Difference between revisions of "Yamauchi Tadayoshi"

From SamuraiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Copied from Bio. Dict.)
 
Line 4: Line 4:
  
  
Tadayoshi was the son of [[Yamauchi Yasutoyo]] and succeeded [[Yamauchi Kazutoyo|Kazutoyo]] as [[daimyo|daimyô]] of Tosa when the latter died childless. He rendered service to the [[Tokugawa clan|Tokugawa]] at the [[Osaka Campaign|Osaka Castle campaigns]].
+
Tadayoshi was the son of [[Yamauchi Yasutoyo]] and succeeded [[Yamauchi Kazutoyo|Kazutoyo]] as [[daimyo|daimyô]] of Tosa when the latter died childless. He rendered service to the [[Tokugawa clan|Tokugawa]] in a number of significant ways, including at the [[Osaka Campaign|Osaka Castle campaigns]], and was granted use of the honorary name [[Matsudaira clan|Matsudaira]] in [[1610]], by [[Tokugawa Hidetada]].<ref>Luke Roberts, "Cultivating Non-National Historical Understandings in Local History," Joshua Fogel (ed.) ''The Teleology of the Nation-State'', Univ of Pennsylvania Press (2004), 167.</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{biodict}}
 
{{biodict}}
 +
<references/>
  
 
[[Category:Samurai]][[Category:Sengoku Period]]
 
[[Category:Samurai]][[Category:Sengoku Period]]
 +
[[Category:Edo Period]]

Revision as of 18:37, 25 January 2014


Tadayoshi was the son of Yamauchi Yasutoyo and succeeded Kazutoyo as daimyô of Tosa when the latter died childless. He rendered service to the Tokugawa in a number of significant ways, including at the Osaka Castle campaigns, and was granted use of the honorary name Matsudaira in 1610, by Tokugawa Hidetada.[1]

References

  1. Luke Roberts, "Cultivating Non-National Historical Understandings in Local History," Joshua Fogel (ed.) The Teleology of the Nation-State, Univ of Pennsylvania Press (2004), 167.