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Matsudaira Yasuhide (松平 康英) (July 16, 1830 – July 5, 1904) was a Japanese daimyō of the late Edo period, who ruled the Tanakura and then Kawagoe Domains. He served as gaikoku bugyō and rōjū in the Tokugawa administration.
The final daimyō of Kawagoe, Matsudaira Yasutoshi, served as domain governor until 1871, and was awarded the title of shishaku under the kazoku peerage system. Kawagoe Domain subsequently became part of Saitama Prefecture.
Matsudaira Yasutō (松平 康任, June 20, 1779 – September 7, 1841) was a Japanese senior councillor of the late Edo period. The seventh lord of the Hamada Domain, he was also the governor of Suō. [1] He served in a variety of positions in the Tokugawa shogunate, including magistrate of temples and shrines, Osaka Castle warden and Kyoto ...
A less well-known, but highly skilled, menkyo kaiden ranked student was Matsudaira Yasutoshi, who, like Yamada Jirokichi, studied the more traditional ways of Jikishin Kage-ryū. The best apprentice of Yasutoshi was Makita Shigekatsu, a young man from a samurai family from Hokkaidō.
Of Odai no Kata's children, Matsudaira Yasumoto (the eldest son) was constantly away from home, and Matsudaira Yasutoshi (the second son) had formerly been a hostage of both the Imagawa and the Takeda, having lost both his toes as a result; the desolation of being unable to stay beside her children led her to refuse sending her youngest son ...
The Takiwaki-Matsudaira family became daimyōs of the Ojima Domain, and from 1868 to 1871, ruled the Sakurai Domain. The Nagasawa-Matsudaira, also known as the Ōkōchi-Matsudaira, had several branches, one of them ruled the Yoshida Domain of Mikawa Province. [10] A prominent Nagasawa-Matsudaira is the early Edo-period politician Matsudaira ...
The last retired military officer appointed as chief priest, Nagayoshi Matsudaira, enshrined 14 prominent convicted war criminals alongside the 2.5 million war dead honoured at the shrine ...
Tokugawa Iemitsu (徳川 家光, August 12, 1604 – June 8, 1651) was the third shōgun of the Tokugawa dynasty.He was the eldest son of Tokugawa Hidetada with Oeyo, and the grandson of Tokugawa Ieyasu.