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  1. Matsudaira Tadanao (松平 忠直, 16 July 1595 – 5 October 1650) was a Sengoku to early Edo period Japanese samurai, and the 2nd daimyō of Fukui Domain in Echizen Province.

  2. Naomasa Matsudaira era nieto de Ieyasu y participó activamente en el asedio de Osaka. Fue muy elogiado por su general enemigo, Nobushige Sanada (Yukimura Sanada), por su actuación como un joven guerrero, y construyó una buena relación con los sucesivos shogunes Tokugawa.

  3. Naomasa Matsudaira was the grandson of Ieyasu and was active in the Osaka Siege. He was highly praised by his enemy general, Nobushige Sanada (Yukimura Sanada), for his acting as a young warrior, and built a good relationship with successive Tokugawa shoguns.

  4. The Echizen Matsudaira (越前松平家 Echizen Matsudaira-ke) were a samurai family (武家 buke) that descended from Yūki Hideyasu (結城秀康, 1574-1607), the second son of Tokugawa Ieyasu. With an income of 340,000 koku, the Matsudaira residing in Fukui (Fukui Prefecture) were among the great shimpan daimyō of the Edo Period (1603-1868).

  5. Matsudaira Tadamasa (松平 忠昌, 21 January 1598 – 20 September 1645) was an early to mid-Edo period Japanese samurai, and daimyō.

  6. Naomasa MATSUDAIRA (September 1, 1601-March 8, 1666) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) in the early Edo Period. After serving as the lord of Anezaki Domain in Kazusa Province, the lord of Ono Domain in Echizen Province and the lord of Matsumoto Domain in Shinano Province, he became the first lord of Matsue Domain in Izumo Province.

  7. The engineers in Nishiyama's study include Matsudaira Tadashi and Miki Tadanao. During World War II, Matsudaira successfully reduced the flutter vibration of the A6M Zero fighter (pp. 58-60). Similarly, Miki minimized the weight of the P1Y bomber, thereby maximizing its speed (pp. 56-58), and he was the chief designer of the rocket-propelled ...