Difference between revisions of "Ashikaga Yoshiaki (Oyumi Kubo)"

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Yoshiaki was a son of [[Ashikaga Masauji]] ([[1466]]-[[1531]]) and a grandson of [[Ashikaga Shigeuji]]. He was established at [[Oyumi castle]] in Shimôsa Province around [[1525]] by the [[Takeda clan|Takeda]] of Kazusa (Oyumi thus became nicknamed the headquarters of the Oyumi kubô and Yoshiaki was called the Oyumi Gosho). He led troops to join [[Satomi Yoshitaka]] in an attack on the Hôjô domain that culminated in the crushing [[Battle of Konodai|defeat at Konodai]] in 1538. In the course of the battle, Yoshiaki was killed along with his son Yoshizumi. He should not, of course, be confused with the [[Ashikaga Yoshiaki (Shogun)|Ashikaga Yoshiaki]] whom [[Oda Nobunaga|Nobunaga]] established in [[Kyoto]] in [[1568]] and who proved to be the last Ashikaga shôgun.
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Yoshiaki was a son of [[Ashikaga Masauji]] ([[1466]]-[[1531]]) and a grandson of [[Ashikaga Shigeuji]]. He was established at [[Oyumi castle]] in Shimôsa Province around [[1525]] by the [[Takeda clan|Takeda]] of Kazusa (Oyumi thus became nicknamed the headquarters of the Oyumi kubô and Yoshiaki was called the Oyumi Gosho). He led troops to join [[Satomi Yoshitaka]] in an attack on the Hôjô domain that culminated in the crushing [[First Battle of Konodai|defeat at Konodai]] in 1538. In the course of the battle, Yoshiaki was killed along with his son Yoshizumi. He should not, of course, be confused with the [[Ashikaga Yoshiaki (Shogun)|Ashikaga Yoshiaki]] whom [[Oda Nobunaga|Nobunaga]] established in [[Kyoto]] in [[1568]] and who proved to be the last Ashikaga shôgun.
  
 
[[Category:Samurai]]
 
[[Category:Samurai]]
 
[[Category:Sengoku Period]]
 
[[Category:Sengoku Period]]

Revision as of 00:01, 21 October 2006


Yoshiaki was a son of Ashikaga Masauji (1466-1531) and a grandson of Ashikaga Shigeuji. He was established at Oyumi castle in Shimôsa Province around 1525 by the Takeda of Kazusa (Oyumi thus became nicknamed the headquarters of the Oyumi kubô and Yoshiaki was called the Oyumi Gosho). He led troops to join Satomi Yoshitaka in an attack on the Hôjô domain that culminated in the crushing defeat at Konodai in 1538. In the course of the battle, Yoshiaki was killed along with his son Yoshizumi. He should not, of course, be confused with the Ashikaga Yoshiaki whom Nobunaga established in Kyoto in 1568 and who proved to be the last Ashikaga shôgun.