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  1. Manabe Akifusa (間部 詮房, June 18, 1666 – August 7, 1720) was a close person confidant and lover of Shōgun Tokugawa Ienobu and held numerous important posts within the administration of the Tokugawa shogunate. He was also daimyō of Takasaki Domain and later of Murakami Domain.

    • June 18, 1666
    • .mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0}Nishida Kiyosada (father)
  2. Akifusa MANABE was the lord of Takasaki Domain in Kozuke Province, and was the first member of the Manabe clan to rise to the position of lord over Murakami Domain in Echigo Province. He served as a chamberlain of the Tokugawa shogunate. He was the eldest son of Kiyosada NISHIDA. Biography. Kunai MANABE (Akifusa's earlier name) was a disciple ...

  3. Manabe Akifusa - SamuraiWiki. Born: 1666. Died: 1720. Titles: soba yônin, Echizen-no-kami. Japanese: 間部 詮房 (Manabe Akifusa) Manabe Akifusa was a prominent shogunal advisor ( soba yônin) under Tokugawa Ienobu and Tokugawa Ietsugu, and lord of Takasaki han in Kôzuke province . The son of Nishida Kiyosada, he claimed descent from the Fujiwara clan.

    • Life
    • Seiyo Kibun
    • References

    Arai Hakuseki was born in Edo (Tokyo) on March 24, 1657. His ancestors were lords of a small feudal state, but their power declined after Toyotomi Hideyoshi attacked Odawara Castle. Hakuseki was born in a shelter at the day after the Great Fire of Meiwa. Because of his birth after the Great Fire, and because he was hot tempered and the crease of hi...

    Hakuseki wrote a 90-page manuscript on handmade paper that was placed in a drawer and never shown officially to others. In 1882, during the Meiji era, the manuscript was published as Seiyo Kibun(“A work describing the Occident, based on Hakuseki's interviews with Giovanni Battista Sidotti”). In 1708, when Hakeseki was at work in the office of the T...

    Arai, Hakuseki and Joyce Ackroyd (trans.). Told Round a Brushwood Fire: The Autobiography of Arai Hakuseki. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1980. ISBN 0691046719
    Arai, Hakuseki and Joyce Ackroyd (trans.). Lessons from History: The Tokushi Yoron. University of Queensland Press, 1982.
    Nakai, Kate Wildman. Shogunal Politics: Arai Hakuseki and the Premises of Tokugawa Rule (Harvard East Asian Monographs). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988. ISBN 0674806530
  4. The Noh actor Manabe Akifusa became the shogun's personal chamberlain and finally a daimyō (feudal lord). Akifusa was a son of Nishida Kiyosada, a member of the Kofu domain. Ienobu, then called Tokugawa Tsunatoyo, was the domain lord. Akifusa became an actor under the tuition of Kita Shichidayu, the founder of the Kita School.

  5. 1 de ene. de 2010 · Arai Hakuseki and Manabe Akifusa, who had been until then the most influential men of the country, were to disappear from the political scene. Takebe was equally one of the attendants down-graded to the status of yoriai , which corresponds to a kind of early retirement. 2

  6. 24 de feb. de 2024 · Another prominent figure in the shogunate under Ienobu was his chamberlain (側用人 soba yōnin) Manabe Akifusa (間部詮房, 1666-1720), a confidant and former Noh actor who managed shogunal affairs as Ienobu's favourite. On his death, Ienobu was succeeded by his four-year-old son, Ietsugu.