Azai clan
The Azai clan (Japanese: 浅井氏, Hepburn: Azai-shi) was a line of daimyōs (feudal lords) during Japan's Sengoku period that was based in Ōmi Province (present day Shiga Prefecture). The Azai clan, along with the Asakura clan, opposed Oda Nobunaga in the late 16th century. They were defeated by him at the Battle of Anegawa in 1570, and all but eliminated when their home castle, Odani Castle, was taken three years later.
Azai clan 浅井氏 | |
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The Azai clan mon | |
Home province | Ōmi |
Titles | Daimyō |
Final ruler | Azai Nagamasa |
Dissolution | 1573 |
Ruled until | 1573, Azai Nagamasa commits seppuku |
Azai of note
- Azai Naotane
- Azai Sukemasa – son of Azai Naotane, established Odani Castle in 1516
- Azai Hisamasa – son of Sukemasa, was defeated by the Sasaki clan
- Azai Nagamasa – son of Hisamasa, came into conflict with Oda Nobunaga and opposed him, entering an alliance with the Asakura clan and the monks of Mt. Hiei; he was defeated and forced to suicide by Nobunaga in 1573. He was married to Nobunaga's sister Oichi. His daughters included Yodo-dono (second wife of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and mother of Toyotomi Hideyori) and Oeyo (wife of Tokugawa Hidetada and mother of the third Tokugawa shōgun Iemitsu)[1]
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gollark: Have each person provide a few sentences or paragraphs.
gollark: Why not cut out the middleman and directly crowdsource the book?
gollark: I read 1 and 2, and don't really like them either to be honest. The writing is kind of clunky, and it does a lot of "oh look, a problem appeared! The protagonist just solves it with [weird interaction of various items, used once then forgotten about]".
gollark: They should obviously specify distance in metres to 10 significant figures.
References
- "The silk coloured portrait of wife of Takatsugu Kyogoku," Archived 2011-05-06 at the Wayback Machine Digital Cultural Properties of Wakasa Obama; Oichinokata, Gifu prefecture website.
Further reading
- Turnbull, Stephen. (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & Co.
- __________. (2002). War in Japan: 1467–1615. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
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