Difference between revisions of "Denzu-in"
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===Other=== | ===Other=== | ||
*[[Kiyokawa Hachiro|Kiyokawa Hachirô]] (member of [[Roshigumi|Rôshigumi]]) | *[[Kiyokawa Hachiro|Kiyokawa Hachirô]] (member of [[Roshigumi|Rôshigumi]]) | ||
− | *[[Reizei Tametsugi]]<!--冷泉為系--> | + | *[[Koizumi Chikashi]] (poet) |
+ | *[[Reizei Tametsugi]]<!--冷泉為系--> (court noble) | ||
*[[Sato Haruo|Satô Haruo]] (novelist) | *[[Sato Haruo|Satô Haruo]] (novelist) | ||
+ | *[[Sawa Nobuyoshi]] (court noble) | ||
*[[Sugiura Shigetake]] ([[Meiji period]] educator) | *[[Sugiura Shigetake]] ([[Meiji period]] educator) | ||
+ | *[[Takabatake Tatsushiro|Takabatake Tatsushirô]] (''[[yoga|yôga]]'' painter) | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 11:06, 7 May 2020
- Japanese: 伝通院 (Denzû-in)
Denzû-in is a Buddhist temple in the Koishikawa neigborhood of Bunkyô-ku, Tokyo. It is the site of the graves of Odai no kata (mother of Tokugawa Ieyasu), Sen-hime (daughter of Tokugawa Hidetada & Oeyo; wife of Toyotomi Hideyori), and many other members of the Tokugawa clan.
Partial List of Notable Burials
Tokugawa clan
- Ja-hime (Oshika no kata, fourth daughter of Ôkubo Tadatane, concubine to Tokugawa Ienari)
- Jo-hime (ninth daughter of Tokugawa Ienari)
- Kachi-hime (14th daughter of Tokugawa Tsunanari)
- wife of Matsudaira Toshitsuna
- Moto-hime (15th daughter of Tokugawa Ienari)
- Odai no kata (mother of Tokugawa Ieyasu)
- Okaku no kata (concubine to Tokugawa Ieyoshi)
- Okume no kata (concubine to Tokugawa Yoshimune)
- Onatsu no kata (concubine to Tokugawa Ieyasu)
- Otose no kata (concubine to Shimazu Shigehide, mother of Kodai-in (wife of Tokugawa Ienari))
- Oyao no kata (concubine to Tokugawa Ienari)
- Sei-hime (daughter of Tokugawa Munetake)
- Sen-hime (daughter of Tokugawa Hidetada & Oeyo; wife of Toyotomi Hideyori and later of Honda Tadatoki of Himeji han)
- wife of Tokugawa Tsunashige (second son of Tokugawa Ieyasu)
- Takatsukasa Takako (wife of Tokugawa Iemitsu)
- Tokugawa Chôkichirô (16th son of Tokugawa Ieyoshi)
- Tokugawa Daigorô (third son of Tokugawa Ienobu)
- Tokugawa Iechiyo (second son of Tokugawa Ienobu)
- Tokugawa Kamematsu (third son of Tokugawa Iemitsu)
- Tokugawa Kyûgorô (20th son of Tokugawa Ienari)
- Tokugawa Shinnoshin (16th son of Tokugawa Ienari)
- Tokugawa Tomihachirô (28th son of Tokugawa Ienari)
- Tokugawa Yôshichirô (22nd son of Tokugawa Ienari)
- Yoshi-hime (second daughter of Tokugawa Yoshimune)
Other
- Kiyokawa Hachirô (member of Rôshigumi)
- Koizumi Chikashi (poet)
- Reizei Tametsugi (court noble)
- Satô Haruo (novelist)
- Sawa Nobuyoshi (court noble)
- Sugiura Shigetake (Meiji period educator)
- Takabatake Tatsushirô (yôga painter)
References
- Plaques and stone markers on-site.