Torii Tadaharu

Torii Tadaharu
Lord of Takatō
In office
1636–1663
Preceded by Hoshina Masayuki
Succeeded by Torii Tadanori
Personal details
Born 1624
Died September 2, 1663
Osaka, Japan
Nationality Japanese
In this Japanese name, the family name is Torii.

Torii Tadaharu (鳥居 忠春, 1624 September 2, 1663) was a Japanese daimyo of the early Edo period who ruled the Takatō Domain in Shinano Province (modern-day Nagano Prefecture). Tadaharu was the 3rd son of Torii Tadamasa, the lord of the Yamagata Domain. As his father died before a successor was named from among his sons, the Torii family's holdings were confiscated. However, because of his grandfather Torii Mototada's distinguished service, the family name was restored, and Tadaharu was made lord of the Takatō fief, with an income of 32,000 koku.

Tadaharu was first famed for his wise rulership of Takatō; however, his rule soon became oppressive, especially after he killed seven of his senior retainers who admonished him. Many of the peasants from Takatō fled to Tokugawa-controlled tenryō territory in 1654. In 1663, while serving at Osaka Castle, Tadaharu was murdered by his doctor Matsui Jukaku.

The family headship was passed to Tadaharu's eldest son Tadanori.

References

Preceded by
Hoshina Masayuki
Daimyo of Takatō
1636–1663
Succeeded by
Torii Tadanori


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.