Qui es va casar amb Tokugawa Ieyasu?
Yōgen-in s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Shimoyama-dono s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Shinjuin s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Sanjōshi s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Lady Acha s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu . La diferència d'edat era de 12 anys, 1 mesos i 16 dies.
Chōshō-in s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Okaji no Kata s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu . La diferència d'edat era de 35 anys, 10 mesos i 7 dies.
Rengein s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Taieiin s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Yōju-in s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Seiunin s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Chaa no Tsubone s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Kame no kata s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Seiei-in s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Asahihime s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Sutsien-si s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Lady Saigō s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Fushoin s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Tsukiyama-dono s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Ryoūn-in s'ha casat amb Tokugawa Ieyasu .
Tokugawa Ieyasu

- En aquest nom japonès, el cognom és Tokugawa.
Tokugawa Ieyasu, en japonès 徳川 家康, (31 de gener de 1543 - 1 de juny de 1616), va ser el fundador i primer shogun del Tokugawa bakufu (Shogunat Tokugawa) del Japó, que va durar del 1600, any de la batalla de Sekigahara, fins a la Restauració Meiji el 1868. Ieyasu va governar des de 1600 (oficialment 1603) fins a la seva renúncia el 1605.
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Yōgen-in
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Shimoyama-dono
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Shinjuin
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Sanjōshi
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Lady Acha

Tokugawa Ieyasu


Chōshō-in
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Okaji no Kata
Okaji no Kata (お梶の方) (December 7, 1578 – September 17, 1642) or Lady Okaji, was a Japanese noble lady and aristocrat who lived during the Sengoku period and at the beginning of Edo period. She was the founder of Eishō-ji temple in Kamakura and was also a concubine of Tokugawa Ieyasu. She was maybe from the Ōta clan. Her other names are Ohachi no Kata (お八の方) and Okatsu no Kata (お勝の方).
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Rengein
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Taieiin
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Yōju-in

Tokugawa Ieyasu


Seiunin
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Chaa no Tsubone
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Kame no kata

Tokugawa Ieyasu


Seiei-in
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Asahihime

Asahi no kata (朝日の方, 1543 – February 18, 1590) was a Japanese aristocrat of the Sengoku period. She was a half-sister of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and wife of Tokugawa Ieyasu, two of the three "Great Unifiers" of Japan. Apart from "Asahi no kata", she is also known as Suruga Gozen (駿河御前) and Asahi-hime (朝日姫), though none of these are personal names, which roughly translate to "the person of Asahi", "the Lady Suruga", or "Princess Asahi", respectively.
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Sutsien-si
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Lady Saigō

Lady Saigō (西郷局 or 西郷の局 Saigō no Tsubone; 1552 – 1 July 1589), also known as Oai, was one of the concubines of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the samurai lord who unified Japan at the end of the sixteenth century and then ruled as shōgun. She was also the mother of the second Tokugawa shōgun, Tokugawa Hidetada. Her contributions were considered so significant that she was posthumously inducted to the Senior First Rank of the Imperial Court, the highest honor that could be conferred by the Emperor of Japan.
During their relationship, Lady Saigō influenced Ieyasu's philosophies, choice of allies, and policies as he rose to power during the late Sengoku period, and she thus had an indirect effect on the organization and composition of the Tokugawa shogunate. Although less is known of her than some other figures of the era, she is generally regarded as the "power behind the throne", and her life has been compared to a "Cinderella story" of feudal Japan.
Once she was in a respected and secure position as the official concubine and mother to Ieyasu's heir, Lady Saigō used her influence and wealth for charitable purposes. A devout Buddhist, she donated money to temples in Suruga Province, where she resided as the consort of Ieyasu, first in Hamamatsu Castle and later in Sunpu Castle. As she was quite near-sighted, she also established a charitable organization that assisted visually impaired women with no other means of support. Lady Saigō died at a fairly young age, under somewhat mysterious circumstances. Although murder was suspected, no culprit was identified.
Lady Saigō bore four children: she had a son and a daughter (Saigō Katsutada and Tokuhime) while married, and she later bore two sons as the consort of Tokugawa Ieyasu: Tokugawa Hidetada and Matsudaira Tadayoshi. Among the descendants of Lady Saigō was the Empress Meishō (1624–1696), one of very few women to accede to the Chrysanthemum Throne as empress regnant.
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Fushoin
Tokugawa Ieyasu


Tsukiyama-dono

Lady Tsukiyama or Tsukiyama-dono (築山殿; d. 19 September 1579) was a Japanese noble lady and aristocrat from the Sengoku period. She was the chief consort of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the daimyō who would become the founder and first shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate. She was the mother of Ieyasu's first child, Kamehime, and gave birth to Ieyasu's heir apparent, Matsudaira Nobuyasu. As principal consort, Tsukiyama led many of the political achievements of the former Matsudaira clan. She was an important figure at the beginning of Ieyasu's career, who later led to the beginning of Tokugawa Shogunate. She is best known for possibly initiating a conspiracy against Oda Nobunaga. Whether or not she cheated Ieyasu into joining the Takeda clan; the veracity of this event remains one of the greatest mysteries of the Sengoku period, known as the Nobuyasu Incident.
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