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  1. Hosokawa Tadatoshi (細川 忠利, December 21, 1586 – April 26, 1641) was a Japanese samurai daimyō of the early Edo period. He was the head of Kumamoto Domain. He was a patron of the martial artist Miyamoto Musashi.

  2. Una explicación fácil de entender de Tadatoshi Hosokawa. Durante el período Sengoku, Akechi Mitsuhide fue quien obligó a Oda Nobunaga a suicidarse durante el Incidente Honnoji. Mitsuhide tiene una hija llamada Garasha. Tama se convirtió en la esposa de Tadaoki Hosokawa y los dos tuvieron varios hijos.

  3. An easy-to-understand explanation of Tadatoshi Hosokawa. During the Sengoku period, Akechi Mitsuhide was the one who forced Oda Nobunaga to commit suicide during the Honnoji Incident. Mitsuhide has a daughter named Garasha. Tama became the wife of Tadaoki Hosokawa, and the two had several children.

  4. Hosokawa Tadatoshi (1586–1641) The connections between Musashi and Hosokawa Tadatoshi went all the way back to the swordsman’s duel with Sasaki Kojirō on Ganryū Island. Tadatoshi, at that time, was still the master of Moji castle , a few miles northeast of Kokura.

  5. Hosokawa Tadaoki (細川忠興, November 28, 1563 – January 18, 1646) was a Japanese samurai warrior of the late Sengoku period and early Edo period. [1] He was the son of Hosokawa Fujitaka with Numata Jakō, and he was the husband of a famous Christian convert ( Kirishitan ), Hosokawa Gracia.

  6. 2 de may. de 2014 · En este relato Mori Ōgai nos presenta a Okitsu Yagoemon, un vasallo del señor Hosokawa Tadaoki que desea cometer seppuku debido a una antigua deuda contraída treinta años atrás: el protagonista asesinó a un compañero samurái en una disputa por la compra de un objeto de valor que le había encargado su señor.

  7. Born: 1586. Died: 1641. Japanese: 細川 忠利 (Hosokawa Tadatoshi) Hosokawa Tadatoshi is considered the third Edo period head of the Hosokawa clan. A son of Hosokawa Tadaoki (Sansai) and Hosokawa Gracia, he was the lord of Kokura han until 1632, when he was transferred by the Tokugawa shogunate to Kumamoto han, where the Hosokawa would remain ...