Next, Ieyasu arranged Sen-hime’s marriage to Daimyo [[Honda Tadatoki]] of [[Himeji castle]]. They had two children. When Honda died 10 years later, Sen-hime took vows as a nun with the name [[Tenjuin]] and lived in [[Edo]] until her death at the age of 70. Sen-hime did not stay cloistered as a nun. She had a connection with both [[Tokeiji]] and [[Mantokuji]] convents (the only two sanctuaries for women who were threatened or abused in Edo period Japan). Inspired by Tokeiji’s Divorce system, Sen-hime established this system at Mantokuji, a [[Kamakura Era]] temple founded by the Tokugawa Clan in Gunma-ken. | Next, Ieyasu arranged Sen-hime’s marriage to Daimyo [[Honda Tadatoki]] of [[Himeji castle]]. They had two children. When Honda died 10 years later, Sen-hime took vows as a nun with the name [[Tenjuin]] and lived in [[Edo]] until her death at the age of 70. Sen-hime did not stay cloistered as a nun. She had a connection with both [[Tokeiji]] and [[Mantokuji]] convents (the only two sanctuaries for women who were threatened or abused in Edo period Japan). Inspired by Tokeiji’s Divorce system, Sen-hime established this system at Mantokuji, a [[Kamakura Era]] temple founded by the Tokugawa Clan in Gunma-ken. |