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Created page with "*''Other Names'': お古牟の方 ''(Okomu no kata)'' *''Japanese'': 法心院 ''(Hôshin-in)'' Okomu no kata, also known by her Buddhist honorary name Hôshin-in, was a conc..."
*''Other Names'': お古牟の方 ''(Okomu no kata)''
*''Japanese'': 法心院 ''(Hôshin-in)''

Okomu no kata, also known by her Buddhist honorary name Hôshin-in, was a concubine of [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]].

She gave birth to Ienobu's first son, a boy named Iechiyo, on [[1707]]/7/11, and was promoted within the hierarchy of the [[Ooku|Ôoku]] as a result; granted the status of ''[[oheya]]'', she was given her own room within the Ôoku compound. However, little Iechiyo died two months after being born.

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==References==
*Cecilia Segawa Seigle, “Tokugawa Tsunayoshi and the Formation of Edo Castle Rituals of Giving,” in Martha Chaiklin (ed.), ''Mediated by Gifts: Politics and Society in Japan 1350-1850'', Brill (2017), 126, 136.

[[Category:Women]]
[[Category:Edo Period]]
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