Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What is the content of the old traditional Japanese character introduction?

What is the content of the old traditional Japanese character introduction?

Contents are as follows:

Tokugawa Ieyasu (Japanese: とくがわ いえやす, English: Tokugawa Ieyasu; January 31, 1543 - June 1, 1616) was a daimyo of Mihawa in the Warring States period of Japan, with the infant name Takechiyo. He was the first Shogun of the Edo period, and one of the Three Masters of Japan's Warring States period (the other two being Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi). He was an outstanding statesman and militarist in Japanese history.

Tokugawa Ieyasu was born in Okazaki Castle in Mikawa (now Okazaki City in Aichi Prefecture), originally surnamed Matsudaira, and changed his surname to Tokugawa by imperial edict in the 10th year of the Eiroku era (1567). His father was Hirotaka Matsudaira, the lord of Okazaki Castle, and his mother was Hirotaka's main wife, Yu Onobata (Transfiguration Institute). After the Battle of Kusakuma, he formed the Seishu Alliance with Oda Nobunaga, cooperated with Oda's army in defeating many powerful enemies, and continued to encroach on the territory of the Imagawa family with the Takeda family.

Toyotomi Hideyoshi confronted him in the Battle of Komaki and Nagatake after the Honnoji Incident, but was forced to submit to him. Moved to Kanto by Toyotomi Hideyoshi after the Battle of Odawara, he lost his longtime base but was given the largest territory among the outward-looking daimyo under the Toyotomi regime. He served as the head of the five oldest pens. After Toyotomi Hideyoshi's death, he led the eastern army to victory over the western army in the Sekigahara Combined Battle, and established the hegemony.

In the eighth year of Keicho (1603), he was appointed Shogun for the conquest of the barbarians and started a shogunate in Edo. From the 19th year of Keicho (1614) to the 20th year of Keicho (1615), the Toyotomi clan was destroyed by the Osaka Winter and Summer Battles, and the Edo Shogunate system of rule became rock-solid and Japan entered a period of peace.

Tokugawa Ieyasu died in Sumpu Castle in 1616 at the age of 74. His body was buried in Kunozan, Sumpu, and a year later was reburied in Nikko, Shimonokuni. Ieyasu Tokugawa was given the title of "Tosho Daigonjin" by the Japanese imperial court, and became the god of the Edo Shogunate, and was enshrined in the Toshogu Shrine in Japan, and was known as "Toshogu Shinkun" to the later generations.