Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Ikeda Mitsumasa
Japanese daimyō From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Ikeda Mitsumasa (池田 光政; May 10, 1609 – June 27, 1682) was a Japanese daimyō of the early Edo period.[1]
Remove ads
Early life
His childhood name was Shintarō (新太郎).He was the son of Ikeda Toshitaka with Tsuruhime, daughter of Sakakibara Yasumasa. He adopted daughter of Tokugawa Hidetada.[1] He married Katsuhime, daughter of Honda Tadatoki with Senhime who was the daughter of Tokugawa Hidetada with Oeyo and Tokugawa Ieyasu's favorite granddaughter.
Family
- Father: Ikeda Toshitaka (1584-1616)
- Mother: Tsuruhime (d.1672)
- Wife: Katsuhime (1618-1678)
- Concubines:
- Mizuno Katsunoshin's daughter
- Okuni no Kata
- Children:
- Ikeda Tsunamasa by Katsuhime
- Jiunin married Honda Tadahira by Katsuhime
- Seigen’in (1636-1717) married Ichijo Norisuke by Katsuhime
- Daughter married Sakakibara Masafusa by Katsuhime
- daughter married Nakagawa Hisatsune by Katsuhime
- Ikeda Masakoto (1645-1700) by Mizuno Katsunoshin's daughter
- Ikeda Terutoshi (1649-1714) by Okuni no Kata
- Rokuhime (1645-1680) married Ikeda Yoshisada latre married Takikawa Kazumune by Okuni no Kata
- Shichihime (1647-1652) by Okuni no Kata
- Kiyohime (1653-1686) married Mori Moritsuna by Okuni no Kata
- daughter (1657-1662) by Okuni no Kata
Remove ads
Daimyo
After his father's death in 1616, Mitsumasa inherited his father's domains in Harima Province.[1]
In 1617, he was transferred to Tottori Domain (325,000 koku) with Inaba Province and Hōki Province as fiefs.[1]
In 1632, he was transferred to Okayama Domain (315,000 koku) at Bizen. His descendants continued to live at Okayama.[1]
He was also a Confucian scholar, and was a patron of Kumazawa Banzan, 17th century Confucian scholar.[citation needed]
References
Further reading
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads