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Intro | Daimyo | |
Places | Japan | |
was | Military leader Samurai | |
Work field | Military | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 26 March 1596 | |
Death | 3 December 1667 (aged 71 years) |
Biography
Ogasawara Tadazane (小笠原 忠真, March 26, 1596 – December 3, 1667) was a Japanese samurai daimyō of the early Edo Period.
Early life
Tadazane was the son of Ogasawara Hidemasa (1569–1615).
Daimyo
Following the deaths of his father and elder brother in the Osaka Summer Campaign, his holdings were transferred from Akashi Domain (100,000 koku) in Harima Province to the Kokura domain (150,000 koku) Buzen Province.
Famed as the lord who employed Miyamoto Musashi's adopted son Iori, Tadazane took part in the Shogunate's campaign to quell the Shimabara Rebellion, where the Kokura forces assisted in the execution of survivors of the rebel force, predominantly Christians.
Tadazane's son Tadataka succeeded him. Other children included Nagayasu, Naganobu, Sanekata, and three daughters (one of them adopted from the Hachisuka clan of Tokushima-han).