Tokugawa Iemitsu

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Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu

Tokugawa Iemitsu (previously spelled Iyemitsu);(1604 - 1651) was the third shogun of the Tokugawa dynasty who reigned from 1623 to 1651. He was the eldest son of Tokugawa Hidetada, and thus the grandson of Tokugawa Ieyasu.

Contents

Early Life (1604-1617)

Tokugawa Iemitsu was born in 1604 (his exact birthdate is unknown). He was the eldest son of Tokugawa Hidetada and his wife, thus making him the grandson of Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu and thus the heir of the Tokugawa family after his father Hidetada became shogun. He was the first member of the Tokugawa family born after Tokugawa Ieyasu became shogun.

Not much is known of Iemitsu's early life, not even his childhood name. He had two sisters, Senhime, and Kazuko, while he had another brother, Tadanaga. Iemitsu was Hidetada's favorite, however.

In 1605, Shogun Ieyasu abdicated, and his heir, Hidetada, became Shogun Hidetada, while Ieyasu was granted the title of Ogosho, or Retired Shogun, retaining effective power. Decision maker or not, Hidetada's accession meant that the infant Iemitsu was now the heir to the Tokugawa dynasty, and would be shogun after his father's death.

In 1614, his father, Shogun Hidetada, with pressure from his father Retired Shogun Ieyasu, announced the Christian Expulsion edict, in which Christianity was banned, and all Christians were expelled from Japan. Shogun Hidetada taught his son and heir, Iemitsu, of the importance of this document, and this would determine Iemitsu's policies against Christians later in his life.

In 1615, his father and grandfather led the assault on Osaka Castle, where Toyotomi Hideyoshi's heir, Toyotomi Hideyori, was living quietly with his mother, his wife (Sen-hime, Iemitsu's older sister), and their son, who was part Tokugawa himself. Ieyasu favored a cautious, slow assault, while Hidetada favored a direct assault. Hidetada got his way, and while Sen-hime was spared and allowed to start a new family, Hideyori, his mother, and his son (who was part Tokugawa) were executed. Iemitsu was eleven years old. In 1616, his grandfather, Retired Shogun Ieyasu, died, and Hidetada now gained de facto control over the shogunate.

Heir of the Tokugawa (1617-1623)

In 1617, Iemitsu had his manhood rite and officially took the name Tokugawa Iemitsu. He also was installed officially as the heir to the Tokugawa shogunate. The only person to contest this position was his brother, Tokugawa Tadanaga, who thought he was better suited for the position himself. A fierce rivalry began to develop between the brothers.

Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu: The Hidetada Regency (1623-1632)

In 1623, when Iemitsu was just nineteen, his father Hidetada abdicated from the post of shogun. Iemitsu thus, unexpectedly, succeeded as the third shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate with Hidetada still being effective ruler.

Before Hidetada had abdicated in favor of Iemitsu, his daughter and Iemitsu's sister, Tokugawa Kazuko married the Emperor Go-Mizunoo. In 1624 Kazuko and Go-Mizunoo had a child, a girl who would become the Empress Meisho. In 1626, Shogun Iemitsu and Retired Shogun Hidetada visited Kyoto, visiting the Emperor Go-Mizunoo, Empress Kazuko (Iemitsu's sister), and Imperial Princess Meisho. Shogun Iemitsu made lavish grants of gold and money to the court nobles and the court itself. Relations with Go-Mizunoo deteriorated after Iemitsu's and Kazuko's wet nurse, a commoner, visited the court. Go-Mizunoo, embaressed, abdicated, and Meisho became empress. The shogun now became the uncle of the Empress.

In 1632, Retired Shogun Hidetada died, giving Iemitsu effective power. Anxious that his brother Tadanaga would try to have him assasinated, he was finally able to govern assuredly after Tadanaga died in 1633.

Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu (1632-1651)

Shogun Iemitsu still had his late father's advisors and veteran daimyo advising him and being "regents" for him. In 1633, after his brother's death, he dismissed his father's advisors and eliminated a number of daimyo who were a thorn in his side. The new advisors to the shogun were all friends Iemitsu had made since childhood, and instead of giving daimyo major autonomy, Iemitsu created a strong, central, administration. This made him unpopular with the daimyo, but he visited villages alone to meet with the common people, informality which would be unheard of years later in the times of later shoguns.

Nonetheless, Iemitsu was still brutal. In 1633, he officially isolated Japan from the rest of the world, also banning Christianity. Christians were executed, but many fled to the Spanish Philippines or went underground, and ordered the entire Japanese population to register at a shrine or temple. In 1635, Shogun Iemitsu set up the (Sankin Kotai) or Hostage System, where the families of daimyo would live as hostages in Edo for half the year to assure loyalty.

In 1637, a rebellion arose in Shimabara, known as the Shimabara Rebellion, organized mainly because of Iemitsu's anti-Christian policies. Thousands were killed in the revolt and countless more executed after. In 1639, Iemitsu officially closed off Japan from the rest of the world.

In 1643, Empress Meisho abdicated the throne. She was succeeded by her younger half-brother (Go-Mizunoo's son, but his mother was not Tokugawa Kazuko) Emperor Go-Komyo, who heavily disliked the shogunate due to its violent and barbaric ways, at many times making degrading comments to Shogun Iemitsu and his eldest and favorite son and heir, Tokugawa Ietsuna.

In 1651, Shogun Iemitsu died at the age of 47, being the first Tokugawa shogun whose reign ended with death, and not abdication. He was succeeded by his eldest son and heir, Tokugawa Ietsuna.


Preceded by:
Tokugawa Ieyasu
Tokugawa Shogun
1623-1651
Succeeded by:
Tokugawa Ietsuna

Template:End boxko:도쿠가와 이에미츠

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