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The Sakai clan (Japanese: 酒井氏, Hepburn: Sakai-shi) was a Japanese samurai clan that claimed descent from the Nitta branch of the Minamoto clan, who were in turn descendants of Emperor Seiwa. Serata (Nitta) Arichika, a samurai of the 14th century, was the common ancestor of both the Sakai clan and the Matsudaira clan, which the Sakai later ...
Furthermore, this armor type was first popularized by Date Masamune, Daimyo of Sendai. [86] Another tools belonged to Tadatsugu which preserved in museum is a Gunbai Uchiwa(軍配団扇) or 'Signal fan', which passed down for generations by the Sakai clan. [87]
It was governed for the whole of its history by the Sakai clan, which resulted in an unusually stable and prosperous domain. During their rule over Shōnai, the Sakai clan was ranked as a province-holding daimyō ( 国持ち大名 , kunimochi daimyō ) family, and as such, had the privilege of shogunal audiences in the Great Hall ( Ohiroma ) of ...
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His son was transferred in 1616, and Isesaki was thereafter ruled by three junior branches of the Sakai clan until the end of the Edo period. During the Bakumatsu period , forces of Iseskai Domain played a role in the suppression of the Tengutō Rebellion ; however the next-to-last daimyo, Sakai Tadatsuyo was quick to join the imperial side in ...
Tsurugaoka Castle (鶴ヶ岡城, Tsurugaoka-jō) is a flatland-style Japanese castle constructed in early Edo period in the city of Tsuruoka, Yamagata.It was the seat of the Sakai clan, a fudai daimyō clan who ruled over Shōnai Domain, Dewa Province in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan under the Tokugawa shogunate.
Sakai clan – cadet branch of Nitta clan, by the Tokugawa clan descended from Seiwa Genji. Sakuma clan ( 佐久間氏 ) – cadet branch of Miura clan who descended from Kanmu Heishi. Sanada clan ( 真田氏 ) – descended from Seiwa Genji (disputed); famous for Sanada Nobushige who is more commonly known as Sanada Yukimura .
Sakai Tadatsugu, another of the Four, wielded Inoshishi-giri, a sword forged by Masazane. [6] Later generations in the shogunate, however, gradually came to think of Muramasa as sinister items. Arai Hakuseki, the official scholar-bureaucrat of the shogunate, commented "Muramasa is associated with not a few sinister events."