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  2. List of daimyōs from the Sengoku period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_daimyōs_from_the...

    Red: Toyotomi Hideyoshi Japan in 1600 (Battle of Sekigahara) Red: Western Army (Ishida Mitsunari, Mōri Terumoto) Cyan: Eastern Army (Tokugawa Ieyasu) Gray: Neutral Japan in 1614 (Siege of Osaka) Cyan: Tokugawa shogunate Red: Toyotomi Hideyori. This is a list of daimyōs from the Sengoku period of Japan.

  3. Japanese clans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_clans

    The old clans mentioned in the Nihon Shoki and Kojiki lost their political power before the Heian period, during which new aristocracies and families, kuge, emerged in their place. After the Heian period, the samurai warrior clans gradually increased in importance and power until they came to dominate the country after the founding of the first ...

  4. Sengoku period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sengoku_period

    The Sengoku period (戦国時代, Sengoku jidai, lit. ' Warring States period ' ) is the period in Japanese history in which civil wars and social upheavals took place almost continuously in the 15th and 16th centuries.

  5. Sengoku clan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sengoku_clan

    In the early Edo period, the Sengoku were at Komoro Domain. [2] In 1706, the family was moved to Izushi Domain with 30,000 koku revenues. [1] The clan remained in Tajima Province until the end of the Edo period. [3] The head of the clan became a kazoku viscount in the Meiji period. [1]

  6. Daimyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daimyo

    A map of the territories of the Sengoku daimyo around the first year of the Genki era (1570 AD). Daimyo (大名, daimyō, Japanese pronunciation: ⓘ) were powerful Japanese magnates, [1] feudal lords [2] who, from the 10th century to the early Meiji period in the middle 19th century, ruled most of Japan from their vast hereditary land holdings.

  7. Ōtomo clan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ōtomo_clan

    A powerful clan throughout the Sengoku period (1467–1573), the Ōtomo are especially notable as one of the first clans to make contact with Europeans, and to establish a trade relationship with them. In or around 1542, three Portuguese ships were carried by a typhoon to the island of Tanegashima, just off the coast of Kyūshū.

  8. Takeda clan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takeda_clan

    The Kazusa Takeda clan, established at the beginning of the Sengoku period in Kazusa Province in the present-day central area of Chiba Prefecture. Along with the Satomi clan of Awa Province in the southern part of present-day Chiba Prefecture the two clans replaced the dominance of the Chiba clan in the region. The Kazusa Takeda is also known ...

  9. Sanada Masayuki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanada_Masayuki

    Sanada Masayuki (真田 安房守 昌幸, 1547 – July 13, 1611) was a Japanese Sengoku period lord and daimyō.He was the head of Sanada clan, a regional house of Shinano Province, which became a vassal of the Takeda clan of Kai Province.