu army defeated the Otomo who retreated under heavy losses.[1] The lose included commanders like Kamachi Akimori, from which it never recovered.
In 1586, when Toyotomi Hideyoshi launched the invasion of Kyūshū and Shimazu clan territory, Arinobu again gathered a handful of troops to take a defensive stand after the main body of the army led by Shimazu Yoshihisa had lost. Refusing to surrender to Toyotomi's troops, Arinobu surrendered only after Yoshihisa ordered him to surrender and offered Toyotomi his son Yamada Arinaga as hostage.
Yamada died in 1609 and it is said that Yoshihisa prayed in front of his coffin, thanking him for his long service.
Reference
- Turnbull, Stephen (2000). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & C0. p. 272-275. ISBN 1854095234.