By 1638, the palace, gates, yagura and other structures were reconstructed, but notably, the donjon was not, since Sunpu was ruled by an appointed administrator, rather than by a daimyo.Īfter the Meiji Restoration, the final Tokugawa Shogun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, resigned his post and moved to Sunpu in retirement. In 1635, most of Sunpu burned down in a fire, which also consumed the buildings of Sunpu Castle. These officials were called the Sunpu jōdai ( 駿府城代) or Sushū Rioban, and were most often appointed from the ranks of the Ōbangashira. After Ieyasu’s death in 1616, Sunpu Castle remained the seat of government for the surrounding Sunpu Domain, which for most of its existence was a tenryō territory governed directly by the Shogun in Edo.ĭuring this period, a series of appointed overseers were based at Sunpu Castle to serve as administrators for the region. When this burned down in 1610, the daimyo were ordered to rebuild it immediately, this time with a seven-story donjon. As part of the Tokugawa policy to sap potential rivals of economic strength, daimyo from around the country were called upon to rebuild Sumpu Castle in 1607 with a triple moat system, keep and palace. With the formation of the Tokugawa shogunate, Ieyasu turned the title of Shogun over to his son Tokugawa Hidetada, and retired to Sunpu, where he set up a shadow government to maintain effective rule over the country from behind the scenes. After the defeat of the Late Hōjō clan at the Battle of Odawara by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Ieyasu was forced to change his domains in the Tōkai region with the provinces of the Kantō region, and turned Sunpu Castle over to Toyotomi retainer Nakamura Kazuichi in 1590.Īfter the defeat of the Toyotomi at the Battle of Sekigahara, Ieyasu recovered Sumpu. He took up residence at the castle in 1586, along with his favored consort, Lady Saigo, and their two sons, Hidetada and Tadayoshi. In 1585, Ieyasu constructed a new Sunpu Castle on the approximate site of the former fortified Imagawa residence. ![]() After Imagawa Yoshimoto was defeated at the Battle of Okehazama in 1560, Suruga Province passed to the Takeda clan, and then to Tokugawa Ieyasu, who had spent his youth in Sunpu as Yoshimoto's hostage. It is not certain exactly when a castle was built on this site. ![]() If yes then you guys need to use Takuma's bomb to kill them before entering the well.During the Muromachi period, the Imagawa clan ruled Suruga province from their base at Sunpu (modern-day Shizuoka City). I don't know whether the others also have an enemy got stuck before entering the well. But then I managed to enter well A without any problem. I threw him into a well and his vision cone remains coming out from the well. What happened is that The Samurai still seemed to be stuck standing with his vision cone, but was actually dead and I could actually pick him up. The only solution I found is that I need to use Takuma's bomb to kill the Samurai. If I try to just leave the Samurai like that and enter the well, then I get the same problem as OP. ![]() If I shot him (either with normal pistols or Takuma's rifle), then my char got stuck without actually firing the shot, while the Samurai remains stuck aswell. Even more bizzarely, if I try attacking him with melee attacks, my char will be frozen in his place and then he will walk away (normally this samurai doesn't patrol, only stands there). Aiko's powder affected his vision cone but he's still stuck. Hayato's shuriken and Yuki's trap don't work on him (which is normal), but he won't react to it. He would not react to my chars entering his vision cone, he would not react to any distraction (rock, wisthle, Kuma). He turned to face Kuma and at the same time he caught a glimpse of one of my char, his vision cone became half purple, half yellow, and he was stuck. I lured a Guard with Kuma and the Samurai got caught in Kuma's howl radius. Prior to entering well A, I had this one Samurai that is just standing near the ledge bugged. I also got stuck here and found a fix that worked for me.
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