Difference between revisions of "Matsudaira Tadaaki"

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* ''Born: [[1583]]''
 
* ''Born: [[1583]]''
 
* ''Died: [[1644]]''
 
* ''Died: [[1644]]''
 
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* ''Japanese'': [[松平]]忠昭 ''(Matsudaira Tadaaki)''
  
 
Tadaaki was a son of [[Okudaira Nobumasa]] and thus a grandson of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] (through his mother). He was adopted by Ieyasu and given the name Matsudaira and a 50,000-koku fief in [[Ise province]] at Kameyama in [[1610]]. He was a notable commander in the Osaka Campaigns and was afterwards given Osaka (and a domain in [[Settsu province|Settsu]] and [[Kawatchi province|Kawatchi]] worth 100,000 koku), whose town he set about rebuilding. He was transferred to Kôriyama in [[Yamato province]] (worth 120,000 koku) in August [[1619]] and in [[1639]] was relocated to Himeji in Harima and given a domain worth 180,000 koku.
 
Tadaaki was a son of [[Okudaira Nobumasa]] and thus a grandson of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] (through his mother). He was adopted by Ieyasu and given the name Matsudaira and a 50,000-koku fief in [[Ise province]] at Kameyama in [[1610]]. He was a notable commander in the Osaka Campaigns and was afterwards given Osaka (and a domain in [[Settsu province|Settsu]] and [[Kawatchi province|Kawatchi]] worth 100,000 koku), whose town he set about rebuilding. He was transferred to Kôriyama in [[Yamato province]] (worth 120,000 koku) in August [[1619]] and in [[1639]] was relocated to Himeji in Harima and given a domain worth 180,000 koku.

Revision as of 15:23, 27 December 2011

Tadaaki was a son of Okudaira Nobumasa and thus a grandson of Tokugawa Ieyasu (through his mother). He was adopted by Ieyasu and given the name Matsudaira and a 50,000-koku fief in Ise province at Kameyama in 1610. He was a notable commander in the Osaka Campaigns and was afterwards given Osaka (and a domain in Settsu and Kawatchi worth 100,000 koku), whose town he set about rebuilding. He was transferred to Kôriyama in Yamato province (worth 120,000 koku) in August 1619 and in 1639 was relocated to Himeji in Harima and given a domain worth 180,000 koku.

References