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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jukei-niJukei-ni - Wikipedia

    Jukei-ni (寿桂尼, c. 1490 - 11 April 1568) was a Japanese noble lady who acted as the power behind the throne or de facto daimyo of the Imagawa clan during the Sengoku period. She was born in the aristocrat Nakamikado Family of Kyoto. Jukei-ni was the wife of Imagawa Ujichika and mother of Imagawa Ujiteru, Imagawa Yoshimoto and ...

  2. The life of the woman known to us as Jukei-ni (the nun Jukei [d. 1568]), was likely extraordinary, but what is indubitably extraordinary is the body of missives she left behind.

  3. His marriage to Jukei-ni, the daughter of a court noble, is said to have strengthened his connection with Kyoto and led to Kyoto's culture being adopted in Sunpu (the capital of Suruga Province).

  4. 14 de sept. de 2022 · An acceptable example of women who became known as “onna daimyō” (female lords) are Jukei-ni and Toshoin. Both women acted for a long period as rulers of their respective domains, even though they were not considered heirs.

  5. Imagawa Ujichika (今川 氏親, 1473 – August 1, 1526) was a Japanese daimyō of the Sengoku period. He was the 10th head of the Imagawa clan of Suruga Province. Ujichika was the son of Imagawa Yoshitada. He was the husband of Jukei-ni .

  6. Principal wife of Imagawa's Suruga-Totomi daimyo Imagawa Ujichika, and Ujiteru and Yoshimoto's mother. Originated from the noble Nakamikado family. Personally, handled national affairs, caring for her ailing husband Ujichika, and had the young Ujiteru inherit the clan.

  7. Yoshimoto's faction argued he was the rightful heir because Yoshimoto's mother (Jukei-ni) was the consort of Ujichika. Genkō Etan's faction disputed this based on Genkō's seniority, and that his mother was a member of the Kushima family.