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  1. Hideyasu was born as Tokugawa Ogimaru (徳川於義丸) in 1574, the second son of Tokugawa Ieyasu, by Lady Oman (also known as Lady Kogō), a handmaiden to his wife, Lady Tsukiyama. When Oman became pregnant, Ieyasu feared his wife's wrath, so he sheltered the girl in the home of his retainer Honda Shigetsugu, in Ofumi Village near Hamamatsu ...

  2. Odai no kata (於大の方 (Vu Đại Chi Phương), ? 1528–1602), còn được gọi là Dai, Daishi, và Denzûin, là một nhân vật quý tộc Nhật Bản sống vào thời Chiến quốc.. Bà là mẹ của Tướng quân Tokugawa Ieyasu, người sáng lập ra Mạc phủ Tokugawa.Bà xuất thân là con gái của Mizuno Tadamasa, lãnh chúa thành Kariya.

  3. Odai no kata (於大の方, 1528–1602), also known as Dai, Daishi, and Denzûin, was a Japanese noble lady from the Sengoku period. She was the mother of Tokugawa Ieyasu, founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate. She was the daughter of Mizuno Tadamasa, the lord of Kariya Castle. She was married to Matsudaira Hirotada in 1541 and gave birth to Ieyasu two years later. After the Mizuno clan betrayed ...

  4. Hideyasu "Sōki" Yūki is the main protagonist in Onimusha: Dawn of Dreams. He was the biological son of Ieyasu Tokugawa and a warrior who possesses the dark power of the Oni. He goes by many names besides Sōki and Hideyasu Yūki, Blue Demon (蒼鬼 Ao Oni) and Oni of the Ash. Having Lamentation, his prized broadsword he learned about Hideyoshi's insidious scheme, he sets out on a journey to ...

  5. Tokugawa Ieyasu's birth mother, Odai no Kata, remarried the castle lord, Toshikatsu Hisamatsu, and lived in the castle for 15 years. It is also said that on May 17th, 1560, prior to the Battle of Okehazama, Odai no Kata and Ieyasu (then Motoyasu Matsudaira) had a deeply emotional reunion here after…

  6. Odai no kata, also known as Dai, Daishi, and Denzûin, was the mother of Tokugawa Ieyasu . A daughter of Mizuno Tadamasa, she was married to Matsudaira Hirotada in 1541 and gave birth to Ieyasu the following year. After the Mizuno clan betrayed Hirotada in 1544, he divorced her and remarried. In 1850, she was posthumously granted the First Rank.