How Yoshitsune's 70 Ships CRUSHED 300 Ships in Just One Morning | Battle of Yashima
Автор: The Bloody Chronicle
Загружено: 2025-12-16
Просмотров: 27
They thought it was impossible mathematics—seventy fishing boats against three hundred warships. At dawn, Yoshitsune's fleet approached in what looked like suicidal frontal assault while Taira commanders tightened their crescent formation, confident in eight centuries of naval dominance. Then the shores exploded. Hidden cavalry thundered onto Yashima's beaches through low-tide passages no one thought passable, smashing rear defenses while the "doomed" fishing boats suddenly darted through gaps as heavy warships turned toward the land threat. Nasu no Yoichi's impossible arrow struck the ceremonial fan from maximum range, shattering morale as formations collapsed into chaos. Ships collided trying to face threats from every direction; the defensive crescent became a death trap; captains abandoned coordination for individual survival. Signal horns screamed conflicting orders while Minamoto vessels—lighter, faster, deadlier—exploited every opening the fracturing formation created. By mid-morning, three hundred ships were fleeing for open water, their island fortress abandoned, and Japan's naval supremacy lay in ruins. One innovation, one morning—seventy boats rewriting the mathematics of medieval warfare.
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