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Kawajiri Hidetaka ( 河尻 秀隆 , 1527 – July 7, 1582) was a Japanese samurai warrior during the Sengoku period , he was served Oda Nobuhide and was one of the vassals of Oda Nobunaga . He was the first samurai in the "Kuro-horo-shu" (bodyguard unit in black) elite troops selected from Nobunaga's aides, and later served as an assistant to Oda Nobutada , Nobunaga's eldest son. He was also the lord of Mino Iwamura, and later became the lord of Kai province . There are few documents related to Hidetaka and Kawajiri clan , and many of his traces are recorded in Shinchō Kōki , Koyo Gunkan , and records related to Tokugawa clan.

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17-434: Kawajiri (written: 川尻 or 河尻) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include: Kawajiri Hidetaka ( 河尻 秀隆 , 1527–1582) , Japanese samurai Tatsuya Kawajiri ( 川尻 達也 , born 1978) , Japanese mixed martial artist Yoshiaki Kawajiri ( 川尻 善昭 , born 1950) , Japanese animator, anime director and screenwriter See also [ edit ] Kawajiri, Hiroshima ,

34-400: A 30,000 koku fief centered at Katsuyama. This became Echizen-Katsuyama Domain. Matsudaira Naomoto was transferred to Ōno Domain in 1635, and was replaced by his younger brother, Matsudaira Naoyoshi , who was in turn transferred to Ōno Domain in 1644, at which point the domain became part of the tenryo territories under direct control of the shogunate. In 1691, Echizen-Katsuyama Domain

51-580: A battle with Kitabatake clan based in Okawachi Castle , Ise province . At this time, he was in charge of patrolling the Oda clan army headquarters, along with  Sugaya Nagayori , Harada Naomasa , Nakagawa Shigemasa , and Maeda Toshiie . The name can be seen in the draft letter of sympathy sent by Munehisa Imai to the Oda clan generals on September 6, 1569. On February 19, 1570, Imai Sokyu  sent urgent news that Akagi Nobuyasu defeated

68-683: A former town in Toyota District, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with the surname Kawajiri . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kawajiri&oldid=974369370 " Categories : Surnames Japanese-language surnames Hidden categories: Articles containing Japanese-language text Articles with short description Short description

85-525: A part in the Siege of Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei . In February 1571, he entered Sawayama Castle after Isono Kazumasa moved out, and since then he was active as a castle general with Niwa Nagahide . In September 1571, Nobunaga ordered for the Tendai Temple affiliated with Enryaku-ji at Mt. Hiei to be burned down , and Hidetaka and Nagahide burned down Saimyōji temple . In 1582, while planning

102-518: A relative of Shibata Katsuie , one of Oda Nobunaga 's leading generals, and Hara Nagayori was assigned as its castellan. The Shibata clan were destroyed in conflicts with Toyotomi Hideyoshi , and after the Battle of Sekigahara , the entire province of Echizen was assigned by Tokugawa Ieyasu to his second son, Yūki Hideyasu in 1601 as Fukui Domain . In 1624, Fukui Domain was divided, with Yūki Hideyasu's fifth son, Matsudaira Naomoto being awarded

119-521: A reward for his conduct in the Mino battle, and the castle's name was changed to Katsuyama . Shortly afterwards, the castle town of Sakahogi, Chozoji, was designated as Kawajiri's family temple. He also allegedly supported the reconstruction of Daisen-ji Temple, which was burned down in the war. In early 1569, he and Sakai Masahisa  were sent to tell Imai Sōkyū to hand over the testimony of Sakai Kitasho . In August of 1569, he participated in

136-543: A reward. On June 28, 1570, he served in the Battle of Anegawa , and in the siege of Sawayama Castle , where Isono Kazumasa , a vassal of Azai Nagamasa , was occupying after the main war, he set up in Nishi-Hikoneyama, one of the attached castles. At the Siege of Shiga in September 1570, he entered the fort of Anota with Sakuma Nobumori , Akechi Mitsuhide , Murai Sadakatsu , and Sassa Narimasa , and played

153-498: A vassal of Nobuhide. He fought with ashigaru commander Yuhara (由原), who was the forerunner of the Imagawa clan , and defeated him at the battle's end. After Nobuhide's death, he also served Oda Nobunaga and became the head of "Kuro-horo-shu" (bodyguard unit in black). In 1558, when Nobunaga summoned his younger brother Oda Nobuyuki to Kiyosu Castle to murder him, he carried out the assassination of Nobuyuki. He participated in

170-498: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Kawajiri Hidetaka It is said that he was born in Iwasaki Village, Owari Province . Hidetaka served Oda Nobuhide from an early stage. His given name's kanji spelling, with 秀 for hide , is considered to be from Nobuhide's name, which was also spelled with 秀 for hide . In August 1542 at the age of 16, he participated in the first Battle of Azukizaka as

187-551: The Battle of Okehazama in May 1560. He followed Nobunaga, who suddenly rushed out, with only four other vassals:  Iwamuro Shigeyasu , Hasegawa Hashisuke , Yamaguchi Hidanokami , and Katō Yasaburo . It is said that Mōri Yoshikatsu defeated Imagawa Yoshimoto in the battle, but there is also a different theory that Hidetaka killed Yoshimoto. In the summer of 1565, he was ordered to attack Mino Sarubami Castle with Niwa Nagahide . The castle's owner, Tajimi Shuri-no-Suke, used

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204-696: The Conquest of Kōshū , Nobunaga assigned an army to his eldest son, Oda Nobutada , and had him invade Shinano and Kai Province . Hidetaka, along with Takigawa Kazumasu , became a military commander. After the battle of Tenmokuzan , Oda Nobunaga placed Kawajiri Hidetaka in charge of Kai Province , but Nobunaga was assassinated only three months later and vengeful former Takeda clan retainers assassinated Kawajiri soon afterwards. Kawajiri Hidetaka died on June 18, 1582. [REDACTED] Media related to Kawajiri Hidetaka at Wikimedia Commons Katsuyama Castle Katsuyama Castle ( 勝山城 , Katsuyama-jō )

221-416: The advantage of the land to protect the castle well, but Nagahide occupied the neighboring mountain and cut off the water source, and Hidetaka launched an onslaught and dropped the castle. In the battle of Dōhora castle , on September 28, 1565, he breached the inner citadel first and forced the enemy commander Kishi Nobuharu  to commit suicide. After the war, he was given Sarubami Castle as

238-491: The army of Miyoshi clan in Awaji province . In the draft letter, the names are listed alongside Kanamori Nagachika , Takei Yūan ,  Sakai Kōsai , and  Sugaya Naganori , and it can be seen that he was recognized as one of Nobunaga's representative aides at that time. On March 6, 1570,  Nakayama Takachika and  Kanroji Tsunemoto visited Nobunaga, but Hidetaka responded due to his absence and received 30 swords as

255-670: Was a Japanese castle located in the city of Katsuyama Fukui Prefecture , in the Hokuriku region of Japan. Built in the Sengoku period by the Shibata clan , it was occupied by a succession of daimyō of Echizen-Katsuyama Domain under the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate . The site is now a public park. Per the Shinchō kōki , Katsuyama Castle was built in 1579 by Shibata Katsuyasu ,

272-601: Was reconstructed in 1826, but was destroyed by the new Meiji government in 1871. The current Katsuyama city hall now stands on the site of the inner bailey of the castle, with some remnants of the moat and ramparts remaining, along with the base of the donjon . The castle should not be confused with the Katsuyama Castle Museum, also located in Katsuyama. The Museum is housed in a huge six-story faux-donjon built in 1992, housing numerous artefacts from

289-564: Was revived for a cadet branch of the Ogasawara clan led by Ogasawara Tadanobu . The Ogasawara clan would rule Katsuyama for the next eight generations until the Meiji restoration . Tadanobu's son, Ogasawara Nobutora received permission from the shogunate in 1708 to rebuild the castle on the pretext of restoring the old structures; however, due to fires and lack of funds, the castle was not completed until 1799, only to burn down again in 1822. It

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