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Toyotomi Hidetsugu

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Name
  
Toyotomi Hidetsugu

Aunts
  
Asahi no kata

Uncles
  
Toyotomi Hidenaga

Parents
  
Toyotomi Hideyoshi

Role
  
Toyotomi Hideyoshi's son


Toyotomi Hidetsugu httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
1595, Mount Koya, Koya, Wakayama, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan

Grandparents
  
Omandokoro, Kinoshita Yaemon

Similar People
  
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Toyotomi Hideyori, Toyotomi Hidenaga, Yodo‑dono, Nene

Toyotomi Hidetsugu (豊臣 秀次, 1568 – July 15, 1595) was a nephew and retainer of Toyotomi Hideyoshi who lived during the Sengoku period of the 16th century of Japan.

Contents

A practitioner of the shudō tradition, Hidetsugu had a number of wakashū. Among these were Yamamoto Tonoma, Yamada Sanjuro, and his most beloved, Fuwano Mansaku (also Bansaku), who gained lasting renown for his beauty of body and spirit.

Biography

Hidetsugu was born to Hideyoshi's elder sister with Miyoshi Kazumichi and later adopted by Miyoshi Yoshifusa, his name was Miyoshi Nobuyoshi. He later renamed himself Hashiba Hidetsugu, in honor of his famous uncle: "Hashiba" was the Hideyoshi's family name, and "Hidetsugu" can be translated as "next Hide".

After the Incident at Honnō-ji in 1582, Hidetsugu was given a 400 thousand koku fiefdom in Ōmi Province because he was one of Hideyoshi's few relatives. In his subsequent career as a general, he sustained heavy losses in the Battle of Nagakute against Tokugawa Ieyasu, but he proved himself in Hideyoshi's Invasion of Shikoku and Siege of Odawara. He also proved a competent manager of the castle town of Ōmihachiman.

In 1590, (Tenshō 18), he was appointed castellan of Kiyosu Castle in Owari Province, where Oda Nobukatsu had once ruled. The following year, Hideyoshi lost his legitimate heir Tsurumatsu (who died before adulthood) and so gave Hidetsugu the position of Imperial Regent. This meant Hidetsugu had to move to Jurakudai in Kyoto, and resulted in a so-called "dual system of government" (二元政治) run by Hideyoshi and Hidetsugu, with the assumption that latter would succeed the former after his death. As Hideyoshi was busy handling the invasion of Korea, Hidetsugu acted in his place to handle domestic affairs.

However, in 1593, Hideyoshi's concubine, Yodo-dono, gave a birth to a new heir, Hideyori, and the relationship between Hidetsugu and Hideyoshi began to deteriorate. Rumours spread of Hidetsugu committing repeated and unjust murder, earning him the nickname "life-killing kanpaku" (殺生関白; sesshō-kanpaku) - although modern historians doubt that these rumours were accurate.

Finally, in 1595, Hidetsugu was accused of plotting a coup and ordered to commit ritual suicide at Mt. Koya. Together with him died his three wakashu, who committed suicide with his assistance.

Daimyōs associated with him were confined and the Jurakudai was destroyed. Controversially, Hideyoshi ordered the execution of Hidetsugu's entire family, including children, wives and mistresses, at Sanjogawara. The harshness and brutality of executing 39 women and children shocked Japanese society and alienated many daimyōs from Toyotomi rule. Combined with the fact that Hidetsugu was the last adult member of the Toyotomi clan besides Hideyoshi himself, the whole incident is often seen to be one of the key causes of the Toyotomi downfall. In a particularly tragic case, Hideyoshi refused to spare the life of Mogami Yoshiaki's 15-year-old daughter, who had only just arrived in Kyoto to become Hidestugu's concubine and had not yet even met her husband-to-be. Her death caused the powerful Mogami clan to zealously support Tokugawa Ieyasu in the Battle of Sekigahara against Toyotomi loyalist forces, five years later.

Only one of Hidetsugu's children was spared: a daughter named Kikuhime, one month old, who was adopted by her grandfather's nephew, Gotō Noriyoshi.

Family

  • Father: Miyoshi Kazumichi (1534-1612)
  • Mother: Tomo (1534-1625)
  • Siblings:
  • Toyotomi Hidekatsu (1569-1592)
  • Toyotomi Hideyasu (1579-1595)
  • Wives, Concubines, and children:
  • Wife: Ikeda Tsuneoki's daughter, called "Waka Mandokoro"
  • Wife: Ichi no Dai (1562-1595), daughter of Imadegawa Harusae
  • Concubine: Kogami-dono (d.1595), daughter of Shijo Ryusho
  • Concubine: Ako no Kata (d.1595), daughter of Hibino Kiyomi
  • First son: Toyotomi Senchiyomaru (1590-1595)
  • Concubine: Otatsu no Kata (d.1595), daughter of Yamaguchi Shigekatsu
  • Second son: Toyotomi Hyakumaru (1592-1595)
  • Concubine: Sachiko (d.1595), daughter of Kitano Shoba-in
  • Third son: Toyotomi Jumaru (1593-1595)
  • Concubine: Ocho no Kata (d.1595), daughter of Takenaka Shigesada
  • Forth son: Toyotomi Tsuchimaru (1595-1595)
  • Concubine: Mae no Kata (d.1595), daughter of Furusori Toshizuke
  • First daughter: Rogetsu-in (1587-1595)
  • Concubine: Kyoku-dono (d.1595), daughter of Itsuki Takashige
  • Second daughter: Kikuhime (1595-1615) later Ryusen-in become Sanada Yukimura's concubine
  • References

    Toyotomi Hidetsugu Wikipedia


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