- male
- According to the Japanese Constitution, the is a symbol of Japan and the unity of its people. He is the head of the Japanese Imperial Family. Under...
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- male, deceased (1703)
- (October 5, 1641 – January 30, 1703) was a "kōke" (a samurai ranking below the daimyo) in Japan during the Edo period. He held the honorary tit...
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- male
- was a Japanese Tendai Buddhist monk of the Azuchi-Momoyama and early Edo periods. He achieved the rank of "Daisōjō", the highest rank of the pr...
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- male, deceased (1788)
- Tanuma Okitsugu was a "Rōjū" (government official) of the Tokugawa shogunate who introduced monetary reform. Though his reform has no particular na...
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- male, deceased (1684)
- Inaba Masayasu was a Japanese "hatamoto" and "daimyō" (feudal lord) of Aono han in Mino Province, and high-ranking official in the central b...
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- male, deceased (1603)
- Takeda Nobuyoshi was a Japanese daimyo of the early Edo period. Born Tokugawa Fukumatsumaru, he was one of Tokugawa Ieyasu's sons. His mother is...
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- male, deceased (1683)
- (February 16, 1592–August 24, 1683) was a daimyo during the Edo period of Japan. He was the sixth son of Tokugawa Ieyasu. He was born in Edo Ca...
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- male, deceased (1541)
- "'"'(1487-1541) was the son of Hōjō Sōun, founder of the Go-Hōjō clan. He continued his father's quest to gain control of the Kantō (the centra...
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- male, deceased (1571)
- was the son of Hōjō Ujitsuna and a "daimyō" (warlord) of the Odawara Hōjō clan. Upon his father's death in 1541, a number of the Hōjō's enemies...
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- female, deceased (1643)
- (1579–October 26, 1643) was from a prominent Japanese samurai family of the Azuchi-Momoyama and Edo periods. Born, she was a daughter of Saito To...
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