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Ōmandokoro (大政所, 1516 – 29 August 1592) or Ōmandokoro Naka was the mother of the Japanese ruler Toyotomi Hideyoshi. She was also the mother of Asahi no kata , Tomo and Toyotomi Hidenaga .
North Mandokoro), and his mother was styled Ōmandokoro (lit. Great Mandokoro). During the Heian period, the wives of the kuge were often called Kita-no-kata (北の方 Lady in the North), since their residence was normally placed in the northern complex of the palace.
In the Japanese aristocracy society, omandokoro is a title given to a mother based on an emperor's direction when her child was serving as the Sessho (the title of a regent given to who is named to assist an emperor when the emperor is still a child, or before coming of age, or when a female), or the Kanpaku - the title of a regent who assists ...
Consecration. Kōdai-ji. Kōdai-in (高台院) (died October 17, 1624), formerly known as Nene (ねね), One (おね), Nei (ねい), was an aristocrat and Buddhist nun, founder of the temple Kōdai-ji in Kyoto, Japan. She was formerly the principal samurai wife of Toyotomi Hideyoshi under the name of Toyotomi Yoshiko (豊臣 吉子). [1]
It is said that Ōmandokoro was born in Gokisu-mura, Owari Province. She was married to Kinoshita Yaemon, an Ashigaru of the Oda clan. They had two sons, Tomo and Hideyoshi. She remarried when her husband died.
仲 大政所 Naka, Zhong, Ōmandokoro, Ômandokoro, Omandokoro, Oomandokoro, Dazhengsuo, 天瑞院, Tenzuiin, Tianruiyuan 關 aka 関, Seki, Guan (1516 - 29 Aug 1592)
Ōmandokoro (大政所, 1516 – 29 August 1592) or Ōmandokoro Naka was the mother of the Japanese ruler Toyotomi Hideyoshi. She was also the mother of Asahi no kata, Tomo and Toyotomi Hidenaga.