- Shimazu Tadatsune
Shimazu Tadatsune (島津忠恒;
November 27 ,1576 -April 7 ,1638 ) was a "tozama " daimyo of Satsuma, the first to hold it as a formal fief ("han") under theTokugawa shogunate , and the first Japanese to rule over theRyūkyū Kingdom . As lord of Satsuma, he was among the most powerful lords in Japan at the time, and formally submitted toTokugawa Ieyasu in 1602, to prove his loyalty, being rewarded as a result with the name Matsudaira Iehisa; Matsudaira being a branch family of the Tokugawa, and "Ie" of "Iehisa" being taken from "Ieyasu", this was a great honor. As of 1603, his holdings amounted to 605,000 "koku ".Tadatsune was the third son of
Shimazu Yoshihiro . Since his elder brotherShimazu Yoshihisa did not have a son and his other elder brotherShimazu Hisakazu died of illness in Korea, he was deemed successor to their uncle and he later took the name of "Iehisa" (家久).Like his father and uncle, he was known for bravery on the battlefield, and during the latter half of
Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea , fighting beside his father, he helped drive off the Ming army of over 100,000 men with only 8000 men. As head of theShimazu clan , he sought to remove corrupt or disloyal counselors, and to reform the clan leadership. To this end, in 1599, he killed a long-time retainer and "karō ",Ijuin Tadamune as well as his sonIjuin Tadazane when they tried to part with theShimazu clan .In 1602, he became the head of his clan but his father held real power until 1619. In 1609, Tadatsune led an expeditionary force to the
Ryūkyū Kingdom , subjugating it and using it to effect trade with China. The Ryūkyūs were allowed to remain semi-independent, and would not be formally annexed by Japan until after theMeiji Restoration (1868); if China knew that the Ryūkyūs were controlled by the Japanese, trade would have come to an end. Thus, Tadatsune forced this unusual status upon the Kingdom.References
*Sansom, George (1961). "A History of Japan: 1334-1615," Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
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