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Maeda Toshinaga
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extra=February 15, 1562 – June 27, 1614 was a and the second early- daimyō of in the of Japan, and the 3rd hereditary chieftain of the . He was the eldest son of . His childhood name was "Inuchiyo" (犬千代).


Biography
Toshinaga was born in what is now part of the city of in , where his father was in the service of Oda Nobunaga In 1581, he married one of Oda Nobunaga's daughters, Ei-hime, who was only six years old at the time. Nobunaga was assassinated the following year at the Honnō-ji Incident.

In 1583, he assisted his father at the Battle of Shizugatake and after the death of , he swore fealty to Toyotomi Hideyoshi and was awarded a 40,000 fief in .

In 1585, he played a key role in Hideyoshi's campaign against , and his holdings were greatly expanded to 320,000 koku across Kaga and Etchū Provinces. He led some 3,000 men in Toyotomi Hideyoshi's during the Kyūshū Campaign (1587) and the Siege of Odawara (1590).

In 1598, he received the 267,000 koku Kanazawa holdings of his father, Maeda Toshiie. Toshiie died the following year 1599, and convinced Toshinaga to support over and Toyotomi Hideyori.

In 1600, at the time of the Battle of Sekigahara, his role was primarily to contain the forces of and , they clash at Battle of Asainawate, and at the same time, to keep the forces of his younger brother, Maeda Toshimasa, ruler of , from joining the western army.

On the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate, Toshinaga was confirmed in his holdings, which had also been expanded by the addition of 225,000 koku formerly held by his brother Toshimasa, and 120,000 koku from Komatsu Castle and 63,000 koku from Daisho-ji Castle to a total of 1,025,000 koku, which covered the provinces of Kaga, Noto and Etchū. The of was exceeded only by the Shogunal house itself. Toshinaga built and resided in .

With the establishment of the sankin-kōtai system of alternative attendance in , Toshinaga was the first daimyō to establish a residence in the new capital.

Toshinaga had no son and adopted his younger brother as his heir. He retired in 1605, and relocated from Kanazawa to , setting aside 220,000 koku for his retirement expenses.


Death
When Toyama Castle burned down in 1609, he moved to Uozu, and later to . During this period, he increasingly withdrew from public life due to complications from , and committed suicide by poison at Takaoka Castle in 1614. His mortuary temple is the temple of Zuiryū-ji in Takaoka.


Family
  • Father:
  • Mother:
  • Wife: Ei-hime (1574–1623)
  • Concubine: Otsubo Sukezaemon's daughter
    • Daughter: Manhime (1605–1611)
  • Adopted son:
  • Adopted daughters:
    • Sensho-in
    • Ona, later Soshin'ni (1588–1675), Makimura Toshisada's daughter
    • Eiju-in, married Aoyama Yoshitsugu, Kyubei Teranishi's daughter
    • Takeshima-dono, later Hisaka-in, 's wife, Chō Tsuratatsu's daughter

  • . (1948). Historical and Geographical Dictionary of Japan. New York: Overbeck Co.


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