Difference between revisions of "1651"
From SamuraiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to searchm (which Kanzaburo?) |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
==Timeline of 1651== | ==Timeline of 1651== | ||
− | * 1651/1/19 [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu]] | + | * 1651/1/19 [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu]] invites [[Nakamura Kanzaburo I|Nakamura Kanzaburô I]] to [[Edo castle]]. |
* 1651/4/20 Tokugawa Iemitsu dies. | * 1651/4/20 Tokugawa Iemitsu dies. | ||
* 1651/4 [[Hoshina Masayuki]] named to be assistant of [[Tokugawa Ietsuna]]. | * 1651/4 [[Hoshina Masayuki]] named to be assistant of [[Tokugawa Ietsuna]]. |
Revision as of 06:50, 9 July 2007
Keian 4 (慶安四年)
Timeline of 1651
- 1651/1/19 Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu invites Nakamura Kanzaburô I to Edo castle.
- 1651/4/20 Tokugawa Iemitsu dies.
- 1651/4 Hoshina Masayuki named to be assistant of Tokugawa Ietsuna.
- 1651/7/9 Matsudaira Sadamasa returns his territory to Bakufu.
- 1651/7 The Keian Uprising, a scheme to overthrow the shogunate, fails.
- 1651/8/18 Shogun Senge ceremony at Edo castle.
Births and Deaths
- 1651/1/5 Môri Hidenari, daimyô of Chôshû han, dies (b. 1595).
- 1651/3/15 Mizuno Katsunari, daimyô of Fukuyama han, dies (b. 1564).
- 1651/4/20 Tokugawa Iemitsu dies (b. 1604).
- 1651/4/20 Rôjû Hotta Masamori commits junshi seppuku (b. 1609).
- Takemoto Gidayû, innovator in jôruri chanting, born (d. 1714).
- Yui Shôsetsu (b. 1605), leader of the Keian Uprising, commits seppuku.
- Marubashi Chûya, leader of the Keian Uprising, is crucified along with 33 of his co-conspirators.