Toyotomi Hideyori

Toyotomi Hideyori

▪ Japanese ruler
born Aug. 29, 1593, Ōsaka
died June 4, 1615, Ōsaka

      son and heir of Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537–98), the great warrior who unified Japan after more than a century of civil unrest. Hideyori's suicide at 22 removed the last obstacle to Tokugawa Ieyasu's bid to establish his own family as the preeminent power in Japan.

      Since Hideyori was only five years old when his father died in 1598, the country was actually governed by a council of five warriors whom Hideyoshi had appointed co-regents for his son in the event of his own death. Quarrels among the regents soon erupted in bloodshed, and at the Battle of Sekigahara (1600), Tokugawa Ieyasu emerged as the dominant military power in Japan.

      Although all the major feudal lords pledged themselves to Ieyasu, many actually remained loyal to Hideyori. To mollify them, Ieyasu allowed Hideyori to maintain his father's castle at Ōsaka and to govern the large surrounding fief. He also united the two families by giving Hideyori his granddaughter in marriage.

      Not until 1611, when the last of the old warriors loyal to the memory of Hideyoshi died, did Ieyasu dare to move against Hideyori. His opportunity came in 1614 in the form of a bronze bell that Hideyori had restored and hung in the Hōkō-ji (Hōkō Temple). Inscribed on the bell were two ideographs also used in writing Ieyasu's name. Accusing Hideyori of attempting to jinx him, Ieyasu called for an attack on Hideyori's castle. None of the great feudal lords came to his aid, but Hideyori managed to assemble an army of more than 90,000 rōnin, masterless warriors dispossessed during the Tokugawas' consolidation of power. Although the Tokugawa forces vastly outnumbered the defenders, the walls of the great Ōsaka castle proved impregnable.

      Early in 1615 Ieyasu arranged a truce. The terms, to which Hideyori agreed, allowed the outer ring of moats protecting the castle to be filled in and the outer perimeter of barricades to be torn down. A few months later, Ieyasu attacked the defenseless castle, and the desperate Hideyori and his family committed suicide.

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Universalium. 2010.

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