Difference between revisions of "So Yoshimichi"

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(Created page with "*''Born: 1684/1/19'' *''Died: 1718/9/5'' *''Titles: Tsushima no kami, Lord of Tsushima han (1694-1718)'' *''Other Names'': 次郎 ''(Jiro...")
 
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Sô Yoshimichi<ref>Some sources refer to him as Sô Yoshikata, but this may be simply a misreading of the name. e.g. Joyce Ackroyd, ''Told Round a Brushwood Fire'', Princeton University Press (1979), 314n72.</ref> was lord of [[Tsushima han]] in the early years of the 18th century.
 
Sô Yoshimichi<ref>Some sources refer to him as Sô Yoshikata, but this may be simply a misreading of the name. e.g. Joyce Ackroyd, ''Told Round a Brushwood Fire'', Princeton University Press (1979), 314n72.</ref> was lord of [[Tsushima han]] in the early years of the 18th century.
 
   
 
   
He was the fourth son of [[So Yoshizane|Sô Yoshizane]], and became the fifth lord of Tsushima in [[1694]]. On the occasion of [[Tokugawa Ienobu]] becoming [[shogun]], Yoshimichi accompanied the [[1711]] [[Korean embassy to Edo]]. As lord of Tsushima, he also added the 1,560 ''[[koku]]'' territory of Tashiro in [[Hizen province]] to his domain.
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He was the fourth son of [[So Yoshizane|Sô Yoshizane]], and became the fifth lord of Tsushima in [[1694]]. Yoshimichi accompanied the [[1711]] [[Korean embassy to Edo]] which took place in honor of [[Tokugawa Ienobu]] becoming shogun two years prior. As lord of Tsushima, he also added the 1,560 ''[[koku]]'' territory of Tashiro in [[Hizen province]] to his domain.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 03:05, 20 March 2014

Sô Yoshimichi[1] was lord of Tsushima han in the early years of the 18th century.

He was the fourth son of Sô Yoshizane, and became the fifth lord of Tsushima in 1694. Yoshimichi accompanied the 1711 Korean embassy to Edo which took place in honor of Tokugawa Ienobu becoming shogun two years prior. As lord of Tsushima, he also added the 1,560 koku territory of Tashiro in Hizen province to his domain.

References

  • "Sô Yoshimichi," Nihon jinmei daijiten 日本人名大辞典, Kodansha 2009.
  1. Some sources refer to him as Sô Yoshikata, but this may be simply a misreading of the name. e.g. Joyce Ackroyd, Told Round a Brushwood Fire, Princeton University Press (1979), 314n72.