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  1. Tokugawa Iemitsu (徳川 家光? ) , alle volte indicato erroneamente come Iyemitsu , ( 12 agosto 1604 – 8 giugno 1651 ) è stato un militare giapponese . Figlio di Tokugawa Hidetada , fu il terzo shōgun dello shogunato Tokugawa .

  2. Iemitsu was married to a woman named Takako, but they didn’t have any natural children. He had 1 daughter and 3 surviving sons, of which 2 became later shoguns, by his concubines. There were also 5 adopted daughters for strategic reasons. Tokugawa Iemitsu died aged 47, and he was the first shogun to not abdicate. Isolation of Japan

  3. Tokugawa Iemitsu (1604-651) was the third shogun of the Tokygawa Shogunate. After assuming that title in 1623, Iemitsu instituted reforms that would define Japan for centuries.

  4. 11 de ago. de 2022 · Tokugawa Iemitsu was born August 12, 1604 in the Nishi-no-maru compound of Edo Castle as the second son of Tokugawa Hidetada. Hidetada had an elder son, Nagamaru, born in 1601, but the child died young, and so the second son, the future Iemitsu was given the childhood name of Takechiyo, the same as his grandfather Tokugawa Ieyasu.As such he became the favored grandson of Ieyasu.

  5. Media in category "Tokugawa Iemitsu" The following 5 files are in this category, out of 5 total. LapinTokugawa.jpg 486 × 660; 71 KB. Taiyuinbyo, Mausoleum of The 3rd Tokugawa Shogun, Lemitsu, Nikko, Japan.jpg 6,502 × 2,440; 9.76 MB.

  6. Tokugawa Iemitsu. (1604–51). The third member of the Tokugawa family to rule Japan was Tokugawa Iemitsu. The Tokugawa rulers took the title of shogun, or military governor, and their government was known as the Tokugawa shogunate. Under Iemitsu, the Tokugawa regime assumed many of the characteristics that marked it for the next two and a half ...

  7. Biographie. Fils aîné du shogun Tokugawa Hidetada, il devint le nouveau shogun en 1623 quand son père se retira et établit le principe de chef non exécutif ōgosho dont il tint le rôle jusqu'à sa mort en 1632.. Pour assurer le pouvoir du shogunat, Iemitsu élimina un grand nombre de daimyōs et établit une administration centrale qui dura deux siècles jusqu'à la restauration Meiji.