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| *''Died: [[1718]]/9/5'' | | *''Died: [[1718]]/9/5'' |
| *''Titles: [[Tsushima province|Tsushima]] no kami, Lord of [[Tsushima han]] ([[1694]]-1718)'' | | *''Titles: [[Tsushima province|Tsushima]] no kami, Lord of [[Tsushima han]] ([[1694]]-1718)'' |
− | *''Other Names'': 次郎 ''(Jirou)'' | + | *''Other Names'': 次郎 ''(Jirou)'', 大衍院 ''(Daienin)'' |
| *''Japanese'': [[宗]]義方 ''(Sou Yoshimichi)'' | | *''Japanese'': [[宗]]義方 ''(Sou Yoshimichi)'' |
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− | Sô Yoshimichi<ref>Some sources refer to him as Sô Yoshikata, but this may be simply a misreading of the name. e.g. Joyce Ackroyd, ''Told Round a Brushwood Fire'', Princeton University Press (1979), 314n72.</ref> was lord of [[Tsushima han]] in the early years of the 18th century. | + | Sô Yoshimichi<ref>Some sources refer to him as Sô Yoshikata, but this may be simply a misreading of the name. e.g. Joyce Ackroyd, ''Told Round a Brushwood Fire'', Princeton University Press (1979), 314n72.</ref> was lord of [[Tsushima han]] in the early years of the 18th century. He is considered the 23rd head of the [[So clan|Sô clan]].<ref>Plaques on-site at Sô family cemetery, Banshô-in, Tsushima.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/52093165818/in/photostream/]</ref> |
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− | He was the fourth son of [[So Yoshizane|Sô Yoshizane]], and became the fifth lord of Tsushima in [[1694]]. Yoshimichi accompanied the [[1711]] [[Korean embassy to Edo]] which took place in honor of [[Tokugawa Ienobu]] becoming shogun two years prior. As lord of Tsushima, he also added the 1,560 ''[[koku]]'' territory of Tashiro in [[Hizen province]] to his domain. | + | He was the third son of [[So Yoshizane|Sô Yoshizane]], and became the fifth lord of Tsushima in [[1694]]. Yoshimichi accompanied the [[1711]] [[Korean embassy to Edo]] which took place in honor of [[Tokugawa Ienobu]] becoming shogun two years prior. As lord of Tsushima, he also added the 1,560 ''[[koku]]'' territory of Tashiro in [[Hizen province]] to his domain. |
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| ==References== | | ==References== |