Everything about Tokugawa Ieyasu totally explained
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was the founder and first
shogun of the
Tokugawa shogunate of
Japan which ruled from the
Battle of Sekigahara in
1600 until the
Meiji Restoration in
1868. Ieyasu seized power in 1600, received appointment as shogun in
1603, abdicated from office in
1605, but remained in power until his death in 1616. His given name is sometimes spelled
Iyeyasu, according to the historical pronunciation of
we.
Biography
Early life (1543–1556)
Tokugawa Ieyasu was born in
MIkawa on on the 26th day of the twelfth month of the eleventh year of
Tenbun, according to the Japanese calendar. Originally named
Matsudaira Takechiyo (松平竹千代), he was the son of
Matsudaira Hirotada (松平広忠), the
daimyo of Mikawa, and O-Dai-no-kata (於大の方), the daughter of a neighboring samurai lord
Mizuno Tadamasa (水野忠政). Oddly, his mother and father were step-brother and step-sister to each other. They were just 17 and 15 years old, respectively, when Ieyasu was born. Two years later, O-Dai-no-kata was sent back to her family and the couple never lived together again. Both husband and wife remarried and both had children so Ieyasu ended up with 11 half-brothers and sisters.
The Matsudaira family was split in 1550: one side wanted to be vassals of the
Imagawa clan, while the other side preferred the
Oda. As a result, much of Ieyasu's early years were spent in danger as wars with the Oda and Imagawa clans were fought. This family feud was the reason behind the murder of Hirotada's father (Takechiyo's grandfather),
Matsudaira Kiyoyasu (松平清康). Unlike his father and the majority of his branch of the family, Ieyasu's father, Hirotada, favored the Imagawa clan.
In
1548, when the Oda clan invaded Mikawa, Hirotada turned to Imagawa Yoshimoto, the head of the Imagawa clan, for help to repel the invaders. Yoshimoto agreed to help under the condition that Hirotada send his son Ieyasu (Takechiyo) to
Sumpu as a hostage. Hirotada agreed.
Oda Nobuhide, the leader of the Oda clan, learned of this arrangement and had Ieyasu abducted from his entourage en route to Sumpu. Ieyasu was just six years old at the time.
Nobuhide threatened to execute Ieyasu unless his father severed all ties with the Imagawa clan. Hirotada replied that sacrificing his own son would show his seriousness in his pact with the Imagawa clan. Despite this refusal, Nobuhide chose not to kill Ieyasu but instead held him for the next three years at the Manshoji Temple in
Nagoya.
In
1549, at the age of 24, Ieyasu's father Hirotada died of natural causes. At about the same time, Oda Nobuhide died during an epidemic. The deaths dealt a heavy blow to the Oda clan. An army under the command of Imagawa Sessai laid siege to the castle where Oda Nobuhiro, Nobuhide's eldest son and the new head of the Oda, was living. With the castle about to fall, Imagawa Sessai offered a deal to
Oda Nobunaga (Oda Nobuhide's second son). Sessai offered to give up the siege if Ieyasu was handed over to the Imagawa clan. Nobunaga agreed and so Ieyasu (now nine) was taken as a hostage to Sumpu. Here he lived a fairly good life as hostage and potentially useful future ally of the Imagawa clan until he was 15.
Rise to power (1556–1584)
In
1556, Ieyasu came of age, and, following tradition, changed his name to Matsudaira Jirōsaburō Motonobu (松平次郎三郎元信). One year later, at the age of 16 (according to
East Asian age reckoning), he married his first wife and changed his name again to Matsudaira Kurandonosuke Motoyasu (松平蔵人佐元康). Allowed to return to his native Mikawa, the Imagawa ordered him to fight the Oda clan in a series of battles. Ieyasu won his first battle at the
Siege of Terabe and later succeeded in delivering supplies to a border fort through a bold night attack.
In
1560 the leadership of the Oda clan had passed to the brilliant leader
Oda Nobunaga. Yoshimoto, leading a large Imagawa army (perhaps 20,000 strong) then attacked the Oda clan territory. Ieyasu with his Mikawa troops captured a fort at the border and then stayed there to defend it. As a result, Ieyasu and his men were not present at the
Battle of Okehazama where Yoshimoto was killed by Oda Nobunaga's surprise assault.
With Yoshimoto dead, Ieyasu decided to ally with the Oda clan. A secret deal was needed because Ieyasu's wife and infant son,
Nobuyasu were held hostage in Sumpu by the Imagawa clan. In
1561, Ieyasu openly broke with the Imagawa and captured the fortress of Kaminojo. Ieyasu was then able to exchange his wife and son for the wife and daughter of the ruler of Kaminojo castle.
For the next few years Ieyasu set about reforming the Matsudaira clan and pacifying Mikawa. He also strengthened his key vassals by awarding them land and castles in Mikawa. They were:
Honda Tadakatsu,
Ishikawa Kazumasa,
Koriki Kiyonaga,
Hattori Hanzō,
Sakai Tadatsugu, and
Sakakibara Yasumasa.
Ieyasu defeated the military forces of the Mikawa Monto within Mikawa province. The Monto were a warlike group of monks that were ruling
Kaga Province and had many temples elsewhere in Japan. They refused to obey Ieyasu's commands and so he went to war with them, defeating their troops and pulling down their temples. In one battle Ieyasu was nearly killed when he was struck by a bullet which didn't penetrate his armor. Both Ieyasu's Mikawa troops and the Monto forces were using the new gunpowder weapons which the Portuguese had introduced to Japan just 20 years earlier.
In
1567, Ieyasu changed his name yet again, his new
family name was
Tokugawa and his
given name was now
Ieyasu. In so doing, he claimed descent from the
Minamoto clan. No proof has actually been found for this claimed descent from
Seiwa tennō, the 56th Emperor of Japan.
Ieyasu remained an ally of Oda Nobunaga and his Mikawa soldiers were part of Nobunaga's army which captured
Kyoto in
1568. At the same time Ieyasu was expanding his own territory. He and
Takeda Shingen, the head of the
Takeda clan in
Kai Province made an alliance for the purpose of conquering all the Imagawa territory. In
1570, Ieyasu's troops captured
Tōtōmi Province while Shingen's troops captured
Suruga province (including the Imagawa capital of Sumpu).
Ieyasu ended his alliance with Takeda and sheltered their former enemy,
Imagawa Ujizane; he also allied with
Uesugi Kenshin of the Uesugi clan—an enemy of the Takeda clan. Later that year, Ieyasu led 5,000 of his own men supporting Nobunaga at the
Battle of Anegawa against the
Azai and
Asakura clans.
In October
1571, Takeda Shingen, now allied with the
Hōjō clan, attacked the Tokugawa lands of Tōtōmi. Ieyasu asked for help from Nobunaga, who sent him some 3,000 troops. Early in
1573 the two armies met at the
Battle of Mikatagahara. The Takeda army, under the expert direction of Shingen, hammered at Ieyasu's troops till they were broken. Ieyasu fled with just 5 men to a nearby castle. This was a major loss for Ieyasu, but Shingen was unable to exploit his victory because Ieyasu quickly gathered a new army and refused to fight Shingen again on the battlefield.
Fortune smiled on Ieyasu a year later when Takeda Shingen died at a siege early in
1573. Shingen was succeeded by his less capable son
Takeda Katsuyori. In
1575, the Takeda army attacked Nagashino Castle in Mikawa province. Ieyasu appealed to Nobunaga for help and the result was that Nobunaga personally came at the head of his very large army (about 30,000 strong). The Oda-Tokugawa force of 38,000 won a great victory on
June 28,
1575, at the
Battle of Nagashino, though Takeda Katsuyori survived the battle and retreated back to Kai province.
For the next seven years, Ieyasu and Katsuyori fought a series of small battles. Ieyasu's troops managed to wrest control of Suruga province away from the Takeda clan.
In
1579, Ieyasu's wife, and his eldest son,
Matsudaira Nobuyasu, were accused of conspiring with Takeda Katsuyori to assassinate Nobunaga. Ieyasu's wife was executed and Nobuyasu was forced to commit
seppuku. Ieyasu then named his third and favorite son,
Tokugawa Hidetada, as heir, since his second son was adopted by another rising power:
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the future ruler of all Japan.
The end of the war with Takeda came in
1582 when a combined Oda-Tokugawa force attacked and conquered Kai province. Takeda Katsuyori, as well as his eldest son Takeda Nobukatsu, were defeated at the
Battle of Temmokuzan and then committed
seppuku.
In late
1582, Ieyasu was near
Osaka and far from his own territory when he learned that Nobunaga had been assassinated by
Akechi Mitsuhide. Ieyasu managed the dangerous journey back to Mikawa, avoiding Mitsuhide's troops along the way, as they were trying to find and kill him. One week after he arrived in Mikawa, Ieyasu's army marched out to take revenge on Mitsuhide. But they were too late, Hideyoshi—on his own—defeated and killed Akechi Mitsuhide at the
Battle of Yamazaki.
The death of Nobunaga meant that some provinces, ruled by Nobunaga's vassals, were ripe for conquest. The leader of Kai province made the mistake of killing one of Ieyasu's aides. Ieyasu promptly invaded Kai and took control.
Hōjō Ujimasa, leader of the Hōjō clan responded by sending his much larger army into
Shinano and then into Kai province. No battles were fought between Ieyasu's forces and the large Hōjō army and, after some negotiation, Ieyasu and the Hōjō agreed to a settlement which left Ieyasu in control of both Kai and Shinano provinces, while the Hōjō took control of Kazusa province (as well as bits of both Kai and Shinano province).
At the same time (
1583) a war for rule over Japan was fought between
Toyotomi Hideyoshi and
Shibata Katsuie. Ieyasu didn't take a side in this conflict, building on his reputation for both caution and wisdom. Hideyoshi defeated Katsuie at the
Battle of Shizugatake—with this victory, Hideyoshi became the single most powerful
daimyo in Japan.
Ieyasu and Hideyoshi (1584–1598)
In
1584, Ieyasu decided to support
Oda Nobukatsu, the eldest son and heir of
Oda Nobunaga, against Hideyoshi. This was a dangerous act and could have resulted in the annihilation of the Tokugawa.
Tokugawa troops took the traditional Oda stronghold of Owari, Hideyoshi responded by sending an army into Owari. The
Komaki Campaign was the only time any of the great unifiers of Japan fought each other: Hideyoshi vs. Ieyasu. In the event, Ieyasu won the only notable battle of the campaign at Nagakute. After months of fruitless marches and feints, Hideyoshi settled the war through negotiation. First he made peace with Oda Nobuo, and then he offered a truce to Ieyasu. The deal was made at the end of the year; as part of the terms Ieyasu's second son, O Gi Maru, became an adopted son of Hideyoshi.
Ieyasu's aide,
Ishikawa Kazumasa, chose to join the pre-eminent daimyo and so he moved to Osaka to be with Hideyoshi. However, only a few other Tokugawa retainers followed this example.
Hideyoshi was understandably distrustful of Ieyasu, and five years passed before they fought as allies. The Tokugawa didn't participate in Hideyoshi's successful invasions of
Shikoku and
Kyūshū.
In
1590 Hideyoshi attacked the last independent daimyo in Japan,
Hōjō Ujimasa. The Hōjō clan ruled the eight provinces of the Kantō region in eastern Japan. Hideyoshi ordered them to submit to his authority and they refused. Ieyasu, though a friend and occasional ally of Ujimasa, joined his large force of 30,000 samurai with Hideyoshi's enormous army of some 160,000. Hideyoshi attacked several castles on the borders of the Hōjō clan with most of his army laying siege to the castle at
Odawara. Hideyoshi's army captured Odawara after six months (oddly for the time period, deaths on both sides were few). During this siege, Hideyoshi offered Ieyasu a radical deal. He offered Ieyasu the eight
Kantō provinces which they were about to take from the Hōjō in return for the five provinces that Ieyasu currently controlled (including Ieyasu's home province of Mikawa). Ieyasu accepted this proposal. Bowing to the overwhelming power of the Toyotomi army, the Hōjō accepted defeat, the top Hōjō leaders killed themselves and Ieyasu marched in and took control of their provinces, so ending the clan's over 100 year reign.
Ieyasu now gave up control of his five provinces (Mikawa, Tōtōmi, Suruga, Shinano, and Kai) and moved all his soldiers and vassals to the Kantō region. He himself occupied the castle town of
Edo in Kantō. This was possibly the riskiest move Ieyasu ever made — to leave his home province and rely on the uncertain loyalty of the formerly Hōjō samurai in Kantō. In the event, it worked out brilliantly for Ieyasu. He reformed the Kantō provinces, controlled and pacified the Hōjō samurai and improved the underlying economic infrastructure of the lands. Also, because Kantō was somewhat isolated from the rest of Japan, Ieyasu was able to maintain a unique level of autonomy from Hideyoshi's rule. Within a few years, Ieyasu had become the second most powerful daimyo in Japan. There is a Japanese proverb which likely refers to this event "Ieyasu won the Empire by retreating."
In
1592, Hideyoshi invaded
Korea as a prelude to his plan to attack
China (see
Hideyoshi's attack on Korea for more information about this campaign). The Tokugawa samurai never took part in this campaign. Early in
1593, Ieyasu was summoned to Hideyoshi's court in Nagoya (in
Kyūshū, different from similarly spelled city in Owari Province), as a military advisor. He stayed there, off and on for the next five years. Despite his frequent absences, Ieyasu's sons, loyal retainers and vassals were able to control and improve Edo and the other new Tokugawa lands.
In
1593, Hideyoshi fathered a son and
heir,
Toyotomi Hideyori.
In
1598, with his health clearly failing, Hideyoshi called a meeting that would determine the
Council of Five Elders who would be responsible for ruling on behalf of his son after his death. The five that were chosen as regents (
tairō) for Hideyori were
Maeda Toshiie,
Mōri Terumoto,
Ukita Hideie,
Uesugi Kagekatsu, and Ieyasu himself, who was the most powerful of the five. This change in the pre-Sekigahara power structure became pivotal as Ieyasu turned his attention towards Kansai; and at the same time, other ambitious (albeit ultimately unrealized) plans, such as the Tokugawa initiative establishing official relations with Mexico and New Spain, continued to unfold and advance.
The Sekigahara Campaign (1598–1603)
Hideyoshi, after three more months of increasing sickness, died on
September 18,
1598. He was nominally succeeded by his young son
Hideyori but as he was just five years old, real power was in the hands of the regents. Over the next two years Ieyasu made alliances with various daimyo, especially those who had no love for Hideyoshi. Happily for Ieyasu, the oldest and most respected of the regents died after just one year. With the death of Regent Toshiie in
1599, Ieyasu led an army to
Fushimi and took over
Osaka Castle, the residence of Hideyori. This angered the three remaining regents and plans were made on all sides for war.
Opposition to Ieyasu centered around
Ishida Mitsunari, a powerful daimyo but not one of the regents. Mitsunari plotted Ieyasu's death and news of this plot reached some of Ieyasu's generals. They attempted to kill Mitsunari but he fled and gained protection from none other than Ieyasu himself. It isn't clear why Ieyasu protected a powerful enemy from his own men but Ieyasu was a master strategist and he may have concluded that he'd be better off with Mitsunari leading the enemy army rather than one of the regents, who would have more legitimacy.
Nearly all of Japan's daimyo and samurai now split into two factions—Mitsunari's group and anti-Mitsunari Group. Ieyasu supported anti-Mitsunari Group, and formed them as his potential allies. Ieyasu's allies were the
Date clan, the
Mogami clan, the
Satake clan and the
Maeda clan. Mitsunari allied himself with the three other regents:
Ukita Hideie,
Mori Terumoto, and
Uesugi Kagekatsu as well as many daimyo from the eastern end of Honshū.
In June
1600, Ieyasu and his allies moved their armies to defeat the Uesugi clan who was accused of planning to revolt against Toyotomi administration (Led by Ieyasu, top of Council of Five Elders). Before arriving to Uesugi's territory, Ieyasu had got information that Mitsunari and his allies moved their army against Ieyasu. Ieyasu held a meeting with daimyo, and they agreed to ally Ieyasu. He then led the majority of his army west towards Kyoto. In late summer, Ishida's forces captured Fushimi.
Ieyasu and his allies marched along the
Tōkaidō, while his son Hidetada went along the
Nakasendō with 38,000 soldiers. A battle against Sanada Masayuki in
Shinano Province delayed Hidetada's forces, and they didn't arrive in time for the main battle.
This battle was the biggest and likely the most important battle in Japanese history. It began on
October 21,
1600 with a total of 160,000 men facing each other. The Battle of Sekigahara ended with a complete Tokugawa victory. The Western bloc was crushed and over the next few days Ishida Mitsunari and many other western nobles were captured and killed. Tokugawa Ieyasu was now the
de facto ruler of Japan.
Immediately after the victory at Sekigahara, Ieyasu redistributed land to the vassals who had served him. Ieyasu left some western daimyo un-harmed, such as the
Shimazu clan, but others were completely destroyed. Toyotomi Hideyori (the son of Hideyoshi) lost most of his territory which were under management of western daimyo, and he was degraded to an ordinary daimyo, not a ruler of Japan. In later years the vassals who had pledged allegiance to Ieyasu before Sekigahara became known as the
fudai daimyo, while those who pledged allegiance to him after the battle (in other words, after his power was unquestioned) were known as
tozama daimyo.
Tozama daimyo were considered inferior to
fudai daimyo.
Shogun Ieyasu (1603–1605)
In
1603, Tokugawa Ieyasu received the title of
shogun from Emperor
Go-Yozei. Ieyasu was 60 years old. He had outlasted all the other great men of his times: Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, Shingen, Kenshin. He was the shogun and he used his remaining years to create and solidify the
Tokugawa shogunate (That was eventually to become the
Edo period, about two hundred years under Ieyasu's Shogunate), the third shogunal government (after the
Minamoto and the
Ashikaga). He claimed descent from the
Minamoto clan by way of the
Nitta family. Ironically Ieyasu descendants would marry into the
Taira and
Fujiwara Clans. The Tokugawa Shogunate would rule Japan for the next 250 years.
Following a well established Japanese pattern, Ieyasu abdicated his official position as shogun in
1605. His successor was his son and heir,
Tokugawa Hidetada. This may have been done, in part to avoid being tied up in ceremonial duties, and in part to make it harder for his enemies to attack the real power center. The abdication of Ieyasu had no effect on the practical extent of his powers or his rule; but Hidetada nevertheless assumed a role as formal head of the
bakufu bureaucracy.
Ogosho Ieyasu (1605–1616)
Ieyasu, acting as the Cloistered Shogun or
Ogosho (大御所), was the effective ruler of Japan, remaining so until his death. Ieyasu retired to
Sunpu, but he also supervised the building of
Edo Castle, a massive construction project which lasted for the rest of Ieyasu's life. The end result was the largest castle in all of Japan, the costs for building the castle being borne by all the other daimyo, while Ieyasu reaped all the benefits. The central
donjon, or
tenshu, burned in the 1657
Meireki fire. Today, the Imperial Palace stands on the site of the castle.
Ogosho Ieyasu also supervised diplomatic affairs with the
Netherlands and
Spain. He chose to distance Japan from the Europeans starting in
1609, although the bakufu did give the Dutch exclusive trading rights and permitted them to maintain a "factory" for trading purposes. From 1605 till his death, Ieyasu consulted with an English Protestant pilot in Dutch employ,
William Adams, who played a noteworthy role in forming and furthering the Shogunate's evolving relations with Spain and the
Roman Catholic Church.
In
1611, Ieyasu, at the head of 50,000 men, visited Kyoto to witness the coronation of
Emperor Go-Mizunoo. In Kyoto, Ieyasu ordered the remodeling of the imperial court and buildings, and forced the remaining western daimyo to sign an oath of fealty to him. In 1613, he composed the
Kuge Shohatto' a document which put the court daimyo under strict supervision, leaving them as mere ceremonial figureheads. The influences of Christianity, which was beset by quarreling over the
Protestant Reformation and its aftermath, on Japan were proving problematic for Ieyasu. In 1614, he signed the Christian Expulsion Edict which banned Christianity, expelled all Christians and foreigners, and banned Christians from practicing their religion. As a result, many
Kirishitans (early Japanese Christians) fled to the Spanish
Philippines.
In
1615, he prepared the
Buke Shohatto, a document setting out the future of the Tokugawa regime.
Siege of Osaka
The climax of Ieyasu's life was the siege of Osaka Castle (
1614–
1615). The last remaining threat to Ieyasu's rule was Hideyori, the son and rightful heir to Hideyoshi. He was now a young daimyo living in Osaka Castle. Many samurai who opposed Ieyasu rallied around Hideyori, claiming he was the rightful ruler of Japan. Ieyasu found fault with the opening ceremony of a temple built by Hideyori—it was as if Hideyori prayed for Ieyasu's death and the ruin of Tokugawa clan. Ieyasu ordered Toyotomi to leave Osaka Castle, but those in the castle refused and started to gather samurai into the castle. Then the Tokugawa, with a huge army led by Ogosho Ieyasu and Shogun Hidetada, laid siege to Osaka castle in what is now known as "the Winter Siege of Osaka." Eventually, Tokugawa made a deal threatening Hideyori's mother, Yodogimi, firing cannons towards the castle to stop the fighting. However, as soon as the treaty was agreed upon, Tokugawa filled Osaka Castle's moats with sand so his troops could go across them. Ieyasu returned to Sumpu once, but after Toyotomi refused another order to leave Osaka, he and his allied army of 155,000 soldiers attacked Osaka Castle again in "the Summer Siege of Osaka." Finally in late 1615, Osaka Castle fell and nearly all the defenders were killed including Hideyori, his mother (Hideyoshi's widow, Yodogimi), and his infant son. His wife,
Senhime (a granddaughter of Ieyasu), was sent back to Tokugawa alive. With the Toyotomi finally extinguished, no threats remained to Tokugawa domination of Japan.
In
1616, Ieyasu died at age 75.. The cause of death is considered as cancer or syphilis. The first Tokugawa shogun was posthumously deified as
Gongen or
Gongen-sama. The name
gongen is derived from divine title, Tōshō Dai-Gongen (東照大権現).
Gongen means a buddha appeared in the shape of
Kami. In life, Ieyasu expressed the wish to be deified after his death in order to protect his descendant from the evil; and the Gongen's mausoleum at Nikkō Shrine,
Nikkō Tōshō-gū (日光東照宮) hold his remains. The mausoleum's architectural style became known as
gongen-zukuri or
gongen- style.
Ieyasu as a person
Ieyasu had a number of qualities that enabled him to rise to greatness. He was both careful and bold — at the right times, and at the right places. Calculating and subtle, Ieyasu switched alliances when he thought he'd benefit from the change. He allied with the Hōjō clan, then he joined Hideyoshi's army of conquest which destroyed the Hōjō clan and he himself took over their lands. In this he was like other daimyo of his time. This was an era of violence, sudden death and betrayal. He wasn't very well liked, and he wasn't personally popular. But he was feared and he was respected for his leadership and his cunning. For example he wisely kept his soldiers out of Hideyoshi's disastrous campaign in Korea.
He was capable of great loyalty; once he allied with Oda Nobunaga, he never went against Nobunaga, and both leaders profited from their long alliance. He was known for being loyal towards his personal friends and vassals whom he rewarded. However, he also remembered those who wronged him in the past. It is said that Ieyasu executed a man who came into his power because he'd insulted him when Ieyasu was young.
Ieyasu protected many former Takeda retainers from the wrath of Oda Nobunaga, who was known to harbor a bitter grudge towards the Takeda. He managed to successfully transform many of the retainers of the Takeda, Hōjō, and Imagawa clans — all whom he defeated himself or helped to defeat — into loyal followers.
He had nineteen wives and concubines, by whom he'd eleven sons and five daughters. The eleven sons of Ieyasu were
Matsudaira Nobuyasu (松平信康),
Yūki Hideyasu (結城秀康),
Tokugawa Hidetada (徳川秀忠), Matsudaira Tadayoshi (松平忠吉),
Takeda Nobuyoshi (武田信吉),
Matsudaira Tadateru (松平忠輝), Matsuchiyo (松千代), Senchiyo (仙千代),
Tokugawa Yoshinao (徳川義直),
Tokugawa Yorinobu (徳川頼宣), and
Tokugawa Yorifusa (徳川頼房). (In this listing, the two sons without surnames died before adulthood.) His daughters were Kame
hime (亀姫),
Toku hime (徳姫), Furi
hime (振姫), Matsu
hime (松姫), Eishōin
hime (_姫), and Ichi
hime (市姫). He is said to have cared for his children and grandchildren, establishing three of them, Yorinobu, Yoshinao, and Yorifusa as the daimyo of Kii, Owari, and Mito provinces, respectively. At the same time, he could be ruthless when crossed. For example, he ordered the executions of his first wife and his eldest son-a son-in-law of
Oda Nobunaga; Oda was also an uncle of Hidetada's wife Oeyo.
After Hidetada became shogun he married
Oeyo of the
Oda family of the
Taira clan and they'd two sons,
Tokugawa Iemitsu and
Tokugawa Tadanaga. They also had two daughters, one of whom,
Sen hime, married twice. The other daughter,
Kazuko hime, married Emperor
Go-Mizunoo of descent from the
Fujiwara clan.
Ieyasu's favorite pastime was
hawking. He regarded it as excellent training for a warrior. "When you go into the country hawking, you learn to understand the military spirit and also the hard life of the lower classes. You exercise your muscles and train your limbs. You have any amount of walking and running and become quite indifferent to heat and cold, and so you're little likely to suffer from any illness.". Ieyasu swam often; even late in his life he's reported to have swum in the moat of Edo Castle.
Later in life he took to scholarship and religion, patronizing scholars like
Hayashi Razan.
Two of his famous quotes:
» "Life is like unto a long journey with a heavy burden. Let thy step be slow and steady, that thou stumble not. Persuade thyself that imperfection and inconvenience are the natural lot of mortals, and there will be no room for discontent, neither for despair. When ambitious desires arise in thy heart, recall the days of extremity thou has passed through. Forbearance is the root of quietness and assurance forever. Look upon the wrath of the enemy. If thou knowest only what it's to conquer, and knowest not what it's like to be defeated, woe unto thee; it'll fare ill with thee. Find fault with thyself rather than with others."
» "The strong manly ones in life are those who understand the meaning of the word patience. Patience means restraining one's inclinations. There are seven emotions: joy, anger, anxiety, love, grief, fear, and hate, and if a man doesn't give way to these he can be called patient. I'm not as strong as I might be, but I've long known and practiced patience. And if my descendants wish to be as I am, they must study patience."
He claimed that he fought, as a warrior or a general, in 90 battles.
In some sources Ieyasu is known to have the bad habit of biting his nails when nervous, especially before and during battle.
He was interested in various
kenjutsu skills, was a patron of the
Yagyū Shinkage-ryū school and also had them as his personal sword instructors.
Era of Ieyasu's rule
Ieyasu ruled directly as shogun or indirectly as Ogosho during the
Keichō era (1596-1615).
In popular culture
See
Japanese historical people in popular culture.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Tokugawa Ieyasu'.
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