Tokugawa Tsunayoshi

{{Short description|Japanese shogun}}

{{Infobox Officeholder

| honorific_prefix = Senior First Rank

| name = Tokugawa Tsunayoshi

| native_name = {{Nobold|徳川 綱吉}}

| native_name_lang = ja

| title = Shōgun

| image = Tsunyaoshi.jpg

| caption = Tokugawa Tsunayoshi

| term = 12 August 1680 – 19 February 1709

| monarch = {{Plainlist|

| predecessor = Tokugawa Ietsuna

| successor = Tokugawa Ienobu

| children = {{plainlist|

}}

| birth_date = {{birth date|1646|2|23|df=y}}

| birth_place = Edo, Tokugawa shogunate
(now Tokyo, Japan)

| death_date = {{death date and age|1709|02|19|1646|02|23|df=y}}

| death_place = Edo, Tokugawa shogunate

| parents = Tokugawa Iemitsu
Keishouin

| signature = Tokugawa Tsunayoshi kao.jpg

| spouse = {{ill|Takatsukasa Nobuko|ja|鷹司信子}}

}}

{{family name hatnote|Tokugawa|lang=Japanese}}

{{nihongo|Tokugawa Tsunayoshi|徳川 綱吉||extra=23 February 1646 – 19 February 1709}} was the fifth shōgun of the Tokugawa dynasty of Japan. He was the younger brother of Tokugawa Ietsuna, as well as the son of Tokugawa Iemitsu, the grandson of Tokugawa Hidetada, and the great-grandson of Tokugawa Ieyasu.Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Tokugawa, Tsunayoshi" in {{Google books|p2QnPijAEmEC|Japan Encyclopedia, p. 979|page=979}}; n.b., Louis-Frédéric is pseudonym of Louis-Frédéric Nussbaum, see [http://dispatch.opac.ddb.de/DB=4.1/PPN?PPN=128842709 Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Authority File] {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20120524174828/http://dispatch.opac.ddb.de/DB=4.1/PPN?PPN=128842709 |date=2012-05-24 }}.

Tsunayoshi is known for instituting animal welfare laws, particularly for dogs. This earned him the nickname of "the dog Shogun" (Inu-Kubō 犬公方: Inu=Dog, Kubō=formal title of Shogun).

Early years (1646–1680)

File:Keishōin.jpg

Tokugawa Tsunayoshi was born on 23 February 1646, in Edo. He was the son of Tokugawa Iemitsu by one of his concubines, named Otama, later known as Keishōin 桂昌院 (1627–1705). Tsunayoshi had an elder brother already five years old, who would become the next shogun after Iemitsu's death, Tokugawa Ietsuna. Tsunayoshi was born in Edo and after his birth moved in with his mother to her own private apartments in Edo Castle. "The younger son (Tsunayoshi) apparently distinguished himself by his precociousness and liveliness at an early age, and the father, the third shogun, Iemitsu, became fearful that he might usurp the position of his duller elder brothers [and] thus he ordered that the boy (Tsunayoshi) not to be brought up as a samurai/warrior, as was becoming for his station, but be trained as a scholar."{{attribution needed|date=January 2018}}Bodart-Bailey, B., ed. (1999). Kaempfer's Japan: Tokugawa Japan Observed, citing Buya shokudan, in Kokushi sosho, edited by Kokushi Kenkyu Kai (Tokyo 1917), ser. 2, 86–87. His childhood name was Tokumatsu ({{lang|ja|徳松}}).

While his father was shōgun, his mother was an adopted daughter of the Honjō family, led by Honjō Munemasa (1580–1639) in Kyoto. His mother's natural parents were merchants in Kyoto. This remarkable woman was very close with Tsunayoshi in his young years, and while his older brother Ietsuna began to rely on regents for much of his reign, Tsunayoshi did exactly the opposite, relying on his remarkable mother for advice until her death.

In 1651, shōgun Iemitsu died when Tsunayoshi was only five years old. His older brother, Tokugawa Ietsuna, became shogun. For the most part, Tsunayoshi's life during the reign of his brother shōgun Ietsuna is unknown, but he never advised his brother.

Family

  • Father: Tokugawa Iemitsu (12 August 1604 – 8 June 1651)
  • Mother: Otama no Kata ({{lang|ja|玉方}},{{cite web |title=「桂昌院」の意味・読み・例文・類語 |url=https://kotobank.jp/word/%E6%A1%82%E6%98%8C%E9%99%A2-16051 |website=コトバンク |date=13 May 2016 |publisher=日本国語大辞典 |access-date=28 October 2023}} 1627–1705) later {{ill|Keishōin|ja|桂昌院}}, daughter of {{ill|Honjo Munemasa|ja|本庄宗正}}

Consorts and their issue(s)

  • Wife (Seishitsu): Takatsukasa Nobuko (鷹司信子, 1651 – 1709) later Jokoin (浄光院), daughter of court noble Takatsukasa Norihira
  • Concubine (Sokushitsu): Oden no Kata (お伝の方, 1658 – 1738) later Zuishun-in (瑞春院)
  • Tsuruhime (鶴姫, 9 May 1677 – 15 May 1704), 1st daughter
  • married Tokugawa Tsunanori of Kii Domain
  • Tokugawa Tokumatsu (徳川 徳松, 14 June 1679 – 22 July 1683), 1st son
  • Concubine (Sokushitsu): Lady Osuke (大典侍, d.1714), later Jukoin (寿光院)
  • Concubine (Sokushitsu): Lady Shinsuke (新典侍), later Sheishin-in (清心院)

=Adopted Issue=

Disputed succession (1680)

In 1680, shōgun Ietsuna died at the premature age of 38.

  • 4 June 1680 (Enpō 8, 8th day of the 5th month): Shogun Ietsuna's death leads to the accession of Tsunayoshi as head of the shogunate.Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du japon, p. 414.
  • 1680–81 (Enpō 8): Gokoku-ji in Edo is founded in honor of Tsunayoshi's mother.
  • 1681 (Tenna 1): Tsunayoshi's investiture as shōgun.

A power struggle ensued, and for a time, the succession remained an open question. Sakai Tadakiyo, one of Ietsuna's most favored advisors, suggested that the succession not pass to someone of the Tokugawa line, but rather to the blood royal, favoring one of the sons of Emperor Go-Sai to become the next shōgun (as during the Kamakura shogunate) but Tadakiyo was dismissed soon after.

Hotta Masatoshi, one of the most brilliant advisors of shōgun Ietsuna's rule, was the first person to suggest that Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, as the brother of the former shōgun and the son of the third, become the next shōgun. Finally, in 1681 (Tenna 1), Tsunayoshi's elevation was confirmed; and he was installed as the fifth shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate.

''Shōgun'' (1680–1709)

{{Unreferenced section|date=December 2022}}

Immediately after becoming shōgun, Tsunayoshi gave Hotta Masatoshi the title of Tairō, in a way thanking him for ensuring his succession. Almost immediately after he became shogun, he ordered a vassal of the Takata to commit suicide because of misgovernment, showing his strict approach to the samurai code. He then confiscated his fief of 250,000 koku. During his reign, he confiscated a total of 1,400,000 koku.

In 1682, shōgun Tsunayoshi ordered his censors and police to raise the living standard of the people. Soon, prostitution was banned, waitresses could not be employed in tea houses, and rare and expensive fabrics were banned. Most probably, smuggling began as a practice in Japan soon after Tsunayoshi's authoritarian laws came into effect. In 1684, Tsunayoshi also decreased the power of the tairō after the assassination of Masatoshi by a cousin in that same year.

Nonetheless, due again to maternal advice, Tsunayoshi became very religious, promoting the Neo-Confucianism of Zhu Xi. In 1682, he read to the daimyōs an exposition of the "Great Learning", which became an annual tradition at the shōgun{{'}}s court. He soon began to lecture even more, and in 1690 lectured about Neo-Confucian work to Shinto and Buddhist daimyōs, and even to envoys from the court of Emperor Higashiyama in Kyoto. He also was interested in several Chinese works, namely The Great Learning (Da Xue) and The Classic of Filial Piety (Xiao Jing). Tsunayoshi also loved art and Noh theater.

In 1691, Engelbert Kaempfer visited Edo as part of the annual Dutch embassy from Dejima in Nagasaki. He journeyed from Nagasaki to Osaka, to Kyoto, and there to Edo. Kaempfer gives us information on Japan during the early reign of Tokugawa Tsunayoshi. As the Dutch embassy entered Edo in 1692, they asked to have an audience with Shogun Tsunayoshi. While they were waiting for approval, a fire destroyed six hundred houses in Edo, and the audience was postponed. Tsunayoshi and several of the ladies of the court sat behind reed screens, while the Dutch embassy sat in front of them. Tsunayoshi took an interest in Western matters, and apparently asked them to talk and sing with one another for him to see how Westerners behaved. Tsunayoshi later put on a Noh drama for them.

File:Nakano Inugoya dog shelters 1696.png

Owing to religious fundamentalism, Tsunayoshi sought protection for living beings in the later parts of his rule. In the 1690s and first decade of the 1700s, Tsunayoshi, who was born in the Year of the Dog, thought he should take several measures concerning dogs. A collection of edicts released daily, known as the {{nihongo|Edicts on Compassion for Living Things|生類憐みの令|Shōruiawareminorei|}}, told the populace, among other things, to protect dogs, since in Edo there were many stray and diseased dogs walking around the city. Therefore, he earned the pejorative title Inu-Kubō (犬公方: Inu=Dog, Kubō=formal title of Shogun).

In 1695, there were so many dogs that Edo began to smell horribly. An apprentice was even executed because he wounded a dog. Finally, the issue was taken to an extreme, as over 50,000 dogs were deported to kennels in the suburbs of the city where they would be housed. They were apparently fed rice and fish at the expense of the taxpaying citizens of Edo.

For the latter part of Tsunayoshi's reign, he was advised by Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu. It was a golden era of classic Japanese art, known as the Genroku era.

In 1701, Asano Naganori, the daimyō of Akō han, having been allegedly insulted by Kira Yoshinaka in Edo Castle, attempted to kill him. Asano was executed, but Kira went unpunished. Asano's forty-seven rōnin avenged his death by killing Kira and became a legend that influenced many plays and stories of the era. The most successful of them was a bunraku play called Kanadehon Chūshingura (now simply called Chūshingura, or "Treasury of Loyal Retainers"), written in 1748 by Takeda Izumo and two associates; it was later adapted into a kabuki play, which is still one of Japan's most popular. The earliest known account of the Akō incident in the West was published in 1822 in Isaac Titsingh's book, Illustrations of Japan.Screech, Timon. (2006). Secret Memoirs of the Shoguns: Isaac Titsingh and Japan, 1779–1822, p. 91.

Tsunayoshi's first son Tokugawa Tokumatsu (1679–1683) died at the age of 4 due to illness.

In 1704, Tsunayoshi's only surviving child, Tsuruhime died following a miscarriage and a few months after her{{whose|date=September 2024}} husband, his son-in-law, Tokugawa Tsunanori of Kii Domain also died. Therefore, Tsunayoshi appointed his nephew, Tokugawa Ienobu, heir apparent in the winter of 1704. Ienobu was the son of his other brother, Tokugawa Tsunashige, the former Lord of Kōfu, which was a title Ienobu held himself before becoming shōgun. Ienobu moved into the official residence of Shogunal heir apparent at the Western Perimeter of Edo Castle.

In 1706, Edo was hit by a typhoon, and Mount Fuji erupted the following year.

Death

It was insinuated that Tsunayoshi was stabbed by his consort after he tried to proclaim an illegitimate child as his heir; this concept, stemming from the Sanno Gaiki, is refuted in contemporary records which explain that Tsunayoshi had the measles at the end of his life and died on 19 February 1709, in the presence of his entourage.Bodart-Bailey, p. 165. His death was just four days short of his 63rd birthday. He was given the Buddhist name Joken'in ({{lang|ja|常憲院}}) and buried in Kan'ei-ji.

Eras of Tsunayoshi's ''bakufu''

The years in which Tsunayoshi was shogun are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengō.Titsingh, pp. 414–415.

Ancestry

{{ahnentafel

|collapsed=yes |align=center |ref={{cite web|url=https://reichsarchiv.jp/%e5%ae%b6%e7%b3%bb%e3%83%aa%e3%82%b9%e3%83%88/%e5%be%b3%e5%b7%9d%ef%bc%88%e5%be%b7%e5%b7%9d%ef%bc%89%e6%b0%8f%ef%bc%88%e5%b0%86%e8%bb%8d%e5%ae%b6%ef%bc%89#tunayosi|title=Genealogy|website=Reichsarchiv|access-date=4 July 2018|language=ja}}

|boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc;

|boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9;

|boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc;

|boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc;

|1= 1. Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, 5th Tokugawa Shōgun

|2= 2. Tokugawa Iemitsu, 3rd Tokugawa Shōgun (1604-1651)

|3= 3. Keishōin (1627-1705)

|4= 4. Tokugawa Hidetada, 2nd Tokugawa Shōgun (1579-1632)

|5= 5. Oeyo (1573-1626)

|6= 6. Honjō Munemasa (?) (1580-1639)

|7= 7. Nabeta

|8= 8. Tokugawa Ieyasu, 1st Tokugawa Shōgun (1543-1616)

|9= 9. Lady Saigō (1552-1589)

|10=10. Azai Nagamasa (1545-1573)

|11=11. Oichi (1547-1583)

|12=

|13=

|14=

|15=

}}

Notes

{{Reflist|2}}

References

  • Bodart-Bailey, Beatrice (2006). The Dog Shogun: The Personality and Policies of Tokugawa Tsunayoshi. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. {{ISBN|9780824829780}}; {{ISBN|9780824830304}}; {{oclc|470123491}}.
  • Bodart-Bailey, Beatrice (1999). Kaempfer's Japan: Tokugawa Culture Observed. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. {{ISBN|9780824819644}}; {{ISBN|9780824820664}}; {{oclc|246417677}}.
  • Bodart-Bailey, Beatrice (1985). Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 40, No. 2. {{JSTOR|2384718}}.
  • Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan Encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-674-01753-5}}; {{oclc|48943301}}.
  • Screech, Timon (2006). Secret Memoirs of the Shoguns: Isaac Titsingh and Japan, 1779–1822. London: RoutledgeCurzon. {{ISBN|978-0-203-09985-8}}; {{oclc|65177072}}.
  • Titsingh, Isaac (1834). Nihon Ōdai Ichiran; ou, [https://books.google.com/books?id=18oNAAAAIAAJ Annales des empereurs du Japon]. Paris: Royal Asiatic Society, Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. {{oclc|5850691}}.
  • Totman, Conrad (1967). Politics in the Tokugawa Bakufu, 1600–1843. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. {{oclc|279623}}.