1 00:00:08,008 --> 00:00:09,968 [dramatic music plays] 2 00:00:30,947 --> 00:00:32,867 -[in Japanese] Attack! -[all yelling] 3 00:00:38,204 --> 00:00:40,214 [opening theme plays] 4 00:00:53,094 --> 00:00:58,224 [narrator in English] 1598, after ending 120 years of civil war, 5 00:00:58,308 --> 00:01:01,308 and reunifying Japan under his banner, 6 00:01:01,394 --> 00:01:05,574 Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the supreme ruler of Japan, lays dead. 7 00:01:07,358 --> 00:01:10,278 In a desperate attempt to protect his dynasty, 8 00:01:10,361 --> 00:01:11,781 just before his death, 9 00:01:11,863 --> 00:01:15,533 Hideyoshi created a council of five powerful warlords. 10 00:01:16,201 --> 00:01:19,911 They are to govern Japan until his young son comes of age. 11 00:01:21,581 --> 00:01:24,631 The fate of Japan now rests on a knife edge. 12 00:01:25,126 --> 00:01:26,746 If the council collapses, 13 00:01:26,836 --> 00:01:29,626 Japan will be plunged back into anarchy 14 00:01:29,714 --> 00:01:34,184 and everything Hideyoshi worked to achieve will be destroyed. 15 00:01:35,887 --> 00:01:37,177 [suspenseful music plays] 16 00:01:51,194 --> 00:01:54,744 [David Spafford] The five elders were of great powerful families. 17 00:01:55,698 --> 00:01:57,328 And putting them together 18 00:01:57,408 --> 00:01:59,828 is meant to create a perfect balance among them 19 00:01:59,911 --> 00:02:02,581 so that none of them will have the upper hand. 20 00:02:04,874 --> 00:02:08,344 [Isaac Meyer] Maeda Toshiie will be stationed in Osaka Castle… 21 00:02:22,350 --> 00:02:25,980 and will be the one responsible for raising young Hideyori, 22 00:02:26,062 --> 00:02:31,112 for managing his education, preparing him for the rigors of leading the country. 23 00:02:33,987 --> 00:02:35,447 [Auslin] Everyone understands 24 00:02:35,530 --> 00:02:39,490 that because Hideyori will not attain his majority for years, 25 00:02:40,326 --> 00:02:44,456 that there is a chance for one of them to become the supreme power. 26 00:02:44,539 --> 00:02:47,829 This is the fatal flaw of Hideyoshi's life, 27 00:02:47,917 --> 00:02:51,377 that everything he worked for is now thrown into doubt 28 00:02:51,462 --> 00:02:53,052 because of the age of his heir. 29 00:03:02,098 --> 00:03:04,098 [imperceptible] 30 00:03:04,893 --> 00:03:07,023 [Spafford] Daimyos started preparing 31 00:03:07,103 --> 00:03:09,903 either to be the one daimyo who's going to take over… 32 00:03:12,358 --> 00:03:16,738 or to organize to prevent a rival from doing so. 33 00:03:21,784 --> 00:03:24,414 [Auslin] Tokugawa Ieyasu is, by this point, 34 00:03:24,495 --> 00:03:26,325 the most powerful daimyo in Japan. 35 00:03:26,414 --> 00:03:28,584 So, he's really given ultimate authority. 36 00:03:28,666 --> 00:03:31,786 He's basically put in charge of the entire government. 37 00:03:33,421 --> 00:03:38,801 [Spafford] Tokugawa Ieyasu was undeniably the most powerful warlord in the country. 38 00:03:38,885 --> 00:03:42,715 His wealth and his military might vastly exceeded anybody else's. 39 00:03:44,265 --> 00:03:47,685 [Auslin] With the death of Hideyoshi, as soon as there was a chance, 40 00:03:47,769 --> 00:03:51,979 Ieyasu was in the perfect position to become supreme ruler of Japan. 41 00:03:57,779 --> 00:04:02,119 He has patiently built up his power, he's patiently eliminated rivals, 42 00:04:02,200 --> 00:04:04,830 he's patiently created alliances, 43 00:04:04,911 --> 00:04:09,831 and now this is the time to make the bid for final and supreme power in Japan. 44 00:04:14,212 --> 00:04:15,802 However, in the shadows, 45 00:04:15,880 --> 00:04:20,050 there was an inveterate schemer preparing to move against Ieyasu. 46 00:04:20,718 --> 00:04:22,298 [dramatic music plays] 47 00:04:22,971 --> 00:04:25,271 [Auslin] And that was Ishida Mitsunari. 48 00:04:25,348 --> 00:04:27,308 Ishida Mitsunari was a minor daimyo. 49 00:04:27,392 --> 00:04:30,482 He didn't have anything like the strength of Ieyasu, 50 00:04:30,561 --> 00:04:33,521 but he was totally loyal to the Toyotomi house. 51 00:04:35,233 --> 00:04:36,653 [Mitsunari in Japanese] Sir. 52 00:04:41,322 --> 00:04:42,742 It's time to strike. 53 00:04:43,825 --> 00:04:45,655 It's now or never. 54 00:04:50,915 --> 00:04:54,335 [Auslin] He did everything he could to undermine Ieyasu's position 55 00:04:54,419 --> 00:04:55,839 and to create suspicion 56 00:04:55,920 --> 00:05:00,090 between Ieyasu and the other great councilors named by Hideyoshi. 57 00:05:00,174 --> 00:05:04,644 And Mitsunari seems to feel that as long as Ieyasu is not challenged, 58 00:05:04,721 --> 00:05:09,231 then he will ultimately dominate the rest of the elders and the councilors. 59 00:05:09,309 --> 00:05:13,729 And he's not willing to live with that. He wants to either assassinate Ieyasu, 60 00:05:13,813 --> 00:05:16,023 pen him in or destroy him. 61 00:05:16,107 --> 00:05:17,937 [water flowing] 62 00:05:18,026 --> 00:05:21,196 Ishida Mitsunari needed allies and support. 63 00:05:27,577 --> 00:05:33,167 So, he approached the veteran member of the council, Maeda Toshiie, 64 00:05:33,249 --> 00:05:38,089 a very rich daimyo and a strong army leader in his own right. 65 00:05:39,422 --> 00:05:45,302 [in Japanese] Maeda Toshiie was the only one capable of going up against Ieyasu. 66 00:05:45,887 --> 00:05:49,637 The Tokugawa family's recent deeds… 67 00:05:54,062 --> 00:05:57,942 Would you please help Hideyori? 68 00:05:59,442 --> 00:06:01,442 [dramatic music plays] 69 00:06:07,784 --> 00:06:09,834 I didn't mean to be presumptuous. 70 00:06:11,704 --> 00:06:13,294 I meant no disrespect. 71 00:06:14,707 --> 00:06:16,537 [Auslin] Toshiie doesn't want to do it. 72 00:06:16,626 --> 00:06:18,246 He's near the end of his life, 73 00:06:18,336 --> 00:06:20,956 he's uncertain that the campaign would succeed, 74 00:06:21,047 --> 00:06:24,467 and he doesn't want to commit to something, knowing he's about to die, 75 00:06:24,550 --> 00:06:26,340 that's going to saddle his son 76 00:06:26,427 --> 00:06:30,057 with a position that could mean the destruction of their house. 77 00:06:30,139 --> 00:06:35,229 So, Maeda Toshiie backs off from confronting Tokugawa Ieyasu, 78 00:06:35,311 --> 00:06:38,771 though he knows that Ieyasu wants to depose Hideyori, 79 00:06:38,856 --> 00:06:41,936 to get rid of him and to rule in the Tokugawa family name. 80 00:06:46,322 --> 00:06:48,532 [Turnbull] Toshiie died shortly afterwards. 81 00:06:49,492 --> 00:06:53,082 Now, he had been the guardian of Toyotomi Hideyori. 82 00:06:54,038 --> 00:06:55,708 So, who should take his place… 83 00:06:55,790 --> 00:06:57,790 [dramatic music plays] 84 00:07:00,169 --> 00:07:02,089 …but Tokugawa Ieyasu, 85 00:07:02,171 --> 00:07:04,671 who moved into Osaka Castle… 86 00:07:07,343 --> 00:07:09,603 so that he had immediate control 87 00:07:10,555 --> 00:07:12,095 over young Hideyori. 88 00:07:14,183 --> 00:07:16,643 [Horikoshi in Japanese] This was a very big deal. 89 00:07:17,145 --> 00:07:19,145 It's like a minister 90 00:07:19,230 --> 00:07:24,740 suddenly coming to Buckingham Palace in England 91 00:07:24,819 --> 00:07:31,529 and telling you that they will start living there. 92 00:07:31,617 --> 00:07:33,117 [dramatic music plays] 93 00:07:40,877 --> 00:07:44,917 It was an act that enraged the other members of the regency, 94 00:07:45,006 --> 00:07:49,466 because Tokugawa Ieyasu now had the young heir under his thumb. 95 00:07:58,728 --> 00:08:02,108 The council of regents ordered Ieyasu to back off 96 00:08:02,190 --> 00:08:06,190 and recognize that Toyotomi Hideyori was the true heir 97 00:08:06,277 --> 00:08:10,867 and that Ieyasu had no place in interfering in that process. 98 00:08:15,411 --> 00:08:19,711 Ieyasu saw that statement simply as a declaration of war. 99 00:08:23,169 --> 00:08:25,709 It was the chance he had been waiting for. 100 00:08:27,798 --> 00:08:30,718 The daimyo of Japan were splitting into two camps, 101 00:08:31,469 --> 00:08:33,929 one that supported Tokugawa Ieyasu… 102 00:08:35,264 --> 00:08:38,274 and one that supported Toyotomi Hideyori, 103 00:08:38,351 --> 00:08:41,401 underneath the leadership of Ishida Mitsunari. 104 00:08:43,731 --> 00:08:47,651 The wheels were now set in motion for the most decisive struggle for power 105 00:08:47,735 --> 00:08:50,025 in the whole of Japanese history. 106 00:08:51,656 --> 00:08:53,816 [suspenseful music plays] 107 00:08:56,160 --> 00:08:59,960 [Segal] As the buildup to the military confrontation starts to shape up, 108 00:09:00,039 --> 00:09:04,919 Ishida Mitsunari is mobilizing men against a potential Ieyasu coalition. 109 00:09:05,002 --> 00:09:08,632 One of those are the Uesugi, who are located north of Ieyasu. 110 00:09:10,174 --> 00:09:14,104 [Ledbetter] Mitsunari's plan is that the Uesugi would move against Ieyasu 111 00:09:14,178 --> 00:09:17,428 and he would be able to crush Ieyasu 112 00:09:17,515 --> 00:09:19,725 between his forces and those of the Uesugi. 113 00:09:24,146 --> 00:09:26,606 [Meyer] So, Ieyasu makes a snap decision. 114 00:09:26,691 --> 00:09:30,991 He's going to call in some favors, particularly with Date Masamune, 115 00:09:31,070 --> 00:09:34,740 and assemble a force in the north to hold off with Uesugi Kagekatsu. 116 00:09:36,659 --> 00:09:40,409 [narrator] As Masamune moves to stop the attack from the north, 117 00:09:40,496 --> 00:09:45,076 Ieyasu plans to race east to Edo to gather his forces. 118 00:09:45,167 --> 00:09:46,537 But he needs time, 119 00:09:46,627 --> 00:09:49,757 as Mitsunari's troops are already on the move, 120 00:09:49,839 --> 00:09:53,839 all Ieyasu's hopes now rest on his castle at Fushimi, 121 00:09:53,926 --> 00:09:57,136 a fortress that controls the road that leads east. 122 00:09:58,598 --> 00:10:00,598 [sinister music plays] 123 00:10:08,649 --> 00:10:14,029 [Turnbull] For this reason, Fushimi Castle had to be held at all costs, 124 00:10:14,113 --> 00:10:18,123 to prevent Ishida Mitsunari from moving against Ieyasu 125 00:10:18,200 --> 00:10:19,830 before he was ready. 126 00:10:20,745 --> 00:10:23,285 [in Japanese] The enemy will surround this castle. 127 00:10:26,334 --> 00:10:27,964 I want you to remain… 128 00:10:31,547 --> 00:10:33,047 at the castle. 129 00:10:34,467 --> 00:10:37,677 [Turnbull] It was defended by his friend Torii Mototada. 130 00:10:38,679 --> 00:10:43,179 Ieyasu and Torii Mototada had been friends for many years. 131 00:10:46,854 --> 00:10:49,984 [Meyer] Both men know that holding this castle is essential 132 00:10:50,066 --> 00:10:52,186 to the future of the Tokugawa family, 133 00:10:52,276 --> 00:10:56,276 and also that doing so will be a nearly impossible task. 134 00:10:59,867 --> 00:11:00,987 Mototada. 135 00:11:11,128 --> 00:11:14,128 [Turnbull] Both knew that this was a suicide mission. 136 00:11:14,215 --> 00:11:18,715 Torii Mototada was likely to be outnumbered by odds of 20 to 1. 137 00:11:18,803 --> 00:11:22,773 Torii Mototada was essentially being assigned a mission 138 00:11:22,848 --> 00:11:28,348 that required him to fight as long as possible with no chance of retreat, 139 00:11:28,437 --> 00:11:30,307 and with no chance of reinforcements. 140 00:11:32,233 --> 00:11:34,243 [wind whistling] 141 00:11:37,571 --> 00:11:40,911 [Turnbull] As Ieyasu hurried to escape Mitsunari's army, 142 00:11:40,991 --> 00:11:43,661 Torii Mototada wrote his final message. 143 00:11:45,496 --> 00:11:47,246 "It would not take too much trouble 144 00:11:47,331 --> 00:11:50,081 to break through a part of their numbers and escape, 145 00:11:50,167 --> 00:11:53,497 but that is not the true meaning of being a warrior. 146 00:11:54,088 --> 00:11:57,678 I will stand off the forces of the entire country here 147 00:11:57,758 --> 00:12:00,298 and die a resplendent death." 148 00:12:08,269 --> 00:12:13,019 [Meyer] Ishida Mitsunari and his 40,000-odd men attack the castle. 149 00:12:13,566 --> 00:12:16,106 -[dramatic music plays] -[men yelling] 150 00:12:16,193 --> 00:12:19,243 Torii Mototada and his 2,000 fight ferociously. 151 00:12:19,321 --> 00:12:20,911 -[yells] -[groans] 152 00:12:22,074 --> 00:12:25,914 Torii Mototada sent his men into battle again and again 153 00:12:25,995 --> 00:12:28,285 -against the Ishida forces. -[yells] 154 00:12:29,123 --> 00:12:31,333 [Turnbull] In an epic act of bravery, 155 00:12:31,417 --> 00:12:36,297 Torii Mototada and his army held out at Fushimi for 12 days. 156 00:12:36,380 --> 00:12:37,300 [panting] 157 00:12:40,092 --> 00:12:43,602 Legend states that the garrison of Fushimi carried on fighting 158 00:12:43,679 --> 00:12:45,969 until there were only ten of them left. 159 00:12:52,021 --> 00:12:53,191 [inhales deeply] 160 00:13:01,238 --> 00:13:02,618 [groaning] 161 00:13:13,417 --> 00:13:16,797 [Turnbull] Finally, as the castle blazed around him, 162 00:13:16,879 --> 00:13:20,089 Torii Mototada committed honorable suicide 163 00:13:20,174 --> 00:13:24,554 after one of the most noble defenses of a castle in Japanese history. 164 00:13:25,721 --> 00:13:29,561 The bravery of Torii Mototada has been absolutely crucial. 165 00:13:29,642 --> 00:13:32,772 It has allowed Ieyasu to gather his forces in Edo 166 00:13:32,853 --> 00:13:35,523 to take on Ishida Mitsunari in battle. 167 00:13:36,482 --> 00:13:38,482 [thunder rumbles] 168 00:13:43,280 --> 00:13:47,240 [narrator] Tokugawa Ieyasu is now ready to make his move. 169 00:13:47,326 --> 00:13:50,076 He splits his force of 75,000 men 170 00:13:50,162 --> 00:13:52,462 and prepares to strike at Mitsunari. 171 00:13:53,457 --> 00:13:56,247 As his son leads a large force to the north, 172 00:13:56,335 --> 00:13:59,755 Ieyasu leads his main army straight towards his enemy. 173 00:14:00,798 --> 00:14:04,298 Mitsunari is now in a highly precarious situation 174 00:14:04,385 --> 00:14:05,845 and risks being outflanked 175 00:14:05,928 --> 00:14:08,308 and surrounded by the two approaching armies. 176 00:14:10,474 --> 00:14:12,484 -[wind whistling] -[birds chirping] 177 00:14:30,578 --> 00:14:33,658 [in Japanese] They're going to hold down the road… 178 00:14:35,124 --> 00:14:37,084 and surround us. 179 00:14:38,002 --> 00:14:42,422 Ishida Mitsunari realizes what a highly precarious situation he's now in. 180 00:14:44,758 --> 00:14:49,258 Ieyasu could potentially get around him and cut Mitsunari's line of retreat. 181 00:14:50,764 --> 00:14:52,684 [in Japanese] I won't let that happen. 182 00:14:55,060 --> 00:14:58,810 We will meet them on the road and attack. 183 00:14:59,565 --> 00:15:02,395 [Turnbull] Ishida Mitsunari made a dramatic decision. 184 00:15:04,069 --> 00:15:08,869 He would not risk being caught by Ieyasu's approaching forces. 185 00:15:10,784 --> 00:15:13,754 He therefore decided to march out 186 00:15:13,829 --> 00:15:15,749 and make a stand on the road 187 00:15:15,831 --> 00:15:19,461 and destroy Ieyasu's army when it arrived. 188 00:15:20,920 --> 00:15:22,760 The place he chose 189 00:15:22,838 --> 00:15:25,928 was a narrow valley called Sekigahara. 190 00:15:28,385 --> 00:15:31,755 [Kazuhiko in Japanese] This was a very good strategy for Mitsunari. 191 00:15:32,556 --> 00:15:36,306 He thought it would be more advantageous to fight at Sekigahara 192 00:15:36,393 --> 00:15:38,653 than in Ogaki Castle. 193 00:15:39,563 --> 00:15:42,573 [Turnbull] If you choose to fight a battle in a narrow valley 194 00:15:42,650 --> 00:15:45,860 and you control the mountains around, which Ishida did, 195 00:15:45,945 --> 00:15:48,355 you can draw your opponent towards you 196 00:15:48,447 --> 00:15:50,817 and then attack him from three sides. 197 00:15:50,908 --> 00:15:52,788 It was an excellent choice. 198 00:15:54,495 --> 00:15:56,115 [in Japanese] Tell the soldiers. 199 00:15:57,373 --> 00:16:01,423 Tighten the defenses before the enemy arrives. 200 00:16:02,336 --> 00:16:03,376 Go! 201 00:16:04,171 --> 00:16:07,971 [Turnbull] Ishida Mitsunari had the time to arrange his forces 202 00:16:08,050 --> 00:16:10,640 in the best possible defensive position. 203 00:16:11,136 --> 00:16:16,386 He himself straddled the road awaiting Ieyasu's attack head-on. 204 00:16:16,475 --> 00:16:18,805 -[dramatic music plays] -[in Japanese] Hideaki… 205 00:16:20,980 --> 00:16:24,610 Put your troops on the mountain. 206 00:16:25,776 --> 00:16:27,736 When I give the signal, 207 00:16:27,820 --> 00:16:31,780 come down the mountain and attack Ieyasu from the side. 208 00:16:33,701 --> 00:16:38,621 [Turnbull] To guard his left flank and to avoid encirclement by Ieyasu, 209 00:16:38,706 --> 00:16:42,166 he sent Kobayakawa Hideaki 210 00:16:42,251 --> 00:16:45,801 to take up position overlooking the road. 211 00:16:47,965 --> 00:16:50,465 When battle was joined the following morning, 212 00:16:50,551 --> 00:16:54,721 he would light a signal fire and then Kobayakawa Hideaki 213 00:16:54,805 --> 00:16:57,305 would descend from his strategic position 214 00:16:57,391 --> 00:17:00,481 and attack the Tokugawa on their right flank, 215 00:17:00,561 --> 00:17:03,561 bringing about total victory. 216 00:17:07,901 --> 00:17:11,911 However, Mitsunari is somewhat disliked 217 00:17:11,989 --> 00:17:16,949 by many of the daimyo who are supporting Toyotomi Hideyori's cause. 218 00:17:23,584 --> 00:17:26,464 This dislike and distrust of Ishida Mitsunari 219 00:17:26,545 --> 00:17:30,295 as overall commander came back to bite him in several ways. 220 00:17:31,091 --> 00:17:35,971 One of the most important is with the case of Kobayakawa Hideaki. 221 00:17:40,059 --> 00:17:42,269 [Turnbull] The main basis for the resentment 222 00:17:42,352 --> 00:17:44,612 that Hideaki felt against Ishida Mitsunari 223 00:17:45,481 --> 00:17:48,191 was from Ishida's role during the Korean invasion. 224 00:17:48,817 --> 00:17:50,817 [dramatic music plays] 225 00:17:52,571 --> 00:17:54,701 [soldiers groan] 226 00:17:54,782 --> 00:17:55,742 [all yelling] 227 00:17:56,450 --> 00:17:57,530 [groans] 228 00:17:59,870 --> 00:18:02,580 Ishida Mitsunari was appointed by Hideyoshi 229 00:18:02,664 --> 00:18:05,584 as the Inspector General of the Japanese forces 230 00:18:05,667 --> 00:18:09,667 and had been highly critical of young Hideaki's performance. 231 00:18:15,302 --> 00:18:17,302 News had gone back to Hideyoshi, 232 00:18:17,387 --> 00:18:20,467 who had stripped Hideaki of many of his rights, 233 00:18:20,557 --> 00:18:21,927 privileges and lands. 234 00:18:24,603 --> 00:18:26,613 [horse neighs] 235 00:18:32,903 --> 00:18:35,743 [Turnbull] In the crucial hours leading up to the battle, 236 00:18:37,574 --> 00:18:41,664 Tokugawa Ieyasu received an unexpected communication. 237 00:18:43,497 --> 00:18:47,127 Hideaki had decided to turn traitor. 238 00:18:49,002 --> 00:18:53,672 Once battle was joined, Hideaki would join Ieyasu instead 239 00:18:53,757 --> 00:18:57,427 and launch a devastating attack on Mitsunari's army. 240 00:18:58,971 --> 00:19:03,391 If this were to happen, it would greatly tip the balance in favor of Ieyasu. 241 00:19:07,479 --> 00:19:11,399 For all we know, Hideaki could well have been playing both sides 242 00:19:11,483 --> 00:19:13,493 to see who was likely to win, 243 00:19:13,569 --> 00:19:16,909 and then he would make his decision whom to support. 244 00:19:16,989 --> 00:19:19,199 Of course, until the battle began, 245 00:19:19,867 --> 00:19:24,907 Ieyasu could not be 100% sure that Hideaki would change sides. 246 00:19:26,373 --> 00:19:29,003 Tokugawa Ieyasu was facing the most difficult 247 00:19:29,084 --> 00:19:31,594 and dangerous decision of his life. 248 00:19:33,881 --> 00:19:37,681 In the end, it was a huge gamble, but one he had to take. 249 00:19:38,177 --> 00:19:40,177 [dramatic music plays] 250 00:19:43,682 --> 00:19:46,062 [Meyer] Tokugawa Ieyasu moves to Sekigahara. 251 00:19:47,186 --> 00:19:50,476 If, as some of his generals believe, this letter is a trick, 252 00:19:50,564 --> 00:19:53,074 then Ieyasu may have just thrown it all away. 253 00:19:53,150 --> 00:19:55,150 [soldiers marching] 254 00:19:56,445 --> 00:19:59,275 [Turnbull] Ieyasu arrived and all he could see roundabout 255 00:19:59,364 --> 00:20:01,664 were fires burning up on the mountains, 256 00:20:01,742 --> 00:20:04,492 which indicated the fortified positions 257 00:20:04,578 --> 00:20:07,578 that Ishida's army had had the leisure to erect. 258 00:20:09,082 --> 00:20:11,752 It was a huge challenge to face. 259 00:20:15,505 --> 00:20:18,715 Ieyasu seemed to be at a disadvantage 260 00:20:18,800 --> 00:20:20,930 because Ieyasu's son, Hidetada, 261 00:20:21,011 --> 00:20:25,521 had not arrived with an additional 30,000-plus troops he was counting on. 262 00:20:25,599 --> 00:20:28,769 This threatens the very survival of Ieyasu's forces. 263 00:20:30,270 --> 00:20:34,440 [Turnbull] All they could do was prepare as best they could for the coming battle. 264 00:20:35,692 --> 00:20:39,202 In a couple of hours' time, the fog would lift 265 00:20:39,738 --> 00:20:43,118 and the most decisive battle in Japan would begin. 266 00:20:43,992 --> 00:20:45,992 [dramatic music plays] 267 00:20:49,456 --> 00:20:52,456 [narrator] As the sides line up at Sekigahara, 268 00:20:52,542 --> 00:20:54,252 Mitsunari has the upper hand. 269 00:20:54,795 --> 00:20:58,085 His 120,000 men control the high ground. 270 00:20:59,132 --> 00:21:00,632 When battle commences, 271 00:21:00,717 --> 00:21:04,137 Mitsunari aims to bring down the wings of his formation, 272 00:21:04,221 --> 00:21:06,521 crushing Ieyasu from three sides. 273 00:21:07,516 --> 00:21:09,096 At the base of the valley, 274 00:21:09,184 --> 00:21:13,564 Ieyasu is in the weaker position and outnumbered almost three-to-two. 275 00:21:14,564 --> 00:21:17,114 With his son and his forces still absent, 276 00:21:17,192 --> 00:21:21,152 all his hopes now depend on Hideaki's promise of betrayal. 277 00:21:24,741 --> 00:21:26,741 [thunder rumbling in distance] 278 00:21:27,411 --> 00:21:29,411 [dramatic music plays] 279 00:21:31,123 --> 00:21:33,503 [Meyer] On the day of the battle of Sekigahara, 280 00:21:33,583 --> 00:21:35,253 there's fog early in the morning, 281 00:21:35,335 --> 00:21:38,125 so the two sides cannot see each other very clearly. 282 00:21:40,841 --> 00:21:43,761 When that fog starts to lift early in the morning, 283 00:21:43,844 --> 00:21:46,474 Ieyasu sees precisely what's in front of him. 284 00:21:48,473 --> 00:21:51,483 This entrenched position held by Mitsunari. 285 00:21:53,645 --> 00:21:55,355 He is outnumbered, it's true. 286 00:21:55,439 --> 00:22:00,359 But on the flip side, Mitsunari does not have very much battlefield experience. 287 00:22:00,444 --> 00:22:04,284 He's never directed a battle himself. He's only ever been a subcommander. 288 00:22:04,364 --> 00:22:06,374 [suspenseful music plays] 289 00:22:13,123 --> 00:22:14,623 [dramatic music plays] 290 00:22:33,894 --> 00:22:35,104 [in Japanese] Attack! 291 00:22:35,187 --> 00:22:36,097 [all yelling] 292 00:22:42,903 --> 00:22:44,573 -[arquebuses fire] -[blades clang] 293 00:22:46,323 --> 00:22:48,703 Mitsunari has had time to prepare defenses. 294 00:22:48,784 --> 00:22:53,044 As a result, Ieyasu's forces are forced to push forward at great cost. 295 00:22:53,121 --> 00:22:54,751 It's a tremendous slog. 296 00:22:54,831 --> 00:22:56,711 [all yelling] 297 00:22:57,584 --> 00:22:59,754 [Ledbetter] We have hand-to-hand fighting, 298 00:23:00,295 --> 00:23:03,215 spearmen and pikemen fighting with each other. 299 00:23:03,298 --> 00:23:08,098 On the flanks, you have contingents of arquebusiers firing at the enemy. 300 00:23:09,554 --> 00:23:12,474 The fighting devolves into an intense slog. 301 00:23:12,557 --> 00:23:15,437 It is chaotic, it is confusing and it is extremely brutal. 302 00:23:15,936 --> 00:23:17,976 [soldiers groan] 303 00:23:18,855 --> 00:23:20,685 [Ledbetter] It's controlled chaos. 304 00:23:20,774 --> 00:23:25,074 As the battle progresses, neither side is really able to gain much of an advantage. 305 00:23:26,571 --> 00:23:32,081 This is simply going to be a contest to see which side can outmuscle the other. 306 00:23:32,160 --> 00:23:33,620 [fighting continues] 307 00:23:34,413 --> 00:23:36,003 [in Japanese] Raise the signal. 308 00:23:37,207 --> 00:23:41,667 [Ledbetter] Ishida realizes that he needs to force some of his troops 309 00:23:41,753 --> 00:23:43,383 to enter the battle. 310 00:23:44,881 --> 00:23:46,971 He gives the prearranged signal 311 00:23:47,050 --> 00:23:50,930 to Kobayakawa Hideaki to attack the Tokugawa forces in the flank. 312 00:23:51,847 --> 00:23:52,847 However… 313 00:23:53,807 --> 00:23:55,307 [dramatic music plays] 314 00:23:56,435 --> 00:23:58,015 …Hideaki's troops don't move. 315 00:24:03,817 --> 00:24:07,947 Ieyasu also sees that the Kobayakawa are not moving. 316 00:24:10,407 --> 00:24:13,197 The Kobayakawa forces continue to hold position. 317 00:24:14,619 --> 00:24:15,829 And after a while, 318 00:24:15,912 --> 00:24:20,332 Ieyasu also becomes a bit nervous about what they're going to do. 319 00:24:24,087 --> 00:24:26,917 Ieyasu then makes a carefully calculated move 320 00:24:27,007 --> 00:24:29,677 that will go down in the history of Japanese folklore. 321 00:24:30,844 --> 00:24:31,804 [in Japanese] Fire! 322 00:24:35,765 --> 00:24:39,685 He is supposed to have ordered his arquebuses to fire at Hideaki's position, 323 00:24:39,769 --> 00:24:42,649 forcing Hideaki to choose one way or the other. 324 00:24:42,731 --> 00:24:43,981 It's time to pick a side. 325 00:24:47,819 --> 00:24:49,399 [in Japanese] Attack! 326 00:24:49,488 --> 00:24:53,158 [Ledbetter] This has the effect of shaking Hideaki out of his inaction, 327 00:24:53,867 --> 00:24:56,327 and the Kobayakawa troops stream down the hill. 328 00:24:56,411 --> 00:24:57,541 [soldiers yelling] 329 00:24:58,121 --> 00:25:00,541 [Meyer] Imagine the reaction of Ishida Mitsunari: 330 00:25:00,624 --> 00:25:03,174 "First, my order got through. They're on their way." 331 00:25:03,251 --> 00:25:04,791 And then this mounting horror: 332 00:25:04,878 --> 00:25:08,168 "Wait, they're not going towards Ieyasu's lines, 333 00:25:08,256 --> 00:25:11,256 they're coming towards my lines. They're attacking me." 334 00:25:11,801 --> 00:25:15,681 [Ledbetter] They slam into the flank of the western army. 335 00:25:18,391 --> 00:25:20,731 The commander of the flank unit that's attacked 336 00:25:20,810 --> 00:25:24,440 turned his forces to meet Kobayakawa's attack, but was soon overwhelmed. 337 00:25:26,858 --> 00:25:30,648 This double-punch to Ishida Mitsunari's army 338 00:25:30,737 --> 00:25:33,197 had the effect of rolling up the sides… 339 00:25:34,616 --> 00:25:36,696 and forcing his resistance to crumble. 340 00:25:37,577 --> 00:25:38,997 Mitsunari now realizes… 341 00:25:39,079 --> 00:25:40,749 [in Japanese] Hideaki… 342 00:25:41,248 --> 00:25:43,078 …the battle is as good as lost. 343 00:25:45,627 --> 00:25:49,457 The western army's contingents remaining did everything they could to escape. 344 00:25:50,632 --> 00:25:53,892 Many, of course, would be ridden down 345 00:25:53,969 --> 00:25:56,679 by the victorious opponents… 346 00:25:57,639 --> 00:25:58,719 -and killed. -[groans] 347 00:26:00,517 --> 00:26:04,597 Immediately after the battle would be a scene of chaos. 348 00:26:07,566 --> 00:26:11,736 [Segal] Many of the leading generals of the losing side fled the scene, 349 00:26:11,820 --> 00:26:13,070 including Mitsunari, 350 00:26:13,154 --> 00:26:15,914 but Ieyasu's forces were able to capture a number of them. 351 00:26:28,169 --> 00:26:31,669 [Michael Wert] Sekigahara was a watershed moment for Ieyasu. 352 00:26:33,800 --> 00:26:36,890 Because now it's clear that, militarily speaking, 353 00:26:36,970 --> 00:26:39,140 he's certainly the greatest power in Japan. 354 00:26:40,265 --> 00:26:43,055 [Meyer] For Ieyasu, the victory at Sekigahara 355 00:26:43,143 --> 00:26:46,353 puts him in what you'd call one of the most dominant positions 356 00:26:46,438 --> 00:26:48,768 of any age of Japanese history. 357 00:26:49,441 --> 00:26:51,741 Most of the opposition to his rule is gone. 358 00:26:51,818 --> 00:26:53,318 [triumphant music plays] 359 00:26:54,904 --> 00:26:57,494 [Auslin] Ieyasu's victory in Sekigahara is complete, 360 00:26:57,574 --> 00:26:59,784 but he has to send a signal of his victory 361 00:26:59,868 --> 00:27:03,658 and Ieyasu orders the execution of loyalists to Hideyoshi… 362 00:27:06,207 --> 00:27:08,167 including Ishida Mitsunari. 363 00:27:09,336 --> 00:27:12,416 Their heads are placed on stakes to announce for all intents and purposes 364 00:27:12,505 --> 00:27:14,965 that the Toyotomi coalition is done 365 00:27:15,050 --> 00:27:18,470 and that the supreme power in the land is now Tokugawa Ieyasu. 366 00:27:18,553 --> 00:27:20,563 [dramatic music plays] 367 00:27:27,937 --> 00:27:29,517 In the wake of Sekigahara, 368 00:27:29,606 --> 00:27:31,816 Ieyasu makes a controversial decision 369 00:27:31,900 --> 00:27:35,240 against the advice of his generals and loyal retainers. 370 00:27:35,320 --> 00:27:37,490 Even though he's destroyed the coalition that fought 371 00:27:37,572 --> 00:27:39,992 to protect Hideyoshi's young heir, Hideyori, 372 00:27:40,075 --> 00:27:42,785 Ieyasu decides not to kill the young man. 373 00:27:42,869 --> 00:27:46,919 Instead, he lets him live in Osaka Castle under the stewardship of his mother, 374 00:27:47,499 --> 00:27:48,629 Lady Chacha. 375 00:27:53,588 --> 00:27:56,678 [Meyer] Date Masamune will send a letter to Tokugawa Ieyasu. 376 00:27:57,300 --> 00:27:58,260 He will say, 377 00:27:58,343 --> 00:28:03,143 "Ieyasu, if you do not keep this boy at your side and raise him yourself… 378 00:28:04,057 --> 00:28:08,057 all of your enemies will gather around him and pour poison in his ear, 379 00:28:08,144 --> 00:28:10,314 and that will turn him against you." 380 00:28:12,482 --> 00:28:15,362 Ieyasu, however, seems to have felt differently. 381 00:28:15,443 --> 00:28:18,993 Keeping some distance and allowing Hideyori to be his own man 382 00:28:19,072 --> 00:28:22,412 would allow Hideyori to accept the idea of Tokugawa rule. 383 00:28:24,160 --> 00:28:27,330 That decision, sentimental you might even call it, 384 00:28:27,414 --> 00:28:28,834 turns out to be a mistake. 385 00:28:31,376 --> 00:28:34,916 [narrator] Ieyasu now moves to tighten his stranglehold on Japan. 386 00:28:36,047 --> 00:28:38,967 All daimyo who opposed him at Sekigahara 387 00:28:39,050 --> 00:28:41,970 are killed or stripped of their lands and titles. 388 00:28:42,053 --> 00:28:44,643 They are then moved to the fringes of the country, 389 00:28:44,723 --> 00:28:46,733 far from influence and power. 390 00:28:47,600 --> 00:28:52,230 All those who supported him are moved closer to the center and richly rewarded. 391 00:28:53,273 --> 00:28:57,903 By doing so, Ieyasu has created a buffer zone of loyal supporters 392 00:28:57,986 --> 00:28:59,986 to prevent any threat of attack. 393 00:29:01,781 --> 00:29:04,201 This far-reaching relocation system 394 00:29:04,284 --> 00:29:08,504 will protect Ieyasu and forever change the political makeup of Japan. 395 00:29:11,583 --> 00:29:12,753 It was a genius scheme. 396 00:29:12,834 --> 00:29:16,594 We have to remember that neither Nobunaga nor Hideyoshi 397 00:29:16,671 --> 00:29:21,341 had come up with a viable political equilibrium. 398 00:29:21,426 --> 00:29:22,886 Uh, one that could last. 399 00:29:22,969 --> 00:29:24,049 And Ieyasu did. 400 00:29:25,972 --> 00:29:30,312 [Benesch] So, while many people benefited greatly from the Battle of Sekigahara, 401 00:29:30,393 --> 00:29:33,693 the same cannot necessarily be said for Kobayakawa Hideaki. 402 00:29:35,148 --> 00:29:38,778 [Meyer] Despite the fact that Kobayakawa's defection sealed the deal… 403 00:29:38,860 --> 00:29:40,860 It's the reason Ieyasu won. 404 00:29:40,945 --> 00:29:42,695 …Ieyasu did not trust him. 405 00:29:42,781 --> 00:29:46,241 He betrayed one master. What's to say he wouldn't betray another? 406 00:29:48,703 --> 00:29:51,413 [Kitagawa] Hideaki was tormented 407 00:29:51,498 --> 00:29:55,338 and also felt so guilty of betraying his original house, 408 00:29:55,418 --> 00:29:59,668 which was the Toyotomi, that he literally became insane. 409 00:30:04,969 --> 00:30:06,889 [Benesch] And within two years… 410 00:30:12,018 --> 00:30:13,688 he drank himself to death. 411 00:30:22,111 --> 00:30:25,911 [Meyer] Ieyasu has, really, in many ways, secured his position. 412 00:30:25,990 --> 00:30:29,990 He's redistributed these lords in a way that is beneficial to him, 413 00:30:30,078 --> 00:30:33,328 he's established his dominance over the country, 414 00:30:33,414 --> 00:30:36,254 but Ieyasu, very importantly, I think, 415 00:30:36,334 --> 00:30:39,754 wants to establish himself as a warrior leader first and foremost, 416 00:30:39,838 --> 00:30:43,968 not someone who is bound too tightly to the old imperial court. 417 00:30:48,513 --> 00:30:52,683 In 1603, he takes the final step to cement his legitimacy. 418 00:30:54,811 --> 00:30:57,401 He'll be invested with this title of Shogun. 419 00:31:00,775 --> 00:31:03,435 [Wert] One thing to remember about the Shogun title 420 00:31:03,528 --> 00:31:05,778 is that throughout much of Japanese history, 421 00:31:05,864 --> 00:31:10,794 it was not a very influential, powerful or even desirable title. 422 00:31:10,869 --> 00:31:13,579 Many of the Shogun were simply puppets. 423 00:31:15,748 --> 00:31:19,338 Ieyasu recreates the Shogun title 424 00:31:19,419 --> 00:31:22,129 as a position of power, 425 00:31:22,213 --> 00:31:26,053 invigorating it and allowing him to control all of Japan. 426 00:31:26,134 --> 00:31:28,144 [dramatic music plays] 427 00:31:32,765 --> 00:31:35,475 Once Ieyasu is given the title of Shogun, 428 00:31:35,560 --> 00:31:40,020 he is, for the first time since the collapse of central power 429 00:31:40,106 --> 00:31:42,526 in the mid-15th century, 430 00:31:42,609 --> 00:31:44,569 standing at the apex of power in Japan. 431 00:31:51,784 --> 00:31:54,914 [Auslin] It seems to everyone that 130 years of civil war 432 00:31:54,996 --> 00:31:56,616 have finally come to an end. 433 00:31:56,706 --> 00:31:58,576 But just over a decade later, 434 00:31:58,666 --> 00:32:00,996 talk of full rebellion is brewing. 435 00:32:01,085 --> 00:32:04,665 Those who had never reconciled themselves to the victory of the Tokugawa 436 00:32:04,756 --> 00:32:07,006 begin to coalesce around the one man 437 00:32:07,091 --> 00:32:09,891 who could legitimately challenge Ieyasu for power… 438 00:32:12,347 --> 00:32:15,767 Toyotomi Hideyori, Hideyoshi's trueborn heir. 439 00:32:17,352 --> 00:32:19,732 [Segal] After the victory at Sekigahara, 440 00:32:19,812 --> 00:32:23,322 Ieyasu did not take any direct action against Hideyori, 441 00:32:23,399 --> 00:32:25,229 the heir to Hideyoshi's title. 442 00:32:25,818 --> 00:32:28,698 And the boy was able to grow up retaining his position. 443 00:32:37,747 --> 00:32:40,787 Over the years, many people came to see Hideyori 444 00:32:40,875 --> 00:32:43,705 as an alternative to Ieyasu's rise to power. 445 00:32:45,588 --> 00:32:48,298 In particular, some of the masterless samurai, 446 00:32:48,383 --> 00:32:50,843 the ronin, who've been left without position 447 00:32:50,927 --> 00:32:53,427 following the Battle of Sekigahara. 448 00:32:58,184 --> 00:33:02,064 He also has, for lack of a better word, "supporters" all over the country. 449 00:33:05,108 --> 00:33:08,488 [Benesch] Although Hideyori himself becomes a rallying point 450 00:33:08,569 --> 00:33:11,569 for many dissatisfied with the Tokugawa order… 451 00:33:12,281 --> 00:33:14,241 it is questionable to what extent 452 00:33:14,325 --> 00:33:17,195 he himself would have wanted to challenge Ieyasu. 453 00:33:17,286 --> 00:33:21,706 Ieyasu was, obviously, militarily, much more powerful, 454 00:33:21,791 --> 00:33:25,961 and it seems that Hideyori would have wanted to avoid a conflict. 455 00:33:26,462 --> 00:33:27,592 [in Japanese] Silence! 456 00:33:27,672 --> 00:33:28,802 [dramatic music plays] 457 00:33:30,383 --> 00:33:33,093 Your Highness, you must not listen to them. 458 00:33:35,930 --> 00:33:37,600 If you beg for your life, 459 00:33:38,266 --> 00:33:40,596 you'll be playing right into Tokugawa's hands. 460 00:33:40,685 --> 00:33:43,515 Even his own mother, one of his closest advisers, 461 00:33:43,604 --> 00:33:45,734 Lady Yodo, sometimes called Chacha, 462 00:33:45,815 --> 00:33:50,235 will begin to push her son to more actively defy Tokugawa Ieyasu. 463 00:33:50,319 --> 00:33:53,949 Often, actually, in defiance of advice from his own retainers, 464 00:33:54,032 --> 00:33:57,912 many of whom suggest it's better to wait for Ieyasu to die 465 00:33:57,994 --> 00:34:01,754 and to challenge his younger son, who may be less effective as a ruler. 466 00:34:03,249 --> 00:34:06,839 [in Japanese] If you are a samurai, think about regaining Toyotomi rule! 467 00:34:07,420 --> 00:34:08,550 Mother… 468 00:34:09,839 --> 00:34:13,469 Chacha does not want to wait. She wants the challenge to happen now. 469 00:34:14,260 --> 00:34:15,390 Please stop. 470 00:34:18,514 --> 00:34:19,894 I want all of you to leave. 471 00:34:21,350 --> 00:34:22,480 Get out! 472 00:34:33,946 --> 00:34:36,276 [Benesch] Regardless of Hideyori's intentions, 473 00:34:36,365 --> 00:34:40,195 from the fact that tens of thousands and perhaps up to 60,000 people 474 00:34:40,286 --> 00:34:44,116 were gathering around Hideyori at Osaka Castle, 475 00:34:44,207 --> 00:34:47,997 seemed to Tokugawa Ieyasu to show that a rebellion was brewing. 476 00:34:48,086 --> 00:34:50,126 -[birds chirping] -[dramatic music plays] 477 00:34:52,006 --> 00:34:53,466 [suspenseful music plays] 478 00:34:57,678 --> 00:35:00,678 [Auslin] Ieyasu was blessed with having a lot of sons. 479 00:35:00,765 --> 00:35:04,305 He knew that his family was going to survive… 480 00:35:05,478 --> 00:35:08,188 if there were no credible power alternatives, 481 00:35:08,272 --> 00:35:10,902 and Hideyori is a credible power alternative. 482 00:35:10,983 --> 00:35:14,823 He has become a magnet for those disaffected with Tokugawa rule. 483 00:35:17,990 --> 00:35:20,200 -[in Japanese] Kill Hideyori. -Yes, sir. 484 00:35:20,910 --> 00:35:24,330 If Ieyasu wants to leave this Earth assured 485 00:35:25,164 --> 00:35:28,544 that his family will survive and his work will continue, 486 00:35:28,626 --> 00:35:30,456 he must destroy Hideyori. 487 00:35:30,545 --> 00:35:31,875 [birds chirping] 488 00:35:35,550 --> 00:35:37,640 [Meyer] He determines now to do something 489 00:35:37,718 --> 00:35:40,138 he begins to think he should have done years ago. 490 00:35:41,848 --> 00:35:45,348 Wipe out the last traces of the Toyotomi bloodline. 491 00:35:45,434 --> 00:35:47,064 [dramatic music plays] 492 00:35:52,483 --> 00:35:57,993 [narrator] Ieyasu marches 194,000 troops to besiege Osaka Castle. 493 00:35:58,948 --> 00:36:02,908 Joined by loyal allies, including Date Masamune, 494 00:36:02,994 --> 00:36:07,124 thousands die as Ieyasu's forces lay siege to the fortress. 495 00:36:08,166 --> 00:36:11,626 The fighting is ferocious, but the defenders hold fast. 496 00:36:12,170 --> 00:36:17,800 But, finally, in June 1615, Osaka Castle's formidable defenses fall. 497 00:36:18,426 --> 00:36:19,506 [crackling] 498 00:36:22,722 --> 00:36:26,142 [Benesch] After many months of fighting and siege, 499 00:36:26,225 --> 00:36:30,935 the Tokugawa cannons are raining down on Osaka Castle. 500 00:36:31,022 --> 00:36:33,022 Parts of the castle are burning. 501 00:36:34,400 --> 00:36:35,610 [chokes] 502 00:36:35,693 --> 00:36:37,703 [cannons firing in distance] 503 00:36:44,118 --> 00:36:46,618 [Auslin] Hideyori must have known that it was over. 504 00:36:51,667 --> 00:36:55,457 He'd become a pawn for those dissatisfied with Tokugawa rule, 505 00:36:55,546 --> 00:36:58,666 and he'd been manipulated into starting a war he could not win. 506 00:36:58,758 --> 00:37:00,258 [crackling] 507 00:37:01,928 --> 00:37:04,428 The flames are rising through Osaka Castle. 508 00:37:04,513 --> 00:37:07,233 It's clear that any more resistance is futile. 509 00:37:09,185 --> 00:37:10,845 [cannons firing in distance] 510 00:37:39,340 --> 00:37:41,130 [dramatic music plays] 511 00:37:42,760 --> 00:37:43,930 [groans] 512 00:37:55,147 --> 00:37:56,517 [groans softly] 513 00:38:02,071 --> 00:38:03,611 [choking cough] 514 00:38:03,698 --> 00:38:04,738 [gasps] 515 00:38:04,824 --> 00:38:06,034 [coughs] 516 00:38:09,537 --> 00:38:10,657 [thuds] 517 00:38:17,586 --> 00:38:19,046 [flames crackling] 518 00:38:24,260 --> 00:38:26,550 [Auslin] The destruction of Osaka Castle 519 00:38:26,637 --> 00:38:29,427 was as if all of the final energies 520 00:38:29,515 --> 00:38:32,885 of the civil war period were being played out, 521 00:38:32,977 --> 00:38:34,687 that there would be nothing left. 522 00:38:34,770 --> 00:38:38,400 It all had to be destroyed in order that a new era could be born. 523 00:38:44,655 --> 00:38:48,695 There's no more fighting to be done. It's finally over. 524 00:38:48,784 --> 00:38:50,374 Everyone understands that. 525 00:38:50,453 --> 00:38:53,253 And Ieyasu has outlasted everyone. 526 00:38:55,791 --> 00:38:59,001 [Meyer] The Tokugawa now have a complete stranglehold on power. 527 00:39:06,802 --> 00:39:08,802 [somber music plays] 528 00:39:15,895 --> 00:39:19,395 [Auslin] Ieyasu didn't have long to see the fruits of his last victory. 529 00:39:19,982 --> 00:39:22,402 A year after the fall of Osaka Castle, 530 00:39:22,485 --> 00:39:25,315 he lays dying from probably stomach cancer. 531 00:39:28,407 --> 00:39:30,617 [Spafford] When Ieyasu is on his deathbed, 532 00:39:30,701 --> 00:39:34,411 many of the great figures of the land come and visit to pay their respects. 533 00:39:34,497 --> 00:39:35,957 [somber music plays] 534 00:39:41,170 --> 00:39:43,420 And among these is Date Masamune, 535 00:39:43,506 --> 00:39:47,336 who is said to have visited Ieyasu and read him poetry. 536 00:39:50,346 --> 00:39:53,676 [Auslin] It appears they had a great mutual respect for each other. 537 00:39:53,766 --> 00:39:57,846 And clearly Date had acted as a loyal ally in the years after Sekigahara. 538 00:39:57,937 --> 00:39:59,267 [somber music continues] 539 00:40:17,665 --> 00:40:20,785 Tokugawa Ieyasu, an old badger, 540 00:40:20,876 --> 00:40:27,166 a wily old creature who had survived the storms and battles… 541 00:40:33,639 --> 00:40:34,809 passed away… 542 00:40:36,225 --> 00:40:39,345 having simply outlived all of his enemies. 543 00:40:45,109 --> 00:40:47,109 [wind whistling] 544 00:40:50,865 --> 00:40:52,945 [Auslin] The great warlords, 545 00:40:53,033 --> 00:40:54,663 through this entire period, 546 00:40:54,743 --> 00:40:58,753 were the ones who understood that there was something beyond war. 547 00:40:58,831 --> 00:41:02,421 That's what Tokugawa Ieyasu gives them, is that chance. 548 00:41:03,711 --> 00:41:08,761 He's created an incredibly durable system for governing Japan 549 00:41:08,841 --> 00:41:10,971 in an era after war. 550 00:41:11,051 --> 00:41:13,101 He was lucky in that he had many sons. 551 00:41:13,179 --> 00:41:15,179 He had a line that could continue on. 552 00:41:15,264 --> 00:41:18,774 So, he had luck, but he had wisdom. 553 00:41:18,851 --> 00:41:20,021 And because of that, 554 00:41:20,102 --> 00:41:23,732 the system that he created lasted for two and a half centuries. 555 00:41:26,775 --> 00:41:28,395 It's an incredible achievement. 556 00:41:33,866 --> 00:41:35,276 [dramatic music plays] 557 00:41:35,367 --> 00:41:38,747 [Meyer] Tokugawa Ieyasu's death marks the passing of this era, 558 00:41:38,829 --> 00:41:42,629 where, all of a sudden, this military order is falling away 559 00:41:42,708 --> 00:41:46,798 and the samurai now are warriors who rule over a country at peace. 560 00:41:47,171 --> 00:41:49,171 -[groans] -[soldiers yelling] 561 00:41:49,256 --> 00:41:51,506 [Auslin] They have known nothing but battle 562 00:41:51,592 --> 00:41:53,092 -for a century. -[screams] 563 00:41:53,177 --> 00:41:55,887 [Auslin] They are born into it, raised into it. 564 00:41:55,971 --> 00:41:57,311 They are educated into it. 565 00:41:57,389 --> 00:42:00,889 These are probably the greatest warriors history has ever known. 566 00:42:01,810 --> 00:42:03,600 All of a sudden, there's no war. 567 00:42:03,687 --> 00:42:05,357 [dramatic music plays] 568 00:42:08,359 --> 00:42:09,319 [thunder cracks] 569 00:42:09,401 --> 00:42:13,491 [Meyer] Very quickly, you see this incredible transformation of the samurai. 570 00:42:14,990 --> 00:42:19,330 Instead of focusing purely on war and conflict and strategy… 571 00:42:20,788 --> 00:42:24,668 there's an increasing focus on philosophy, duty, honor. 572 00:42:24,750 --> 00:42:26,170 What does it mean to serve? 573 00:42:26,252 --> 00:42:29,842 What does it mean to be a warrior in an age of peace? 574 00:42:30,381 --> 00:42:32,931 And so, within just a couple of decades, 575 00:42:33,008 --> 00:42:36,598 the samurai are in many ways unrecognizable from what they had been. 576 00:42:38,973 --> 00:42:40,643 [Auslin] But the samurais' legacy 577 00:42:40,724 --> 00:42:44,404 in the transformation of a country from one of bloody civil war to peace 578 00:42:44,478 --> 00:42:46,728 stands like a colossus over Japan. 579 00:42:51,986 --> 00:42:54,606 The century of warfare, 580 00:42:54,697 --> 00:42:58,987 as tragic as it was, and as destructive and brutal as it was, 581 00:42:59,076 --> 00:43:02,576 provided 250 years of peace, 582 00:43:02,663 --> 00:43:06,543 and that's an achievement that is actually quite rare in human history. 583 00:43:13,299 --> 00:43:15,299 [closing theme plays]