Sanada clan
The Sanada (真田) family was from the village of Sanada in the Chiisagata District (小県郡) in northern Shinano province. They served the Takeda clan and even captured Numata castle (沼田城) in NW Kozuke province. After the fall of the Takeda in 1582, they took over the Chiisagata District and built Ueda castle (上田城), even defeating an attack by Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1585.
In 1600 at the time of the Battle of Sekigahara, Masayuki and Nobushige (Yukimura) supported the 'western' side and were exiled, but Nobuyuki, who had supported Ieyasu, kept Ueda and Numata. In 1622 Nubuyuki was moved from Ueda to Matsushiro (松代) in Shinano. The Matsushiro branch continued to rule there until the Restoration, but Numata was confiscated in 1681.
Members of the Sanada clan | |
Served Takeda Shingen from about 1544
Brother of Yukitaka; he worked closely with his family
Eldest son of Yukitaka; he was killed at the Battle of Nagashino
Second son of Yukitaka; he was killed at the Battle of Nagashino
Third son of Yukitaka; he built Ueda castle and fought off the Tokogawas twice, but was exiled to Kii province in 1600.
Fourth son of Yukitaka; he served the Takeda then Ieyasu. He became a hatamoto in the Edo period.
Fifth son of Yukitaka.
Eldest son of Masayuki; he supported Ieyasu in 1600.
Daughter of Honda Tadakatsu, adopted daughter of Ieyasu, wife of Nobuyuki.
Second son of Masayuki; he was exiled to Kii province with his father in 1600 and fought for Osaka in the Osaka Campaigns of 1614-15
Elder son of Nobuyuki; he died before his father.
Second son of Nobuyuki; he became daimyo of Matsushiro
Son of Yukimura; he fought with his father in the Osaka Campaigns and died there.
Son of Nobuyoshi; he became daimyo of Numata, | |
Source
Sanada Clan in Popular Culture
The Sanada family has always been popular in Japan, especially Yukimura.
From 1974-82 Ikenami Shôtarô (池波正太郎) (1923-1990) wrote a serial Sanada Taihei-ki (真田太平記) for the weekly magazine Shûkan Asahi. (It was published in 16 volumes from 1974-83). From April 1985-March 86 it was dramatized weekly on NHK. There is a museum for the book in Ueda. 池波正太郎 真田太平記館 (Ikenami Shôtarô Sanada Taiheiki Kan).
Sources
http://www.city.ueda.nagano.jp/shokoka/ikenami2/top.htm (Taiheiki Kan)
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/真田太平記_(テレビドラマ) 真田太平記_(テレビドラマ) (Sanada Taiheiki--TV drama)