Ii Naomasa
Ii Naomasa | |
---|---|
井伊 直政 | |
Head of Ii clan | |
In office 1582–1602 | |
Preceded by | Ii Naotora |
Succeeded by | Ii Naokatsu |
Daimyō of Takasaki | |
In office 1590–1600 | |
Succeeded by | Sakai Ietsugu |
Daimyō of Sawayama | |
In office 1600–1600 | |
Preceded by | Ishida Mitsunari |
Daimyō of Hikone | |
In office 1600–1602 | |
Preceded by | Ii Naotora |
Succeeded by | Ii Naokatsu |
Personal details | |
Born | March 4, 1561 Tōtōmi Province, Japan |
Died | March 24, 1602 Edo, Japan | (aged 41)
Spouse | Tobai-in |
Parent |
|
Relatives |
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Military service | |
Allegiance | Tokugawa clan Eastern Army Tokugawa shogunate |
Unit | Ii clan |
Battles/wars | Siege of Takatenjin Battle of Komaki and Nagakute Siege of Tanaka castle Siege of Odawara Battle of Gifu Castle Battle of Sekigahara |
Ii Naomasa (井伊 直政, March 4, 1561 – March 24, 1602) was a general under the Sengoku period daimyō, and later shōgun, Tokugawa Ieyasu.[1] He is regarded as one of the Four Guardians of the Tokugawa along with Honda Tadakatsu, Sakakibara Yasumasa, and Sakai Tadatsugu. He led the clan after the death of his foster mother, Ii Naotora. He married Tobai-in, Matsudaira Yasuchika's daughter and adopted daughter of Tokugawa Ieyasu.
Ii Naomasa joined the ranks of the Tokugawa clan in the mid-1570s, rising swiftly through the ranks to eventually become the master of a sizable holding in Ōmi Province, following the Battle of Sekigahara (1600).[1] His court title was Hyōbu-dayū.
Early life[edit]
Ii Naomasa was born in Hōda Village of Tōtōmi Province. His childhood name was Toramatsu (虎松) later Manchiyo (万千代). His family, like the Tokugawa, had originally been retainers of the Imagawa clan, but following the death of the clan's leader, Imagawa Yoshimoto, in the Battle of Okehazama (1560), confusion and general chaos ensued. Naomasa's father, Ii Naochika, was falsely convicted of treason by Yoshimoto's paranoid successor, Imagawa Ujizane, and was subsequently killed.
Naomasa, then a very small child, was personally lucky to escape his father's fate. After many difficulties, Ii Naotora succeeded the Ii clan and acted as the guardian of Naomasa; she adopted Naomasa to later succeed her. When Ii Naotora began working with Tokugawa Ieyasu after visiting him in Hamamatsu, she sent Naomasa to his care.[1]
Service under Ieyasu[edit]
At the age of 22, Naomasa distinguished military service against the Takeda clan, at Siege of Takatenjin in 1581,[2]and for killing ninja who had been sneaking in to the bedroom of Ieyasu.[citation needed].
When Honnoji Incident occured in 1582, Naomasa accompanied Ieyasu returned to Mikawa from Sakai, where he had been staying, crossing over Iga province, following the death of Oda Nobunaga.
Naomasa initially garnered mass attention at the Battle of Nagakute (1584), commanding around three thousand musketeers with distinction and defeating the forces led by Ikeda Tsuneoki and Mori Nagayoshi. In the battle, Naomasa fought so valiantly that it elicited praise from Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who was on the opposing side. Following the battle, Hideyoshi's mother was sent to stay with Naomasa in gentle captivity, cementing an alliance between the Tokugawa and the Toyotomi.
Later in 1587, during the campaign of Toyotomi Hideyoshi against the Ikkō-ikki rebel armies, the Tokugawa clan involved in the battle of Tanaka castle.[3]
During the Siege of Odawara in 1590, Naomasa participated in the Tokugawa troops.[4]
Naomasa's finest hour was to come at the Battle of Sekigahara, where his unit outpaced those of other generals such as Fukushima Masanori, drawing the "first blood" of that battle. However, as the fighting was dying down, Naomasa was shot and wounded by a stray bullet during his attempt to prevent Shimazu Yoshihiro's getaway, a wound from which he would never fully recover. The wound also prevented his personal involvement in quelling the last vestiges of the anti-Tokugawa faction in the coming months.[1] According to legend, Naomasa was feared so much by his own men, that when he was critically wounded at Sekigahara, not a single one of them committed ritual seppuku, the act of honor killing to prevent a samurai from falling into enemy hands, out of fear of retaliation. As such, Naomasa was able to regain his composure and escape with his life.
Later, Naomasa were transferred to Sawayama castle in Ōmi Province, the former territory of Ishida Mitsunari,[5][6][7] where his fief also increased from 60,000 koku into 180,000 koku.[8]
Death[edit]
Ii Naomasa's premature death in 1602 has been widely blamed on the wound he received at Sekigahara. Naomasa was highly regarded by Tokugawa Ieyasu, so it is no surprise that his sons Naotsugu and Naotaka succeeded him in his service and title. However, Naotsugu managed to anger Ieyasu by refusing to take part in his campaign to reduce the Toyotomi clan stronghold at Osaka. Nonetheless, the Ii remained influential in Japanese politics throughout the Edo period. (Ii Naosuke is especially famous)
Personal Information[edit]
Based on the elegy Confucian scholar Oze Hoan [ja] (1564–1640), in his biographical work Taikōki, Ii Naomasa is implied has beautiful face(Bishōnen).[9]
The units Naomasa commanded on the battlefield were notable for being outfitted almost completely in blood-red armour for psychological impact, a tactic he adopted from Yamagata Masakage, one of Takeda Shingen's generals.[1] As such, his unit became known as the "Red Demons of Ii", a nickname he shared. It has also been rumored, although never confirmed, that Naomasa would sometimes wear a "monkey mask" into battle, including at Sekigahara.
Family[edit]
- Foster Mother: Ii Naotora
- Father: Ii Naochika
- Mother: Okuyama Hiyo (d.1585)
- Wife: Tobai-in
- Concubine: Inbu Tokuemon’s daughter
- Children:
- Ii Naokatsu by Tobai-in
- Ii Naotaka by Inbu Tokuemon’s daughter
- Masako married Matsudaira Tadayoshi by Tobai-in
- Koan-in married Date Hidemune by Tobai-in
Legacy[edit]
In theater and other contemporary works, Naomasa is often characterized as the opposite of Ieyasu's other great general, Honda Tadakatsu. While both were fierce warriors of the Tokugawa, Tadakatsu survived countless battles without ever suffering an injury, while Naomasa is often depicted as enduring many battle wounds, but fighting through them.
Naomasa's sets of armour are all preserved within Hikone Castle and are accessible for viewing.
References[edit]
- ^ a b c d e 井伊直政 -Hatabo's Homepage Archived 2003-09-08 at archive.today
- ^ 戦国武将100列伝 (Hardcover) (in Jp). 展望社. 2020. p. 121. ISBN 4885463734. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ Stephen Turnbull (2019). Tanaka 1587: Japan’s Greatest Unknown Samurai Battle (From Retinue to Regiment) (Paperback). Helion and Company. ISBN 1912866498. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
- ^ 川村一彦. 小田原征伐の攻防 (in Jp). 86: 歴史研究会. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ 村川
- ^ 江戸時代人物控1000, 山本博文監修, 小学館, 2007, p. 23, ISBN 978-4-09-626607-6
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ 井伊達夫 (2007). 井伊軍志 (新装版 ed.). 宮帯出版社. p. 107.
- ^ 川村 真二 (2014). 徳川四天王 家康に天下を取らせた男たち (Paperback) (in Jp). PHP研究所. p. 54. ISBN 4569761933. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ Hoan, Oze (1626). Wikisource. – via
Bibliography[edit]
- 村川浩平 (2013). "天正・文禄・慶長期、武家叙任と豊臣姓下賜の事例" (PDF). 駒沢史学. 80.
- 野田浩子 (2017). 井伊直政: 家康筆頭家臣への軌跡 [Naomasa Ii: His path to becoming Ieyasu's top vassal]. Ebisukosyo Publication. ISBN 978-4-86403-262-9. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
External links[edit]
- Ii family information (in Japanese)
- Painting and brief bio of Naomasa (in Japanese)
- Information on Naomasa, including images of his flag, battle standard, and armor (in Japanese)