Ashikaga Ujinohime
Ashikaga Ujinohime 足利 氏姫 | |
---|---|
Koga Kubō(de facto) | |
In office 1583–1590 | |
Preceded by | Ashikaga Yoshiuji |
Castellan of Kōnosu Palace (Kitsuregawa clan) | |
In office 1590–1620 | |
Personal details | |
Spouse(s) | Ashikaga Kunitomo Ashikaga Yoriuji |
Parents |
|
Relatives | Hōjō Ujiyasu (grandfather) Lady Hayakawa (aunt) Hōjō Ujimasa (uncle) Hōjō Ujiteru (uncle) Hōjō Ujikuni (uncle) Hōjō Ujinori (uncle) |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Ashikaga shogunate Toyotomi clan Kitsuregawa clan |
Unit | Koga Kubō |
Ashikaga Ujihime (足利 氏姫, 1574 – June 6, 1620), or Ashikaga no Ujihime[1], Ashikaga Ujinohime[2] was the de facto Koga kubō in Sengoku period. She was the daughter of 5th Koga kubō Ashikaga Yoshiuji and Jōkō-in (a daughter of Hōjō Ujiyasu). She was a woman trained in martial arts and received education from the highest court. In 1583 when Yoshiuji died without a male heir, Ujihime succeeded her father at the young age of nine, she took the title Koga kubō (title equivalent to shōgun in Kantō region) and inherited an area equivalent the Koga domain.[1]
Life
[edit]She was de facto the Koga Kubo and the castellan in Koga Castle. Even the Ashikaga shogunate lost its sovereignty, Ujinohime was vital to the administration of the Kantō region, she worked together with the Later Hōjō clan and had her lands protected by her uncle Hōjō Ujimasa.[2]
In 1590, Toyotomi Hideyoshi initiated a campaign to eliminate the Hōjō clan, the last obstacle for Japan to be unified under the name of Hideyoshi. The Toyotomi clan wins in the siege of Odawara and the Hōjō clan has been banished, Ujimasa is ordered to commit seppuku along with his brother Hōjō Ujiteru. The area was awarded to Tokugawa Ieyasu after the defeat of the Hōjō at the siege of Odawara.[3]
After this in the same year, Ujinohime was moved to Kōnosu Palace in currently Ibaraki Prefecture and she became the owner of the palace. In 1591 Toyotomi Hideyoshi ordered her married to Ashikaga Kunitomo. When Kunitomo died in 1593, she was then married to his younger brother Ashikaga Yoriuji (Later known as Kitsuregawa Yoriuji) and give birth to a son. The marriage between Ujinohime and Yoriuji began the formation of a new clan, the Kitsuregawa clan. Yoriuji received a new domain, but Ujinohime declined to change domain. So she continued commanding the Konosu palace and Yoriuji went to another castle.
She and Yoriuji ran the Kitsuregawa clan until the day of her death on June 6, 1620. The clan Ujinohime founded prospered for years and became a fudai daimyo in the Edo period.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b kotobank.jp
- ^ a b "JLogos | | > > 辞書・辞典・百科事典一括検索JLogos". premium.jlogos.com. Retrieved 2019-05-11.
- ^ "古河藩". www.asahi-net.or.jp. Archived from the original on 2012-01-28. Retrieved 2019-05-11.
- ^ Jansen, Marius (1995-09-29). Warrior Rule in Japan. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521484046.
- People of Sengoku-period Japan
- 1574 births
- 1620 deaths
- Samurai
- Government of feudal Japan
- Kantō kubō
- Ashikaga clan
- 16th-century Japanese people
- 16th-century Japanese women
- 17th-century Japanese women
- 16th-century women rulers
- 17th-century women rulers
- 16th-century women politicians
- 17th-century women politicians
- People of Edo-period Japan
- Female castellans in Japan