| | [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] was not asked by Hideyoshi to bring any considerable number of troops; some scholars have suggested that Hideyoshi called upon him to come to Hizen not so much for his contribution to the war, but rather to keep an eye on him while Hideyoshi and so many other powerful daimyô were absent from the remainder of the country. This would be the only time in his life that Ieyasu left [[Honshu|Honshû]].<ref>Morgan Pitelka, ''Spectacular Accumulation'', University of Hawaii Press (2016), 75.</ref> | | [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] was not asked by Hideyoshi to bring any considerable number of troops; some scholars have suggested that Hideyoshi called upon him to come to Hizen not so much for his contribution to the war, but rather to keep an eye on him while Hideyoshi and so many other powerful daimyô were absent from the remainder of the country. This would be the only time in his life that Ieyasu left [[Honshu|Honshû]].<ref>Morgan Pitelka, ''Spectacular Accumulation'', University of Hawaii Press (2016), 75.</ref> |
| − | Other daimyô encampments included those of [[Shimazu Yoshihiro]], [[Uesugi Kagekatsu]], [[Sanda Masayuki]], [[Fukushima Masanori]], [[Kato Kiyomasa|Katô Kiyomasa]], [[Hori Hideharu]], [[Nabeshima Naoshige]], [[Kinoshita Nobutoshi]], [[Maeda Toshiie]], [[Kuroda Nagamasa]], and [[Date Masamune]]. | + | Other daimyô encampments included those of [[Shimazu Yoshihiro]], [[Uesugi Kagekatsu]], [[Sanada Masayuki]], [[Fukushima Masanori]], [[Kato Kiyomasa|Katô Kiyomasa]], [[Hori Hideharu]], [[Nabeshima Naoshige]], [[Kinoshita Nobutoshi]], [[Maeda Toshiie]], [[Kuroda Nagamasa]], and [[Date Masamune]]. |