Satake Yoshimasa (1728-1753)

Satake Yoshimasa (佐竹義真, September 7, 1728 – September 17, 1753) was the 6th daimyō of Kubota Domain in Dewa Province, Japan (modern-day Akita Prefecture), and then 24th hereditary chieftain of the Satake clan. His courtesy title was Sahyōe-no-kami and Jijū and his Court rank was Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade.[1]

Satake Yoshimasa
佐竹義真
Satake Yoshimasa, portrait at Tentoku-ji, Akita
6th Daimyō of Kubota Domain
In office
1749–1753
MonarchShōgun
Preceded bySatake Yoshizumi
Succeeded bySatake Yoshimasa
Personal details
Born(1728-09-07)September 7, 1728
DiedSeptember 17, 1753(1753-09-17) (aged 25)
Kubota Castle, Akita, Japan
Spouse(s)Gōhime, daughter of Maeda Yoshinori of Kaga Domain
FatherSatake Yoshikata

Biography

Satake Yoshimasa was the eldest son of Satake Yoshikata of Kubota-Shinden Domain and was adopted as heir to Satake Yoshizumi in 1742. He was received in formal audience by Shōgun Tokugawa Yoshimune in 1744, and became daimyō of Kubota in 1749. In 1751, he married Gōhime (1737-1762), the daughter of Maeda Yoshinori of Kaga Domain and he made his first visit to his domain the same year. Kubota Domain was rent by peasant uprisings and by plots among his retainers caused by the years of mismanagement of the domain by his predecessor. Yoshimasa died at Kubota Castle in 1753 after complaining of sudden stomach pains and growing numbness in his limbs. During the Edo period it was widely suspected that he had been poisoned. As he had no children, the domain passed to Satake Yoshiharu, the eldest son of Satake Yoshimichi of Iwasaki Domain.[1]

gollark: Huh, `tee` is a function somewhere?
gollark: `vmsplice` or something apioformic.
gollark: 100GB/s or so.
gollark: Did you know that GNU Yes can print `y\n` at 3GB/s, which is something like 5% of the maximum achieved `y\n` printing speed?
gollark: On the plus side, GNU Yes is quite good.

See also

References

  1. Shichinomiya, Keimi (2001). 常陸・秋田 佐竹一族. Shinjinbutsu Oraisha. ISBN 440402911X.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.