− | The 2nd son and heir of [[Ikeda Nobuteru]], Terumasa held [[Ikejiri castle|Ikejiri Castle]] ([[Mino province|Mino Province]]) and joined his father in fighting for Hideyoshi in the [[Komaki Campaign]] ([[1584]]). He led troops at [[Battle of Nagakute|Nagakute]] (1584), the battle in which his father was killed. In [[1590]], following the transfer of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] to the [[Kanto province|Kanto]], Terumasa was established at Yoshida in [[Mikawa province|Mikawa]], a 152,000 koku fief. In [[1594]] Terumasa married one of Tokugawa’s daughters, and after Hideyoshi’s death in [[1598]], the [[Ikeda clan|Ikeda]] drifted into Ieyasu’s camp. When the [[Sekigahara Campaign]] began in the fall of [[1600]], Terumasa immediately sided with Tokugawa; on 28 September he competed with [[Fukushima Masanori]] to be the first to attack Gifu, held by [[Oda Hidenobu]]. At the [[Battle of Sekigahara]] Ikeda commanded 4,500 troops in the rear guard and saw some desultory fighting with [[Chosokabe Morichika|Chosokabe Morichika’s]] contingent as the battle wound down. Following the Tokugawa victory, Terumasa was given a 520,000-koku fief in [[Harima province|Harima]], centered on [[Himeji castle|Himeji Castle]] (which he greatly expanded). In [[1603]] [[Bizen province|Bizen]] was added to Terumasa’s territory, and this he assigned to his eldest son, Toshitaka ([[1584]]-[[1616]]). By the time of Terumasa’s death in 1613, the Ikeda had grown to rule over Harima, Bizen, [[Inaba province|Inaba]], and [[Awaji province|Awaji]], with a combined income of around 1,000,000-koku. Terumasa himself had come to be nicknamed saigoku no shogun, or, ‘The Shogun of Western Japan’. Following the death of Toshitaka, the Tokugawa Bakufu took steps to reduce the alarming power of the Ikeda and eventually reduced the family to Tottori (Inaba) and Okayama (Bizen).
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| + | The 2nd son and heir of [[Ikeda Nobuteru]], Terumasa held [[Ikejiri castle|Ikejiri Castle]] ([[Mino province]]) and joined his father in fighting for Hideyoshi in the [[Komaki Campaign]] ([[1584]]). He led troops at [[Battle of Nagakute|Nagakute]] (1584), the battle in which his father was killed. In [[1590]], following the transfer of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] to the [[Kanto]], Terumasa was established at Yoshida in [[Mikawa province|Mikawa]], a 152,000 koku fief. In [[1594]] Terumasa married one of Tokugawa’s daughters, and after Hideyoshi’s death in [[1598]], the [[Ikeda clan|Ikeda]] drifted into Ieyasu’s camp. When the [[Sekigahara Campaign]] began in the fall of [[1600]], Terumasa immediately sided with Tokugawa; on 28 September he competed with [[Fukushima Masanori]] to be the first to attack Gifu, held by [[Oda Hidenobu]]. At the [[Battle of Sekigahara]] Ikeda commanded 4,500 troops in the rear guard and saw some desultory fighting with [[Chosokabe Morichika|Chosokabe Morichika’s]] contingent as the battle wound down. Following the Tokugawa victory, Terumasa was given a 520,000-koku fief in [[Harima province|Harima]], centered on [[Himeji castle|Himeji Castle]] (which he greatly expanded). In [[1603]] [[Bizen province|Bizen]] was added to Terumasa’s territory, and this he assigned to his eldest son, Toshitaka ([[1584]]-[[1616]]). By the time of Terumasa’s death in 1613, the Ikeda had grown to rule over Harima, Bizen, [[Inaba province|Inaba]], and [[Awaji province|Awaji]], with a combined income of around 1,000,000-koku. Terumasa himself had come to be nicknamed saigoku no shogun, or, ‘The Shogun of Western Japan’. Following the death of Toshitaka, the Tokugawa Bakufu took steps to reduce the alarming power of the Ikeda and eventually reduced the family to Tottori (Inaba) and Okayama (Bizen). |