Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Imagawa Ujizane (今川 氏真, 1538 – January 27, 1615) was a Japanese daimyō who lived in the Sengoku through early Edo periods. He was the tenth head of the Imagawa clan, and was a son of Imagawa Yoshimoto and the father of Imagawa Norimochi and Shinagawa Takahisa .

    • Overview
    • Role in Games
    • Voice Actors
    • Historical Information

    Ujizane Imagawa is the twelfth head of the Imagawa and the son of Yoshimoto Imagawa as well as Lady Hayakawa's husband. Although he suffered numerous setbacks as clan leader, he found renown as a patron of the arts after surrendering to the Tokugawa. He was also famed for his love of culture and kemari, traits which have been given to his father in popular culture.

    He placed forty-eighth in the Nobunaga no Yabou Taishi poll for most favorite father.

    Ujizane is a non-playable officer who fights for the Imagawa clan in the Samurai Warriors series. Like his father, he does not appear in Samurai Warriors 2, but is present in the first Empires spin-off as leader of his faction.

    In Samurai Warriors 4, he plays a prominent role in the Hōjō story where the conflicts in Suruga are given a particular highlight. First, the Hojo help repel the Tokugawa offensive at Kakegawa castle with Naotora Ii's allegiance. Secondly, they beat Shingen Takeda in a field battle at Enshu. Ujizane is portrayed as very cowardly and incompetent with many of his vassals defecting to the enemy. Regardless of the Hojo's efforts, Ujizane is soon rendered powerless and a deal is exchanged in where his life is spared and he can live out his days in peace while the other daimyo allocate the Imagawa's lands between themselves. In Samurai Warriors: Spirit of Sanada, his role is much the same though he does share a far closer affinity to his wife, Lady Hayakawa.

    •Yuki Sakakihara - Nobunaga no Yabou Hadou

    Born as the eldest son of Imagawa Yoshimoto and Jōkei-in, Ujizane spent his formative years at Sunpu where he later married Lady Hayakawa in 1554 as part of an agreement between their respective clans and the Takeda. Their marriege yielded five children as well as one adopted son from the Hōjō.

    Although Ujizane inherited the position of clan head after his father's death, his tenure was marred with insurrections and hostilities that offset the Imagawa's reign over Suruga, Mikawa, and Tōtōmi. Several vassals like Ii Naochika and Iio Tsuratatsu wanted to break away from the Imagawa, though only Tokugawa Ieyasu was successful in gaining independence. Ujizane, for his part, tried to appease the people with tax relief policies, though this failed to quell much of the hostile factions surrounding him.

    Even with the Hōjō's assistance, the Imagawa soon lost Sunpu to the Takeda. In retaliation, Ujizane enacted a salt embargo against them, though it had little effect thanks to the Uesugi selling salt. Holed up in Kakegawa Castle alongside the loyal Asahina clan, Ujizane surrendered to the Tokugawa and was allowed to keep Suruga in exchange for their unanimous support. He eventually died at his family estate in Shinagawa.

    While Ujizane was criticized for his indecisiveness, indulgent behavior, and military ineptitude, he found fulfillment through cultural endeavors like poetry and Kemari. Having taken the Buddhist name Sōkan in Edo, he became a master of the tea ceremony and frequented teahouses to socialize with the upper class. He even organized a Kemari exhibition at the request of Oda Nobunaga despite their clan's previous enmity.

  2. Imagawa Yoshimoto (今川義元,? 1519 - 12 de junio de 1560) fue un daimyō (señor feudal) a principios del período Sengoku en Japón. Con base en la provincia de Suruga, fue uno de los tres daimyō que dominaron la región de Tōkaidō.

    • いまがわ よしもと
    • Imagawa Yoshimoto
    • 今川 義元
  3. Imagawa Yoshimoto (今川 義元, 1519 – June 12, 1560) was a Japanese daimyō (feudal lord) of the Sengoku period. Based in Suruga Province, he was known as The number one Daimyō in the Tōkaidō (海道一の弓取り, Kaidō-ichi no Yumitori); [1] he was one of the three daimyō that dominated the Tōkaidō region. He died in 1560 while marching to Kyoto to become Shogun.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Imagawa_clanImagawa clan - Wikipedia

    Imagawa clan (Japanese: 今川氏, Hepburn: Imagawa-uji) was a Japanese samurai clan that claimed descent from the Seiwa Genji by way of the Kawachi Genji. It was a branch of the Minamoto clan by the Ashikaga clan.

    • Imagawa Kuniji (Ashikaga Kuniuji)
    • Ashikaga clan
    • Various
  5. Imagawa Ujizane (今川氏真) Ujizane IMAGAWA was a warlord of Suruga Province. He was the 10th head of the Imagawa clan of Suruga Province, and he was the last head of the Imagawa family as a daimyo (feudal lord).

  6. Imagawa Yoshimoto (今川 義元 , 1519 - 12 de junio de 1560) fue un daimyō japonés (señor feudal) del período Sengoku. Basado en la provincia de Suruga, era conocido como "El Daimyō número uno en el Tōkaidō" (海道一の弓取り, Kaidō-ichi no Yumitori ); fue uno de los tres daimyō que dominaron la región de Tōkaidō. Murió en ...