Difference between revisions of "Tokugawa Ienari"

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Tokugawa Ienari was the 11th [[Tokugawa shogunate|Tokugawa shogun]].
 
Tokugawa Ienari was the 11th [[Tokugawa shogunate|Tokugawa shogun]].
  
A son of [[Tokugawa Harunari]] (aka Harusada]], head of the [[Hitotsubashi Tokugawa clan|Hitotsubashi]] [[Gosankyo|branch family]] of the [[Tokugawa clan]],<ref>Gallery labels, "Flowering Plants of Summer and Autumn," [[Tokyo National Museum]], 23 July 2010.</ref> Ienari was adopted into the main shogunal Tokugawa lineage and became shogun after [[Tokugawa Ieharu|Tokugawa Ieharu's]] death in [[1786]]. Ienari's formal accession ceremonies were held on [[1787]]/4/15.
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A son of [[Tokugawa Harunari]] (aka Harusada), head of the [[Hitotsubashi Tokugawa clan|Hitotsubashi]] [[Gosankyo|branch family]] of the [[Tokugawa clan]],<ref>Gallery labels, "Flowering Plants of Summer and Autumn," [[Tokyo National Museum]], 23 July 2010.</ref> Ienari was adopted into the main shogunal Tokugawa lineage and became shogun after [[Tokugawa Ieharu|Tokugawa Ieharu's]] death in [[1786]]. Ienari's formal accession ceremonies were held on [[1787]]/4/15.
  
 
He married [[Kodai-in (1773-1844)|Shige-hime]] (aka Kôdai-in), a daughter of [[Shimazu Shigehide]], in [[1789]]. She gave birth to their first child, Atsunosuke, in [[1797]], but he died when he was only age 4.<ref>"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%BA%83%E5%A4%A7%E9%99%A2 Kôdai-in]." ''Nihon jinmei daijiten'' 日本人名大辞典. Kodansha, 2009.; ''Kaiyô kokka Satsuma'' 海洋国家薩摩, Kagoshima: Shôkoshûseikan (2010), 58-59.</ref>
 
He married [[Kodai-in (1773-1844)|Shige-hime]] (aka Kôdai-in), a daughter of [[Shimazu Shigehide]], in [[1789]]. She gave birth to their first child, Atsunosuke, in [[1797]], but he died when he was only age 4.<ref>"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%BA%83%E5%A4%A7%E9%99%A2 Kôdai-in]." ''Nihon jinmei daijiten'' 日本人名大辞典. Kodansha, 2009.; ''Kaiyô kokka Satsuma'' 海洋国家薩摩, Kagoshima: Shôkoshûseikan (2010), 58-59.</ref>

Revision as of 19:46, 1 December 2017

Tokugawa Ienari was the 11th Tokugawa shogun.

A son of Tokugawa Harunari (aka Harusada), head of the Hitotsubashi branch family of the Tokugawa clan,[1] Ienari was adopted into the main shogunal Tokugawa lineage and became shogun after Tokugawa Ieharu's death in 1786. Ienari's formal accession ceremonies were held on 1787/4/15.

He married Shige-hime (aka Kôdai-in), a daughter of Shimazu Shigehide, in 1789. She gave birth to their first child, Atsunosuke, in 1797, but he died when he was only age 4.[2]

Ienari was named Dajô daijin on 1827/3/18.

Ienari had more than twenty children, many of whom were adopted into other families; Hachisuka Narihiro, Ienari's 22nd child, serves as just one example.[3] Ienari's daughter Yôhime married Maeda Nariyasu, lord of Kaga han.[4] Some of his other daughters included Mine-hime (b. 1800), Asahime, Fumihime, and Morihime.[5] At the time of his abdication on 1837/4/2, however, Ienari had only one living son who had not been adopted away: Tokugawa Ieyoshi, who thus succeeded him as shogun. The next two shoguns after Ieyoshi would be grandsons of Ienari: Ieyoshi's son Tokugawa Iesada, followed by Tokugawa Iemochi, a son of Ienari's son Tokugawa Nariyuki.

Following his death in 1841, Ienari was buried at the Tokugawa clan family temple of Kan'ei-ji. While a number of shogunal mausolea were lost in the bombings of Tokyo during World War II, his is among those which survive.


Preceded by:
Tokugawa Ieharu
Tokugawa Shogun
1787-1837
Succeeded by:
Tokugawa Ieyoshi


References

  • Evelyn Rawski, Early Modern China and Northeast Asia: Cross-Border Perspectives, Cambridge University Press (2015), 161.
  1. Gallery labels, "Flowering Plants of Summer and Autumn," Tokyo National Museum, 23 July 2010.
  2. "Kôdai-in." Nihon jinmei daijiten 日本人名大辞典. Kodansha, 2009.; Kaiyô kokka Satsuma 海洋国家薩摩, Kagoshima: Shôkoshûseikan (2010), 58-59.
  3. Mark Ravina, Land and Lordship in Early Modern Japan, Stanford University Press (1999), 192.
  4. Albert M. Craig, The Heritage of Japanese Civilization, Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 78.; "Embroidered Costume on Pale Blue Crepe," Seisonkaku official website.
  5. Asao Naohiro (ed.), Fudai daimyô Ii ke no girei, Hikone Castle Museum (2004), 57.