- Matsudaira Ietada (Fukōzu)
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Matsudaira Ietada 1st Lord of Omigawa
(Fukōzu-Matsudaira)In office
1594–1600Preceded by none Succeeded by Matsudaira Tadayoshi Personal details Born 1547
Mikawa Province, JapanDied September 8, 1600
Fushimi, Yamashiro Province, JapanNationality Japanese In this Japanese name, the family name is "Matsudaira".Matsudaira Ietada (松平 家忠 , 1547 – September 8, 1600) was a Japanese samurai of the Sengoku period through late Azuchi-Momoyama period, who served the Tokugawa clan, and became a daimyo in 1590. Ietada was the eldest son of Matsudaira Koretada, the head of the Fukōzu branch of the Matsudaira clan. Ietada served Tokugawa Ieyasu from a young age, and fought in many of Ieyasu's campaigns. Upon the latter's entry into the Kantō region in 1590, Ietada was granted the 10,000 koku fief of Oshi. Oshi had been meant for Ieyasu's fourth son Tadayoshi; however, as Tadayoshi was still young, the fief was entrusted to Ietada's stewardship. When Tadayoshi came of age, he was granted Oshi, and Ietada was moved to the Omigawa Domain in Shimōsa Province. Ietada was assigned to Fushimi Castle together with Torii Mototada; the two men died in battle there, shortly before the Battle of Sekigahara.
Ietada is famous for his journal, Ietada nikki (家忠日記 ), which he kept for the 17 year interval between 1575 and August of 1594.
References
- (Japanese) "Fukōzu" on Matsudaira-shoke mokuji (19 Feb. 2008)
- (Japanese) Short biography (19 Feb. 2008)
Preceded by
Matsudaira Koretada4th Fukōzu-Matsudaira family head
1575-1600Succeeded by
Matsudaira TadatoshiPreceded by
none1st Lord of Oshi
(Fukōzu-Matsudaira)
1590-1592Succeeded by
Matsudaira TadayoshiPreceded by
none1st Lord of Omigawa
(Fukōzu-Matsudaira)
1594-1600Succeeded by
Matsudaira TadatoshiCategories:- Daimyo
- Japanese writers
- Japanese diarists
- Tokugawa clan
- 1547 births
- 1600 deaths
- Japanese warriors killed in battle
- Japanese nobility stubs
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