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  1. Tokugawa Iesada (徳川 家定, May 6, 1824 – August 14, 1858) was the 13th shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan. He held office for five years from 1853 to 1858. He was physically weak and was therefore considered by later historians to have been unfit to be shōgun. His reign marks the beginning of the Bakumatsu period.

  2. ja.wikipedia.org › wiki › 徳川家定徳川家定 - Wikipedia

    第11代征夷大将軍・ 徳川家斉 は祖父、 徳川治済 は曽祖父、 徳川宗尹 は高祖父にあたる。. 家慶は14男13女を儲けたが、成人まで生き残ったのは家定だけであった。. しかし家定も幼少の頃から病弱で、人前に出ることを極端に嫌った。. 天保 12年( 1841年 ...

  3. Deep within the Toeizan Kaneiji temple lies the final resting site of successive generations of mighty Tokugawa shoguns. Off the beaten path and away from the bustling throngs of parkgoers, in...

  4. Tokugawa Iesada was the 13th Tokugawa shogun. His reign saw many of the key events of the Bakumatsu period, including Commodore Perry's second arrival in Japan, the Convention of Kanagawa, and the Harris Treaty, and the beginnings of the factionalism and political tensions which would eventually topple the shogunate .

  5. Discover Tokugawa Iesada, whose reign witnessed the opening of Japan to international trade and the beginning of the country's modernization. His leadership ...

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    • 秋津島ちゃんねる ~日本の歴史と文化~
  6. Tokugawa Iesada (徳川家定) Iesada TOKUGAWA was the thirteenth Seitaishogun (commander in chief of the expeditionary force against the barbarians; a great and unifying leader) of the Edo Bakufu. The period prior to Iesada's inauguration to Shogun

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  8. Hayashi Akira served Tokugawa Iesada (1824–58), Iemochi (1846–66), and Yoshinobu (1837–1913) as chief diplomatic adviser and thus played a vital role in the treaty port negotiations with Commodore Matthew Perry in the late 1850s.