Andō Morinari: Difference between revisions
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{{Japanese name|Andō}} |
{{Japanese name|Andō}} |
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{{nihongo|'''Andō Morinari'''|安藤 守就||extra=1503 – June 27, 1582}}, also known as {{nihongo|'''Andō Michitari'''|安藤 道足}} was a [[ |
{{nihongo|'''Andō Morinari'''|安藤 守就||extra=1503 – June 27, 1582}}, also known as {{nihongo|'''Andō Michitari'''|安藤 道足}} was a [[Japan]]ese [[samurai]] warrior in the [[Sengoku period]].<ref>[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%AE%89%E8%97%A4%E5%AE%88%E5%B0%B1 安藤守就] at ''Nihon jinmei daijiten''; retrieved 2013-5-29.</ref> |
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He served as a head retainer under [[Saitō Dōsan]] after Dōsan overthrew [[Toki Yorinari]] (the original ruler of Mino) and became [[daimyō]] of [[Mino Province]]. |
He served as a head retainer under [[Saitō Dōsan]] after Dōsan overthrew [[Toki Yorinari]] (the original ruler of Mino) and became [[daimyō]] of [[Mino Province]]. |
Revision as of 06:31, 5 May 2014
Template:Japanese name Andō Morinari (安藤 守就, 1503 – June 27, 1582), also known as Andō Michitari (安藤 道足) was a Japanese samurai warrior in the Sengoku period.[1]
He served as a head retainer under Saitō Dōsan after Dōsan overthrew Toki Yorinari (the original ruler of Mino) and became daimyō of Mino Province.
Morinari was considered one of the "Mino Triumvirate" (西美濃三人衆, Nishi Mino Sanninshū), along with Inaba Yoshimichi and Ujiie Naotomo. In 1547, they agreed together to join the forces of Oda Nobunaga.[2]
He fought at the Siege of Inabayama Castle (1652), the Battle of Anegawa (1570) and in the battles for the Ishiyama Honganji. He was dismissed from Nobunaga's service following the fall of the Honganji in 1580 and evidently died as a ronin.
References
- ^ 安藤守就 at Nihon jinmei daijiten; retrieved 2013-5-29.
- ^ Ōta, Gyūichi. (2011). The Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga, p. 114.