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  1. 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 ...

  2. 11 de may. de 2023 · Learn how Tokugawa Ieyasu rose from a modest background to become the founder of the Tokugawa shogunate, which ruled Japan for 250 years. Discover his alliances, battles, and policies that transformed Japan and ended the Warring States period.

  3. Asahi no kata: Nanmeiin: 1543: February 18, 1590: Concubine: Nishigori no Tsubone: Rensho-in: June 19, 1606: Udono Nagamochi (1513–1557) Tokuhime (Tokugawa) married Hojo Ujinao later to Ikeda Terumasa of Himeji Domain: Concubine: Shimoyama-dono: Moshin’in: 1564: November 21, 1591: Akiyama Torayasu: Takeda Nobuyoshi of Mito Domain ...

  4. Asahi-no-kata - SamuraiWiki. Born: 1543. Died: 1590. Other Names: Nanmyô-in. Asahi-no-kata was one of the chief wives ( midaidokoro) of Tokugawa Ieyasu, marrying him in 1586 . Her father was named Chikuami. She was a half-sister of Toyotomi Hideyoshi; the two had the same mother. This article is a placeholder or stub.

  5. Asahi no kata (朝日の方) (1543 – February 18, 1590) was a half-sister of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and wife of Tokugawa Ieyasu, two of Japan's greatest feudal warlords. She is also called Suruga Gozen (駿河御膳) and Asahi-hime (朝日姫), though none of these are names, referring to her as "the person of Asahi," "the Lady Suruga," or ...

  6. 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),

  7. Asahi no kata (1543–1590), married first Soeda Oshinari then Tokugawa Ieyasu; Wives and concubines Hideyoshi sitting with his wives and concubines. Wife Nene (between 1541 and 1549–1624), or One, later Kōdai-in; Minami-dono, daughter of Yamana Toyokuni; Yodo-dono (1569–1615), or Chacha, later Daikōin, daughter of Azai Nagamasa