「daimyo」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 109件
He managed to become | daimyo, a powerful feudal ruler, but became engaged i |
The player controls Pistol | Daimyo, a little Japanese lord who has a pistol strap |
Amidamaru's loyalty was split between the | daimyo and his friend. |
The domain was tozama | daimyo and was governed by the Satake clan. |
Hidemune immediately entered his new fief as | daimyo, and ruled until his retirement in Meireki 3 ( |
imes formed ikko-ikki in rebellion against the | daimyo and succeeded, for a time, in establishing ind |
ho believed in filial piety and loyalty to his | daimyo, and on the other he was enthusiastic about We |
ku was added to his income, making him a fudai | daimyo, and his landholdings into a formal han of ove |
Daimyo associated with him were confined and the Jura | |
ri Motonari, on the life of the Sengoku period | daimyo, based on Nagai's book of the same name. |
ts to this prominent office were usually fudai | daimyo, but this was amongst the senior administrativ |
u centered around Ishida Mitsunari, a powerful | daimyo but not one of the regents. |
Nagamichi was never chosen to be | daimyo, but developed a political base within Karatsu |
were identified as one of the fudai or insider | daimyo clans which were hereditary vassels or allies |
Tokugawa Japan consisted of a number of | daimyo clans enfeoffed by the Tokugawa clan, and in t |
art of Mie Prefecture) and established a major | daimyo dynasty. |
Iiyama was ruled by several different | daimyo families over the course of its history. |
onimitsu, providing him with information about | daimyo feudal lords and shogunate officials, while al |
as adopted into the Hachisuka clan as the 12th | daimyo, Hachisuka Narimasa was childless. |
esidence in Edo, as the eldest son of the 13th | daimyo Hachisuka Narihiro (1821-1868). |
the abolition of the han system, the title of | daimyo had been abolished and Naotora became "domain |
tobe was not known for his good relations with | daimyo, having once angered Date Yoshikuni, the power |
g the Boshin War despite his status as a fudai | daimyo, he was allowed to keep his revenues of 35,000 |
Tozama | daimyo held large fiefs, with the Kaga han of Ishikaw |
Kinoshita would have thus been a | daimyo if the Tokugawa shogunate had lasted only a fe |
oshitsune, Toshitaka, and Toshitoyo all became | daimyo in their own right. |
nd relative of the Tokugawa clan, and became a | daimyo in 1602. |
Masazumi was made a | daimyo in 1608, with an income of 33,000 koku. |
bakufu order, Narishige became an independent | daimyo in his own right. |
e, the last individual to have actually been a | daimyo in the historic sense was Hayashi Tadataka. |
Sadayasu was relieved of his duties as | daimyo in 1871, due to the order for the abolition of |
retainer to the Oda clan, and was eventually a | daimyo in his own right. |
led by his childhood name of Kamechiyo, became | daimyo in 1660 at the age of one, under the guardians |
This made Kagetsuna a | daimyo in his own right; however, soon after taking p |
as a Taoist advisor to the Japanese "Daimio" ( | daimyo) in a time of crisis. |
When Pistol | Daimyo is hit without any armor, he dies and players |
He accompanied the forces commanded by | Daimyo Konishi Yukinaga, himself a Christian, and pro |
Kenshin Uesugi - The Uesugi Clan | daimyo, like Takeda Shingen he is shown as a placid m |
862, he was assigned to assist the Aizu Domain | daimyo Matsudaira Katamori during the latter's tenure |
Mitsuhide was a general under | daimyo Oda Nobunaga, although he later suddenly betra |
Hayashi Tadataka, a famous fudai | daimyo of the Bakumatsu period |
Yasushige ended his life as | daimyo of Kishiwada han. |
He was also the | daimyo of the Takamatsu Domain. |
ather Naganao was appointed to the position of | daimyo of Ako with 50 thousand koku. |
rd son of Tokugawa Yorifusa, became the second | daimyo of Mito in 1661. |
0 koku in Hizen Province, and became the first | daimyo of Hasunoike. |
le, Kinoshita Toshiyasu, was the 13th and last | daimyo of Ashimori han (25,000 koku). |
ndfather was Marquis Nabeshima Naohiro, former | daimyo of Saga. |
Her mother was the 11th daughter of the | daimyo of Matsuura Domain, Matsuura Seizan. |
was the fourth son of Chosokabe Motochika, the | daimyo of the Chosokabe family and vassal of Toyotomi |
He was the 9th | daimyo of the Aizu han and the Military Commissioner |
- 1618) was a vassal of Ukita Hideie, the | daimyo of Okayama prefecture and fought against Tokug |
former was still young and the latter was the | daimyo of Nagahama. |
of many sieges undertaken by Uesugi Kenshin, a | daimyo of Japan's Sengoku period. |
grandfather, Matsudaira Katamori, was the last | daimyo of Aizu, a cadet branch of the Tokugawa dynast |
the daughter of Shimazu Tadayoshi, the former | daimyo of Satsuma han, who had been antagonistic to h |
two children: Mitsutomo, who succeeded him as | daimyo of Owari, and Itoko, who married Hirohata Tada |
ing the Boshin War, he assisted in helping the | daimyo of Sendai, Date Munemoto, in declaring allegia |
murai family; his father was a retainer to the | daimyo of Matsumoto, in Shinano Province (modern Naga |
16,000 koku holding for Abe Masatane, formerly | daimyo of Kariya Domain in Mikawa Province. |
met and presented it to Matsudaira Mitsumichi, | daimyo of the Fukui Domain. |
utista was built in 1613 by Date Masamune, the | Daimyo of Sendai in northern Japan, in Tsuki-No-Ura h |
Chiba Shigetane, | daimyo of the Chiba, surrendered the castle to the be |
ng that their loyalty would be questioned, the | daimyo of 260 other domains followed suit. |
Henry is known to have counselled the | Daimyo of Nagaoka, in Niigata, to whom he especially |
Ieyasu) and succeeded him, becoming the second | daimyo of the Mito domain. |
In October 1840, when the 4th | daimyo of Karatsu, Ogasawara Nagayoshi died without h |
The final | daimyo of Sanuki Domain, Abe Masatsune, initially ser |
member of the House of Peers, son of the last | daimyo of Nagoya, founder of the Tokugawa Art Museum, |
he second son of Shimazu Takahisa, who was the | Daimyo of the Satsuma Province, took back the oranges |
cts during 1578, and was not rebuilt until the | daimyo of Himeji, Honda Tadamasa, agreed to aid the I |
The final | daimyo of Karatsu, Ogasawara Nagakuni attempted to en |
dynasty king Sejong the Great in 1443, and the | daimyo of the So clan of Tsushima island was granted |
did, the cherry trees came into bloom, and the | Daimyo, passing by, marveled and gave him many gifts. |
A | Daimyo paying a state visit, illustration from ca. 18 |
Buddhist monasteries during the civil wars of | Daimyo rivalry. |
ublic works, and extravagant spending, several | daimyo sided against the Tokugawa Shogunate during th |
In doing so the | daimyo slowly established unified and centralized gov |
The | daimyo staged a tournament where the participants fou |
Though every | daimyo swore loyalty to the Shogun, their relationshi |
The | daimyo system was abolished with the Meiji Restoratio |
She was the wife of the famous | daimyo, Takeda Shingen. |
He first served under the | daimyo Takeda Nobutora, but later on served under Tak |
He retired from his position as | daimyo the same year, and died six years later. |
, they learn of the legend that has caused the | Daimyo to fear them. |
Amidamaru was ordered by his | daimyo to kill Mosuke in order to ensure the uniquene |
dyguard or mercenary work, and searching for a | daimyo to serve. |
ast in part, with Kagekatsu, who was the first | daimyo to plan revolt against the Tokugawa. |
The Ashikaga shogunate required the shugo | daimyo to reside in Kyoto, so they appointed relative |
t many people unofficially considered the Mito | daimyo to be "vice-shogun". |
1868, and served as the guardian of the young | daimyo Tokugawa Iesato. |
The Japanese | daimyo, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, fearful of the Jesuit's i |
son Niwa Nagahiro (brother of the Yonezawa han | daimyo Uesugi Mochinori) succeeded him. |
higetada was transferred in 1601, and the next | daimyo was appointed in 1609. |
However, in 1869, the title of | daimyo was abolished, and with the abolition of the h |
n and the defacto ruler of the estate when the | daimyo was away. |
Fudai and Shimpan | daimyo were assigned, and frequently reassigned, to A |
ermined by political significance, and han and | daimyo were expected to behave suitably to their clas |
The shugo | daimyo were able to centralize their rule within each |
the families who formed the ranks of the fudai | daimyo were families which had served the Tokugawa cl |
ut the imprimatur of the shogunate, provincial | daimyo were vulnerable to being overthrown by forces |
itary authority to the central government, the | daimyo were re-appointed as non-hereditary governors |
and Mosuke grew older, they were employed by a | daimyo who was impressed with Amidamaru's skills as a |
In 1869, several of the | daimyo who had supported the revolution gave their la |
period; Shingen was one of many feudal lords ( | daimyo) who battled to gain land and power. |
In this way Ii was able to ignore the | Daimyo who supported Hitotsubashi Keiki, the reformis |
eased his income by 10,000 koku and made him a | daimyo with 17,000 koku of land. |
he became established as the most powerful of | daimyo within that region of Japan. |
Being a Christian | daimyo, Yukinaga refused to commit suicide and was ex |
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