Difference between revisions of "Hosokawa clan"

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==Selected Genealogy of the Hosokawa==
 
==Selected Genealogy of the Hosokawa==
 
[[Image:HosokawaGraves.jpg|right|thumb|300px|The graves of the heads of the Hosokawa clan from Fujitaka (1534-1610) to Narimori (1804-1860), at [[Koto-in|Kôtô-in]], a [[tatchu|sub-temple]] of [[Daitokuji]], in Kyoto.]]
 
[[Image:HosokawaGraves.jpg|right|thumb|300px|The graves of the heads of the Hosokawa clan from Fujitaka (1534-1610) to Narimori (1804-1860), at [[Koto-in|Kôtô-in]], a [[tatchu|sub-temple]] of [[Daitokuji]], in Kyoto.]]
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===Medieval Period===
 
*[[Ashikaga Yoshisue]]
 
*[[Ashikaga Yoshisue]]
 
**[[Ashikaga Yoriharu]] (1299-1352) - great-grandson of Yoshisue
 
**[[Ashikaga Yoriharu]] (1299-1352) - great-grandson of Yoshisue
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******[[Hosokawa Katsumoto]] (1430-1473) - son of Mochiyuki
 
******[[Hosokawa Katsumoto]] (1430-1473) - son of Mochiyuki
 
...
 
...
*[[Hosokawa Fujitaka]] (Yûsai, 1534-1610) - first Edo period family head
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*[[Hosokawa Yoriari]]
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**[[Hosokawa Yorinaga]] - son of Yoriari
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***[[Hosokawa Mochiari]] - son of Yorinaga
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****[[Hosokawa Noriharu]] - son of Mochiari
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*****[[Hosokawa Tsuneari]] - son of Noriharu
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******[[Hosokawa Masaari]] - son of Tsuneari
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*******[[Hosokawa Motoari]] - son of Masaari
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********[[Hosokawa Mototsune]] - son of Motoari
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===Edo Period + 20th century===
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*[[Hosokawa Fujitaka]] (Yûsai, 1534-1610) - first Edo period family head; son of Mototsune
 
**[[Hosokawa Tadaoki]] (Sansai, 1563-1646) - son of Fujitaka; second Edo period family head
 
**[[Hosokawa Tadaoki]] (Sansai, 1563-1646) - son of Fujitaka; second Edo period family head
 
**[[Hosokawa Gracia]] (1563-1600) - wife of Tadaoki
 
**[[Hosokawa Gracia]] (1563-1600) - wife of Tadaoki
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************[[Hosokawa Yoshikuni]] (Yoshiyuki, 1835-1876) - son of Narimori, 13th Edo pd family head
 
************[[Hosokawa Yoshikuni]] (Yoshiyuki, 1835-1876) - son of Narimori, 13th Edo pd family head
 
************[[Hosokawa Morihisa]] (1839-1893) - son of Narimori, 14th Edo pd family head, last lord of Kumamoto, [[Marquis]]
 
************[[Hosokawa Morihisa]] (1839-1893) - son of Narimori, 14th Edo pd family head, last lord of Kumamoto, [[Marquis]]
*************[[Hosokawa Morishige]] - son of Morihisa, 15th family head, Marquis
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*************[[Hosokawa Morishige]] (1868-1914) - son of Morihisa, 15th family head, Marquis
*************[[Hosokawa Moritatsu]] - son of Morihisa, 16th family head, Marquis
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*************[[Hosokawa Moritatsu]] (1883-1970) - son of Morihisa, 16th family head, Marquis
**************Hosokawa Morisada - son of Moritatsu, 17th family head, Marquis
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**************Hosokawa Morisada (1912-2005) - son of Moritatsu, 17th family head, Marquis
***************Hosokawa Morihiro - son of Morisada, Prime Minister of Japan (1993-1994)
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***************Hosokawa Morihiro (b. 1938) - son of Morisada, Prime Minister of Japan (1993-1994)
 
*[[Hosokawa Okinori (1723-1785)]]
 
*[[Hosokawa Okinori (1723-1785)]]
 
*[[Hosokawa Okinori (1759-1837)]]
 
*[[Hosokawa Okinori (1759-1837)]]
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{{biodict}}
 
{{biodict}}
 
*[http://www.eiseibunko.com/hosokawa_family.html Hosokawa-ke ryakkei-zu], Eisei Bunko.
 
*[http://www.eiseibunko.com/hosokawa_family.html Hosokawa-ke ryakkei-zu], Eisei Bunko.
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*General museum overview pamphlet, Kumamoto Prefectural Museum of Art.
  
 
[[Category:Clans]]
 
[[Category:Clans]]

Revision as of 18:40, 22 May 2017

The Hosokawa kamon.
  • Japanese: 細川(Hosokawa-ke)

The Hosokawa were descended from Ashikaga Yoshiyasu (1126-1157), whose great-grandson Ashikaga Yoshisue took the name Hosokawa. Yoshisue's own great-grandson Yoriharu (1299-1352) was a staunch supporter of Ashikaga Takauji during the early Nanbokuchô period. As a result the Hosokawa became influential under the Ashikaga shôguns as a powerful shugo family. Hosokawa Yoriyuki (1329-1392) served as the first kanrei (Deputy/Vice-shôgun) and acted as guardian and counsel to Ashikaga Yoshimitsu. Hosokawa Katsumoto (1430-1473) was one of the most powerful figures in Kyoto politics in his day and shugo of much of Shikoku Island. In part as a result of a succession dispute surrounding Shôgun Ashikaga Yoshimasa, Katsumoto and Yamana Mochitoyo, another powerful shugo, became involved in a conflict that consumed Kyoto and would become known as the Ônin War (1467-77). In the aftermath of this struggle, which is often marked as the opening of the Sengoku Period, the Hosokawa managed to retain their hold on Kyoto into the 16th century. Internal struggles and the rise of the Miyoshi, formerly Hosokawa retainers, led to the eclipse of the Hosokawa by 1550. One branch of the family survived to much success under Hosokawa Fujitaka and his son Tadaoki. Thanks to their efforts, the Hosokawa family would endure as daimyô of Kumamoto han to the end of the Edo Period.

In the Meiji period, the head of the Hosokawa family was named a Marquis (kôshaku) in the new kazoku aristocracy, and held a seat in the House of Peers. The family's private collections, including a wealth of historical documents, artworks, arms & armor, and other artifacts, are today managed as the Eisei Bunko.

Selected Genealogy of the Hosokawa

The graves of the heads of the Hosokawa clan from Fujitaka (1534-1610) to Narimori (1804-1860), at Kôtô-in, a sub-temple of Daitokuji, in Kyoto.

Medieval Period

...

Edo Period + 20th century

References