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{{Short description|Japanese feudal warrior}}
{{Short description|Japanese feudal warrior}}
{{Draft topics|biography|east-asia}}
{{Draft topics|biography|east-asia}}
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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
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{{nihongo|'''Hosokawa Akimoto'''|細川 昭元|Hosokawa Akimoto|1548 – 1592 or 1615}} was a military commander and feudal lord from the [[Sengoku period]] to the Azuchi-Momoyama period. He was the guardian of [[Awa Province (Tokushima)|Awa]], [[Settsu Province|Settsu]], and [[Tanba Province|Tanba]] provinces. He was Senior Fifth Rank and Ukyo-no-daibu (head of the western part of Kyoto's administration). He was the 19th head of the Hosokawa family. Born '''Sōmei-maru''' (聡明丸) to Hosokawa Harumoto and Rokkaku Sadayori, he came of age during a period of internal strife for the Hosokawa clan.
{{nihongo|'''Hosokawa Akimoto'''|細川 昭元|Hosokawa Akimoto|1548 – 1592 or 1615}} was a military commander and feudal lord from the [[Sengoku period]] to the Azuchi-Momoyama period. He was the guardian of [[Awa Province (Tokushima)|Awa]], [[Settsu Province|Settsu]], and [[Tanba Province|Tanba]] provinces. He was Senior Fifth Rank and Ukyo-no-daibu (head of the western part of Kyoto's administration). He was the 19th head of the Hosokawa family. Born '''Sōmei-maru''' (聡明丸) to Hosokawa Harumoto and Rokkaku Sadayori, he came of age during a period of internal strife for the Hosokawa clan.


In 1575 he was appointed Ukyo-no-daibu on Oda Nobunaga's reccomendation. It is written in the ''[[Shinchō Kōki]]'' that, upon receiving this appointment, he was given a stipend along with two districts in Tanba province.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taniguchi |first=Katsuhiro |title=『織田信長家臣人名事典』 |year=1995 |editor-last=Akisaku |editor-first=Takagi |language=Japanese |trans-title=Biographical Dictionary of Oda Nobunaga's Retainers |editor-last2=Yoshikawa |editor-first2=Kobunkan}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Miyamoto |first=Yoshiki |title=『誰も知らなかった江』 |publisher=毎日コミュニケーションズ |year=2010 |pages=117 |language=jp |trans-title=The River No One Knew About}}</ref>
In 1575 he was appointed Ukyo-no-daibu on Oda Nobunaga's reccomendation. It is written in the ''[[Shinchō Kōki]]'' that, upon receiving this appointment, he was given a stipend along with two districts in Tanba province.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taniguchi |first=Katsuhiro |title=『織田信長家臣人名事典』 |year=1995 |editor-last=Akisaku |editor-first=Takagi |language=Japanese |trans-title=Biographical Dictionary of Oda Nobunaga's Retainers |editor-last2=Yoshikawa |editor-first2=Kobunkan}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Miyamoto |first=Yoshiki |title=『誰も知らなかった江』 |publisher=毎日コミュニケーションズ |year=2010 |pages=117 |language=ja |trans-title=The River No One Knew About}}</ref>


His wife died in 1582 shortly following the [[Honnō-ji Incident]]. In the aftermath he resisted Toyotomi Hideyoshi's attacks on Shikoku, and (unsuccessfully) attempted to form an alliance between [[Chōsokabe Motochika]] and [[Oda Nobukatsu]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Yamashita |first=Tomoyuki |date=2016 |title=「天正後期の細川信良と長宗我部氏との関係 -細川信良書状の分析を通じて-」 |trans-title="The relationship between Hosokawa Nobuyoshi and the Chosokabe clan in the late Tensho period: through an analysis of letters written by Hosokawa Nobuyoshi," |journal=『戦国史研究』(Sengoku History Research) |pages=12-13}}</ref>
His wife died in 1582 shortly following the [[Honnō-ji Incident]]. In the aftermath he resisted Toyotomi Hideyoshi's attacks on Shikoku, and (unsuccessfully) attempted to form an alliance between [[Chōsokabe Motochika]] and [[Oda Nobukatsu]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Yamashita |first=Tomoyuki |date=2016 |title=「天正後期の細川信良と長宗我部氏との関係 -細川信良書状の分析を通じて-」 |trans-title="The relationship between Hosokawa Nobuyoshi and the Chosokabe clan in the late Tensho period: through an analysis of letters written by Hosokawa Nobuyoshi," |journal=『戦国史研究』(Sengoku History Research) |pages=12–13}}</ref>


Reports differ about the manner and date of his death, with the Hosokawa geneaology saying he died of illness in 1592 while the death register implies he died on 7 November 1615.
Reports differ about the manner and date of his death, with the Hosokawa geneaology saying he died of illness in 1592 while the death register implies he died on 7 November 1615.

Latest revision as of 19:36, 6 December 2024

Hosokawa Akimoto
細川昭元
Born
Sōmei-maru

1548
Died1592 or 1615
SpouseOinu no Kata
ChildrenHosokawa Motokatsu

Enko-in

(unnamed daughter)
Parents
Relatives Hosokawa clan

Hosokawa Akimoto (細川 昭元, Hosokawa Akimoto, 1548 – 1592 or 1615) was a military commander and feudal lord from the Sengoku period to the Azuchi-Momoyama period. He was the guardian of Awa, Settsu, and Tanba provinces. He was Senior Fifth Rank and Ukyo-no-daibu (head of the western part of Kyoto's administration). He was the 19th head of the Hosokawa family. Born Sōmei-maru (聡明丸) to Hosokawa Harumoto and Rokkaku Sadayori, he came of age during a period of internal strife for the Hosokawa clan.

In 1575 he was appointed Ukyo-no-daibu on Oda Nobunaga's reccomendation. It is written in the Shinchō Kōki that, upon receiving this appointment, he was given a stipend along with two districts in Tanba province.[1][2]

His wife died in 1582 shortly following the Honnō-ji Incident. In the aftermath he resisted Toyotomi Hideyoshi's attacks on Shikoku, and (unsuccessfully) attempted to form an alliance between Chōsokabe Motochika and Oda Nobukatsu.[3]

Reports differ about the manner and date of his death, with the Hosokawa geneaology saying he died of illness in 1592 while the death register implies he died on 7 November 1615.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Taniguchi, Katsuhiro (1995). Akisaku, Takagi; Yoshikawa, Kobunkan (eds.). 『織田信長家臣人名事典』 [Biographical Dictionary of Oda Nobunaga's Retainers] (in Japanese).
  2. ^ Miyamoto, Yoshiki (2010). 『誰も知らなかった江』 [The River No One Knew About] (in Japanese). 毎日コミュニケーションズ. p. 117.
  3. ^ Yamashita, Tomoyuki (2016). "「天正後期の細川信良と長宗我部氏との関係 -細川信良書状の分析を通じて-」" ["The relationship between Hosokawa Nobuyoshi and the Chosokabe clan in the late Tensho period: through an analysis of letters written by Hosokawa Nobuyoshi,"]. 『戦国史研究』(Sengoku History Research): 12–13.