Adzai Go ( 浅井 浅井 江 Adzai Go:) , Eyo ( 江 与 与 ) , Wow ( 小 小 督 Wow:) , or Satoko ( 达 子 ) , ( 1573 - November 3, 1626 ) - Japanese statesman and politician of the Azuti-Momoyama period. She was married three times, the first time to Sadzi Kazunari, her cousin, but divorced him on the orders of Toyotomi Hideyoshi . Secondly married Hideyoshi's nephew Toyotomi Hidekatsu, from whom she gave birth to Toyotomi Sadako's daughter, but he died due to illness during the Korean War. In 1595, she married a third time with Tokugawa Hidetada , who later became the 2nd shogun from the Tokugawa dynasty. She became the mother of his successor, Iemitsu . They also had daughters Senhime, Tamahime, Katsuhime, Hatsuhime, Matsuhime and another son of Tadanaga. Hatsuhime was adopted by Ogo Hatsu’s sister, wife of Kёгgoku Takatsugu. In addition, Azai Guo was the grandmother of Empress Meisho.
| Wow | |
|---|---|
| 浅井 江 | |
| Birth name | Azai Go |
| Date of Birth | 1573 |
| Date of death | September 15, 1626 |
| Place of death | Tokyo |
| A country | |
| Occupation | |
| Father | Azai Nagamasa |
| Mother | Oiti |
| Spouse | , and |
| Children | From 2nd marriage: daughter: Toyotomi Sadako From the 3rd marriage: sons: Tokugawa Iemitsu Tokugawa Tadanaga daughters: Senhime Tamahime Katsuhime Hatsuhime Matsuhime |
The posthumous name is Her Highness Ms. Sugengin ( Jap. 崇 源 г Su: gengin ) .
Hidetada's luck had a good effect on Azai Go's life. The surviving records of luxury merchants give us an idea of the tastes of women of the privileged class, to which Ogo and her sisters belonged [1] .
Content
Genealogy
Azai Go, also known as Ogo, was the third and youngest daughter of Azai Nagamasa and Oichi , the youngest sister of Oda Nobunaga [2] . Toyotomi Hideyoshi became the adoptive father and protector of Eyo before her marriage [3] .
Eyo's older sister, Yodo-dono , at the birth of Tyatya, was a prominent concubine of Hideyoshi, who gave birth to his heir, Toyotomi Hideyori [2] .
Ogo's middle sister, Hatsu, was the wife of Kyogoku Takatsugu and the mother of Kyogoku Tadataki [2] .
Burial
After Hidetada transferred the post of shogun to his son Iemitsu and assumed the title of ex-shogun in 1623, Ogo took the Buddhist name, Sugenjin ( Jap. 崇 源 院 Su: genjin ) . Its mausoleum is located in Zojo-ji, Shiba, in the vicinity of Tokyo [4] .
Posthumously awarded the 1st junior bureaucratic rank.
Taiga drama
In 2011, the NHK broadcast a historical drama, Gō: Hime-tachi no Sengoku , based on Ogo's life, played by actress Juri Ueno [5] [6] .
Notes
- ↑ Hickman, Money L. et al. (2002). Japan's Golden Age: Momoyama, p. 283.
- ↑ 1 2 3 "The silk colored portrait of wife of Takatsugu Kyogoku," Archived on May 6, 2011. Digital Cultural Properties of Wakasa Obama; Oichinokata Archived on September 8, 2012. Gifu prefecture website
- ↑ Wilson, Richard L. (1985). Ogata Kenzan (1663-1743), p. 40.
- ↑ Tanabe Yasushi. "On the Sogenin's Mansoleum at Zojoji Temple" (崇 源 院 靈牌 所造 營 考) . Transaction of the Institute of Japanese Architects (建築 学会 論文集). No. 19360331, pp. 317-323.
- ↑ 大河 ド ラ マ 第 50 作 江 (ご う) 姫 た ち の 戦 国 Archived July 11, 2009. ; Atsuhime -Autorin für NHKs 2011er Taiga-Drama gewählt (citing Tokyograph ) Archived on May 6, 2011.
- ↑ J-Dorama Archived July 15, 2006. .
Literature
Azai Go // Nipponik Encyclopedia : [ jap. ] = 日本 大 百科全書: 全 26 冊 巻 . - 2 版. - 東京: 小学 館 , 1994-1997.
- Hickman, Money L., John T. Carpenter and Bruce A. Coats. (2002). Japan's Golden Age: Momoyama. New Haven: Yale University Press . ISBN 0-300-09407-8 ; ISBN 978-0-300-09407-7 ; OCLC 34564921
- Wilson, Richard L. (1985). Ogata Kenzan (1663-1743) (PhD thesis / dissertation). Lawrence, Kansas: University of Kansas. OCLC 19111312