Difference between revisions of "Matsudaira Yasunaga"

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* ''Other name: Toda Yasunaga''
 
* ''Other name: Toda Yasunaga''
 
* ''Distinction: [[Tokugawa clan|Tokugawa]] retainer''
 
* ''Distinction: [[Tokugawa clan|Tokugawa]] retainer''
 
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* ''Japanese'': [[松平]]康長 ''(Matsudaira Yasunaga)''
  
 
Yasunaga was a son of [[Toda Tadashige|Toda Danjô Tadashige]]. He married an adopted daughter of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] (the daughter of [[Hisamatsu Toshikatsu]]) and was allowed to assume the name 'Matsudaira'. He first saw service at the recapture of [[Takatenjin castle]] in [[Totomi province|Tôtômi]] in [[1581]] and during the [[Sekigahara Campaign]] ([[1600]]) participated in the capture of Ôgaki in [[Mino province]]. he was afterwards awarded a string of fiefs that culminated in his transfer to Matsumoto in [[Shinano province]], worth 60,000 koku.
 
Yasunaga was a son of [[Toda Tadashige|Toda Danjô Tadashige]]. He married an adopted daughter of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] (the daughter of [[Hisamatsu Toshikatsu]]) and was allowed to assume the name 'Matsudaira'. He first saw service at the recapture of [[Takatenjin castle]] in [[Totomi province|Tôtômi]] in [[1581]] and during the [[Sekigahara Campaign]] ([[1600]]) participated in the capture of Ôgaki in [[Mino province]]. he was afterwards awarded a string of fiefs that culminated in his transfer to Matsumoto in [[Shinano province]], worth 60,000 koku.

Latest revision as of 16:21, 27 December 2011

  • Birth: 1562
  • Death: 1632
  • Other name: Toda Yasunaga
  • Distinction: Tokugawa retainer
  • Japanese: 松平康長 (Matsudaira Yasunaga)

Yasunaga was a son of Toda Danjô Tadashige. He married an adopted daughter of Tokugawa Ieyasu (the daughter of Hisamatsu Toshikatsu) and was allowed to assume the name 'Matsudaira'. He first saw service at the recapture of Takatenjin castle in Tôtômi in 1581 and during the Sekigahara Campaign (1600) participated in the capture of Ôgaki in Mino province. he was afterwards awarded a string of fiefs that culminated in his transfer to Matsumoto in Shinano province, worth 60,000 koku.

References