Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

    • Japanese daimyō

      • Tokugawa Nariaki (徳川 斉昭, April 4, 1800 – September 29, 1860) was a Japanese daimyō who ruled the Mito Domain (now Ibaraki Prefecture) and contributed to the rise of nationalism and the Meiji Restoration.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokugawa_Nariaki
  1. People also ask

  2. Tokugawa Nariaki (徳川 斉昭, April 4, 1800 – September 29, 1860) was a Japanese daimyō who ruled the Mito Domain (now Ibaraki Prefecture) and contributed to the rise of nationalism and the Meiji Restoration.

  3. Tokugawa Nariaki (born April 4, 1800, Edo, Japan—died Sept. 29, 1860, Mito, Hitachi Province) was a Japanese advocate of reform measures designed to place more power in the hands of the emperor and the great lords and to keep foreigners out of Japan.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Sep 29, 2012 · Tokugawa Nariaki (徳川斉昭, 1800-1860) was the ninth daimyō of the Mito domain (modern-day Ibaraki Prefecture) and father of the fifteenth and last Tokugawa shōgun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu.

  5. Feb 7, 2009 · If anybody was the living embodiment of Mitogaku and all of its inherent contradictions, it had to be the retired lord of Mito himself, Tokugawa Nariaki. Outspoken, brash, lecherous and just plain clever, Nariaki was certainly one of the more colorful personalities that strutted across the early Bakumatsu stage.

  6. Tokugawa Nariaki. Born: 1800. Died: 1860 /8/15. Japanese: 徳川 斉昭 (Tokugawa Nariaki) Tokugawa Nariaki was a lord of Mito han, and a prominent presence in Bakumatsu period politics. His son, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, went on to become the last shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate .

  7. Nariaki held a pivotal place among competing groups and combined all the factors of power-ability, Tokugawa elitism, patronage of loyal- ist teachings, and close ties to the court and bakufu.

  8. Tokugawa Nariaki (1800–1860) was one of the leading Japanese political and military leaders of the nineteenth century. As possessor of the Mito territories, he was one of the most powerful and influential daimyo, or feudal lords, and a member of a collateral branch of the Tokugawa family.