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Ienari was named ''[[Dajo daijin|Dajô daijin]]'' on [[1827]]/3/18.
 
Ienari was named ''[[Dajo daijin|Dajô daijin]]'' on [[1827]]/3/18.
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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.<ref>Mark Ravina, ''Land and Lordship in Early Modern Japan'', Stanford University Press (1999), 192.</ref> Ienari's daughter [[Yohime|Yôhime]]<!--溶姫--> married [[Maeda Nariyasu]], lord of [[Kaga han]].<ref>[[Albert M. Craig]], ''The Heritage of Japanese Civilization'', Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 78.; "[http://www.seisonkaku.com/english/tenjisitu/meihin5.html Embroidered Costume on Pale Blue Crepe]," [[Seisonkaku]] official website.</ref> Some of his other daughters included [[Mine-hime]] (b. [[1800]]), [[Asahime]], [[Fumihime]], and [[Morihime]].<ref>Asao Naohiro (ed.), ''Fudai daimyô Ii ke no girei'', Hikone Castle Museum (2004), 57.</ref> 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]].
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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.<ref>Mark Ravina, ''Land and Lordship in Early Modern Japan'', Stanford University Press (1999), 192.</ref> Ienari's daughter [[Yohime|Yôhime]]<!--溶姫--> married [[Maeda Nariyasu]], lord of [[Kaga han]].<ref>[[Albert M. Craig]], ''The Heritage of Japanese Civilization'', Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 78.; "[http://www.seisonkaku.com/english/tenjisitu/meihin5.html Embroidered Costume on Pale Blue Crepe]," [[Seisonkaku]] official website.</ref> His daughter [[Shoei-in|Senhime]] married [[Matsudaira Naritsugu]] of [[Fukui han]].<ref>Ishin Shiryô Kôyô 維新史料綱要, vol 2 (1937), 360.</ref> Some of his other daughters included [[Mine-hime]] (b. [[1800]]), [[Asahime]], [[Fumihime]], and [[Morihime]].<ref>Asao Naohiro (ed.), ''Fudai daimyô Ii ke no girei'', Hikone Castle Museum (2004), 57.</ref> 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.
 
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.
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