| Following the [[Kiyosu Conference]], Nobuo received much of [[Owari province|Owari]] as well as [[Ise province|Ise]]. His claim to his father's position was supported in [[1584]] by [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] and as a result the [[Komaki Campaign]] was conducted, for the most part in Owari. Nobuo felt compelled to make a separate peace with Hideyoshi by the end of the year and as a result was allowed to retain some of his lands in Owari and went on to lead troops under [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi|Hideyoshi's]] standard during the [[1590]] [[Odawara Campaign]]. Hideyoshi later banished him to a small 20,000 koku fief in [[Dewa province|Dewa]] after an argument. He shaved his head, became a monk, and took the name Joshin to make amends. Hideyoshi subsequently pardoned him and he returned to Ise, eventually settling in the city of [[Fushimi]]. Nobuo backed the forces of [[Ishida Mitsunari]] during the [[Battle of Sekigahara|Sekigahara]] campaign in [[1600]] and again found himself dispossessed, this time by Tokugawa Ieyasu. [[Toyotomi Hideyori|Toyotomi Hideyori's]] mother, [[Yodo-gimi]], attempted to enlist his aid against Ieyasu. Nobuo declined and moved to [[Kyoto]]. As a reward, Nobuo was given a 50,000 koku fief in [[Yamato provine|Yamato]] after the conclusion of the [[Osaka Campaign]] in [[1615]]. | | Following the [[Kiyosu Conference]], Nobuo received much of [[Owari province|Owari]] as well as [[Ise province|Ise]]. His claim to his father's position was supported in [[1584]] by [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] and as a result the [[Komaki Campaign]] was conducted, for the most part in Owari. Nobuo felt compelled to make a separate peace with Hideyoshi by the end of the year and as a result was allowed to retain some of his lands in Owari and went on to lead troops under [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi|Hideyoshi's]] standard during the [[1590]] [[Odawara Campaign]]. Hideyoshi later banished him to a small 20,000 koku fief in [[Dewa province|Dewa]] after an argument. He shaved his head, became a monk, and took the name Joshin to make amends. Hideyoshi subsequently pardoned him and he returned to Ise, eventually settling in the city of [[Fushimi]]. Nobuo backed the forces of [[Ishida Mitsunari]] during the [[Battle of Sekigahara|Sekigahara]] campaign in [[1600]] and again found himself dispossessed, this time by Tokugawa Ieyasu. [[Toyotomi Hideyori|Toyotomi Hideyori's]] mother, [[Yodo-gimi]], attempted to enlist his aid against Ieyasu. Nobuo declined and moved to [[Kyoto]]. As a reward, Nobuo was given a 50,000 koku fief in [[Yamato provine|Yamato]] after the conclusion of the [[Osaka Campaign]] in [[1615]]. |
− | He received the title Chûnagon in [[1585]]. | + | He received the title Chûnagon & post of [[Naidaijin]] in [[1585]], and is thus sometimes referred to as Naifu Jôshin.<ref>Joyce Ackroyd, ''Told Round a Brushwood Fire'', Princeton University Press (1979), 283n75.</ref> |