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Topic: Ujiteru Imagawa


  
  Imagawa Yoshimoto - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Imagawa Yoshimoto (今川 義元 Imagawa Yoshimoto, 1519-1560) was one of the leading daimyo (feudal lord) in Suruga Province along the Tokaido road, Japan.
Later, Imagawa established a three-way alliance with Takeda and Hojo, and set out toward the capital with Matsudaira Motoyasu of Mikawa.
Imagawa Yoshimoto is also a playable character in SWXL.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Imagawa_Yoshimoto   (203 words)

  
 Imagawa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
After the death of Yoshimoto at the battle of Okehazama in 1560, many Imagawa officers defected to other clans.
Within a decade the clan had lost all of its land holdings to the Tokugawa and Takeda clans.
The Imagawa subsequently became the master of ceremonies for the Tokugawa.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Imagawa   (103 words)

  
 Ichijô-Izumida
The Imagawa were established by Imagawa Kuniuji, the son of Ashikaga Nagauji (1211-1290).
Ujiteru was the eldest son of Imagawa Ujichika and succeeded his father in 1526.
Yoshimoto was the 5th son of Imagawa Ujichika and was at first a monk at the Zentoku-ji.
www.samurai-archives.com /dictionary/i.html   (6825 words)

  
 Imagawa Yoshimoto
Imagawa Yoshimoto was the daimyô of Suruga and Tôtomi and, later, Mikawa Provinces until 1560.
Ujiteru himself died of illness in 1536 and this touched off a struggle for power between his remaning brothers.
When word of his death spread, the Imagawa army fled precipitously, signaling not only the end of Yoshimoto but also an eventual end to the Imagawa.
www.samurai-archives.com /Yoshimoto.html   (712 words)

  
 Hôjô Clan Timeline
1545 - Ujiyasu, having made peace with the Imagawa and Takeda (and being compelled to surrender the Hôjô holdings in Suruga Province), marches to the relief of Kawagoe.
Enroute he is confronted by an army led by two of Ujiyasu's sons, Ujiteru and Ujikuni.
Ujimasa and Ujiteru, however, are executed, along with a number of Hôjô retainers.
www.samurai-archives.com /hojotime.html   (1335 words)

  
 Apollonian-Dionysian » Blog Archive » It Is Said
When Ujiteru was told to whom he had been assigned, he withdrew immediately to his fortress with his 5,000 personal soldiers.
Ujiteru was a shrewd man and understood that as long as night fell after day, no number of guards or walls could prevent the demon from entering his home and chopping off his head.
All that is known for sure is that the Imagawa Ujiteru was killed in his fortress by his personal guards, decapitated and done away with soon after his descent into madness and fear was complete—and that the lights of Iwata were then put out.
apodion.net /apo/it-is-said   (1016 words)

  
 Ei-
Nobutada was at first a retainer of the Imagawa and served Imagawa Yoshimoto and Ujizane.
He was at first a vassal of the Imagawa but broke away after the death of Imagawa Ujiteru.
He was defeated and by Takeda Nobutora's army in 1521 but whether he died on this occasion or in a battle in June of 1536 is a matter of debate among scholars.
www.samurai-archives.com /dictionary/eg.html   (2476 words)

  
 Encyclopedia of Japanese History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Hōjō Ujiteru and Hōjō Ujikuni attacked Takeda Shingen.
Although outnumbered 2 to 1, Shingen and his army managed to escape.
Switched his allegiance from the Imagawa family to Oda Nobuhide.
www.openhistory.org /jhdp/encyclopedia/m.html   (1568 words)

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