From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tokugawa shogunate
?川幕府
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Capital
| Edo
|
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|
|
| Go-Y?zei
(first)
Meiji
(last)
|
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| Tokugawa Ieyasu (first)
Tokugawa Yoshinobu (last)
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|
|
|
? Battle of Sekigahara
| 21 October 1600
[1]
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| 1603
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| 3 January 1868
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The
Tokugawa shogunate
, also known as the
Tokugawa bakufu
(
?川幕府
)
, and the
Edo bakufu
(
江?幕府
)
, was a feudal
Japanese
military government.
[2]
The heads of government were the
shoguns
.
[3]
Each was a member of the
Tokugawa clan
.
[4]
These years are known as the
Edo period
. The period takes its name from the city where the Tokugawa shoguns lived.
[5]
This time is also called the
Tokugawa period
[2]
or pre-modern (
Kinsei
).
[6]
In 1603,
Tokugawa Ieyasu
took office as Shogun, and established a military government in
Edo
, now
Tokyo
.
[2]
- Tokugawa Ieyasu
, r. 1603?1605
[7]
- Tokugawa Hidetada
, r. 1605?1623
[4]
- Tokugawa Iemitsu
, r. 1623?1651
[4]
- Tokugawa Ietsuna
, r. 1651?1680
[8]
- Tokugawa Tsunayoshi
, r. 1680?1709
[9]
- Tokugawa Ienobu
, r. 1709?1712
[8]
- Tokugawa Ietsugu
, r. 1713?1716
[2]
- Tokugawa Yoshimune
, r. 1716?1745
[9]
- Tokugawa Ieshige
, r. 1745?1760
[8]
- Tokugawa Ieharu
, r. 1760?1786
[4]
- Tokugawa Ienari
, r. 1787?1837
[8]
- Tokugawa Ieyoshi
, r. 1837?1853
[2]
- Tokugawa Iesada
, r. 1853?1858
[8]
- Tokugawa Iemochi
, r. 1858?1866
[8]
- Tokugawa Yoshinobu
, r. 1866?1867
[10]
Media related to
Tokugawa Shoguns
at Wikimedia Commons