Tokugawa Ienari 

In this Japanese name, the family name is Tokugawa.
Tokugawa Ienari

Tokugawa Ienari; 徳川 家斉 (November 18, 1773March 22, 1841) was the eleventh shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan who held office from 1786 to 1837.

Contents

Family life

First wife

In 1776, the four-year-old Hitosubash Toyochiyo, a minor figure in the Tokugawa clan hierarchy, was betrothed to Shimazu no Shige-hime1 or Tadako-hime, the four-year-old daughter of Shimazu Shigehide, the tozama daimyo of Satsuma Domain on the island of Kyushu. The significance of this alliance was dramatically enhanced when, in 1781, the young Toyochiyo was adopted by the childless shogun, Tokugawa Ieharu. This meant that when Toyochiyo became Shogun Iehari in 1786, Shigehide was set to become the father-in-law of the shogun.2 The marriage was completed in 1789, after which Tadako became formally known as Midaidokoro Sadako, or "first wife" Sadako. Protocol required that she be adopted into a court family, and the Konoe clan agreed to take her in but this was a mere formality.3

Other relationships

Ienari was known as a degenerate who kept a harem of 900 women and fathered over 55 children (in the Nemuri Kyoshiro film series starring Ichikawa Raizo, many of these adult offspring, both male and female, are the villains of the stories).

Many of Ienari's myriad children were adopted into various daimyo houses throughout Japan, and some played important roles in the history of the Bakumatsu and Boshin War. Some of the more famous among them included: Hachisuka Narihiro (Tokushima han), Matsudaira Naritami (Tsuyama han), Tokugawa Narikatsu (first to the Shimizu-Tokugawa, then to the Wakayama domain), Matsudaira Narisawa (Fukui han), and others.

Events of Ienari's bakufu

His time in office was marked by an era of pleasure, excess, and corruption, which ended in the disastrous Tenpō Famine of 1832-1837, in which thousands are known to have perished.

Eras of Ienari's bakufu

The years in which Ienari was shogun are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengō.7

Notes

  1. ^ Screech, Timon. (2006). Secret Memoirs of the Shoguns: Isaac Titsingh and Japan, 1779-1822, p. 234 n.12.
  2. ^ Screech, p. 11.
  3. ^ Screech, p. 221 n35.
  4. ^ Screech, pp. 152-154, 249-250
  5. ^ a b c Screech, p.154.
  6. ^ Screech, p. 155.
  7. ^ Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du japon, p. 420.

References

See also

External links

Preceded by
Tokugawa Ieharu
Edo Shogun:
Tokugawa Ienari

1786-1837
Succeeded by
Tokugawa Ieyoshi