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Ii Naotora (井伊 直虎, d. 12 September 1582) was a daimyō of the Sengoku period and head of the Ii clan, a feudal samurai clan of medieval Japan.

Ii Naotora
井伊 直虎
Head of Ii clan
In office
1563 – 1572[a] / 1582[b]
Preceded byIi Naomori
Succeeded byIi Naomasa
Personal details
BornProbably 1530s[c]
Died1572[d] / September 12, 1582
ChildrenIi Naomasa (adopted)[e]
Takase (adopted)
Parent
RelativesLady Tsukiyama (daughter of Ii Naohira's daughter)[h]
Military service
Allegiance Imagawa clan
Tokugawa clan
Unit Ii clan

there are two theories regarding Naotora's identity:

  • The classical theory from Edo period stated Naotora was Jirō Hōshi daughter of Ii Naomori, the eighteenth head of their clan. She was primarily the head of Ii clan and retainer of the Imagawa clan, and because of her efforts, Ii Naotora became a daimyō and received the nickname "Female Landlord" (女地頭). There is only one contemporaneous document related to the person named "Ii Naotora" (井伊直虎) that she is believed to be the same person as Jirō Hōshi (次郎法師), the daughter of Ii Naomori (井伊直盛), who became the head of the Ii family despite being a woman. This theory is based on the "Ii Family Chronicle" (井伊家伝記), written in the mid-Edo period in 1730 (Kyōhō 15). It is said that Jirō Hoshi was engaged to Ii Naochika (井伊直親) but remained unmarried throughout her life and was the foster mother of Naochika's orphaned child, Ii Naomasa (井伊直政), who later became one of Tokugawa's Four Heavenly Kings.[4]
  • The second theory was that Ii Naotora was actually a son of an Imagawa clan retainer named Sekiguchi Ujitsune. According to this theory, the son of Ujitsune became temporary head of the Ii clan until Ii Naomasa, the son of Ii Naochika, reached adulthood and could inherit the position.[2][3]

Identity speculations

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There are several theories regarding the identity of the head of Ii clan after Ii Naomori. Popular historiography identifies Ii Naotora as Jirō Hōshi, a sole daughter of Ii Naomori who became head of the Ii clan during the Sengoku period.[2][5] Meanwhile, the theory about Sekiguchi Ujitsune came from several sources which pointed out by modern researchers.[6][1][7][8][9][10][11]

Theories about Ii Naotora and Jiro Hoshi
Theorist Relations between them Gender Origin Head of Ii clan
Kazuto Hongō Different persons Female (Jiro Hoshi)
Male (Naotora)
Daughter of Ii Naomori (Jiro Hoshi)
Son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune (Naotora)
Sekiguchi Naotora (male)
Motoki Kuroda Same person Male Son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune Sekiguchi Naotora (male)
Watanabe Daimon Same person Male No opinion Naotora (male)
Atsuyuki Wakabayashi Different persons Female (Jiro Hoshi)
Male (Naotora)
Daughter of Ii Naomori (Jiro Hoshi)
Son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune (Naotora)
Sekiguchi Naotora (male)
Ii Tatsuo Different persons Female (Jiro Hoshi)
Male (Naotora)
Daughter of Ii Naomori (Jiro Hoshi)
Son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune (Naotora)
Sekiguchi Naotora (male)
Tetsuo Owada Same person Female Daughter of Ii Naomori Jiro Naotora (female)
Michifumi Isoda Different persons Female (Jiro Hoshi)
Male (Naotora)
Daughter of Ii Naomori (Jiro Hoshi)
Son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune (Naotora)
Both (first Jiro Hoshi, then replaced by Naotora)
Hirofumi Yamamoto Different persons Female (Jiro Hoshi)
Male (Naotora)
Daughter of Ii Naomori (Jiro Hoshi)
Son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune (Naotora)
Both (de jure Jiro Hoshi, de facto Naotora)

The "Ii clan history" record which is now preserved in the Shizuoka central library was the oldest source supporting the theory that Jirō Hōshi (次郎法師), was a female Ii Naotora were from secondary material which first appeared in mid Edo period. The document was written by a priest at Ryutanji Temple (Hamamatsu City).[7][12] However, this popular theory is disputed by 20th century academics.[2]

Male Naotora theory

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Modern Japanese historians reject the theory of a female head of the Ii clan, such as Kazuto Hongō, history professor of University of Tokyo. Hongō opined the theory of Naotora being a woman were based on speculation of the lack of Ii clan's biological male heir before Ii Naomasa reached adulthood.[1]

Researchers from Hikone Castle Museum also deemed the "Ii clan biography" which contains the theory about Ii Naotora being female as unreliable as it was based on folklore and not actual historical records.[13]

Atsuyuki Wakabayashi from Shizuoka University has stated that the letter was co-signed between Jirō Hōshi and Sekiguchi Naotora as an imperial edict.[14]

Ii Tatsuo, the director of the Ii museum in Kyoto which preserved those documents,[i] also favored this explanation that Ii Naotora was not a woman named Jirō Hōshi, but instead a male retainer of the Imagawa clan named Sekiguchi Ujitsune, who had been bestowed the fiefdoms of the Ii clan.[2] Furthermore, Ii Tatsuo also stated there is no evidence from a primary source identifying Jirō Hōshi as Ii Naotora.[16] This statement was based on several facts:

  • Primary source document which was written by Niino Chikanori, a former retainer of the Imagawa clan who served under Ii Naotora. The document states the identity of Ii Naotora as "Ii Jiro". According to Chikanori, Ii Jiro was the son of "Sekiguchi Ujitsune, Lord of Echigo (Echigo-no-kami)"[7] The Hachisaki temple in Shizuoka Prefecture claimed that they have the replica of the letter dated from 1566 that pointing out the relationship between Naotora with said Sekiguchi clan.[17]
  • The theory of Ii Naotora being descendant of the Sekiguchi clan was further expanded as recent Ii museum researchers have found out the supplementary document from "Kawate clan Genealogy" has revealed that before Sekiguchi's appointment as "Ii Naotora", the Ii clan was temporarily handled by Kawate Suisuke Kagetaka, a vassal of the Matsudaira (Tokugawa) clan. This version explains how after Niino Samanosuke, (Naomasa's benefactor who had invited him to Iinoya), was killed in battle in 1564, Kagetaka assisted Naotora and Jirō Hōshi, and it was thought that around this time he changed his surname from Kawate to Ii. At some point of his service within the Ii clan, Kagetaka refused to implement a decree from Imagawa Ujizane as he argued that the decree was not beneficial for the for Ii clan's interests. However, when he was pressured by Sekiguchi Echigo-no-kami Ujitsune (Sekiguchi Naotora's father), to carry out the decree (August 1668, letter from Sekiguchi Ujitsune), Kagetaka reluctantly accepted the decree. However, this incident caused him to be estranged from the Ii clan. At the sametime Iinoya was invaded by Tokugawa Ieyasu, who had just declared his independence from the Imagawa clan, and it was believed that Kagetaka immediately sided with Ieyasu and ended up driving out Naotora from Hikone Castle. Afterwards, Kagetaka did not return to serve Ii Naomasa, although Naomasa began to serve Ieyasu, but his son Yoshinori (Suisuke) served Naomasa. It was believed that by this time he had already reverted to his original surname, Kawate.[18]
  • Miwa Mori, a professor of early modern history at Kyoto Women's University, also supported the theory of which released by the institution Ii Museum's statement, which was traced from a record of a written retainer of the Ii clan named Kimata in 1640. Mori stated this source as highly reliable primary source.[2]

Another Japanese historian, Motoki Kuroda from Komazawa University, also supported the theory that Ii Naotora was a son of Sekiguchi Ujitsune.[3] Ujitsune was a vassal of the Imagawa clan who was appointed in Iinoya, Hamamatsu.[6]

Similarly, Daimon Watanabe, a history professor from Bukkyo University, also rejected the supplementary sources of Moriyasu Kō shoki about the female Naotora theory,[j] as he says the scripts were copied from an unverified Edo period book.[11] He supported the theory that Ii Naotora and Jiro-Hoshi were the same people but male, based on the evident confusions of previous historians about the identity. Daimon also added that while a woman could become head of clan in certain situations, it was an extremely rare case, and Naotora was unlikely to be one of them.[19]

Female Naotora theory

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Tetsuo Owada, a professor emeritus of Sengoku history at Shizuoka University who published a book about Naotora has said that this theory of misidentification of Ii Naotora is quite possible, since for generations, many of the heirs of Ii clan usually being called "Jiro", thus the name is suspected as just a pseudonym of various historical figures, although he did not deny the possibility that Ii Naotora was a daughter of Ii Naomori, a leader of Iinoya-is a part of Tōtōmi, who had been defeated by Imagawa Yoshimoto and became a vassal of Imagawa.[2]

According to this theory, as Ii clan had no male heir, so Naotora's great uncle Ii Naomitsu tried to betroth his son Ii Naochika to her so that he could inherit the clan. Unidentified Imagawa clan retainers carried a report of the plans to Imagawa, who ordered Naomitsu and his son Naochika to commit seppuku. Naomitsu died, but Naochika, who was very young, was protected by a Buddhist priest named Nankei. Naochika managed to flee to Shinano. Naotora became a priestess, and was named Jiro-Hoshi aged ten by Nankei. In 1563, Ii Naohira and other men from Ii clan were ordered to break into Hikuma Castle as proof of their loyalty to the Imagawa. Otazu no Kata who was wife of Iio Tsurutatsu (lord of Hikuma castle) invited Naohira to a meeting with her husband and planned to eradicate it to claim prominence in Totomi. On September 18, Otazu no Kata then poisoned Naohira's tea and he died soon after. Following Naohira's death, Jiro Hoshi returned to secular life the male name Naotora and declared herself the nominal head of the Ii clan. It was recorded that Naotora, being a former nun, often acted to avoid battles, earning the respect of many civilians. She was responsible for the development of agriculture and the substantial expansion of the domains of her clan in the region of Enshū.[citation needed]

Synthesis theory

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Michifumi Isoda, professor of International Research Center for Japanese Studies instead offered a synthesis theory which differ from the "Ii clan Biography", that both female Jirō Hōshi and male Ii Naotora both existed as different person, and became head of Ii clan on different occasions. Isoda offered this explanation based on the correspondence material from Seto Hokyu, a samurai under Ii clan, with the Imagawa clan, where the Imagawa recognized Jirō Hōshi as head of Ii clan in September 1568. However, after the Imagawa clan fall and the entrance of Tokugawa clan in the area on December, the name of Ii Naotora emerged as the head of Ii clan, thus Isoda suspected that the Tokugawa clan deposed Jirō Hōshi and installed Naotora as the head of Ii clan instead.[9]

Meanwhile, professor Hirofumi Yamamoto from University of Tokyo giving his chronological concilliatory explanation regarding the letter co-signed by Jiro-Hoshi (daughter of Ii Naomori) and Sekiguchi Naotora (son of Ujitsune) that it indicated while Jiro-Hoshi inherited the Ii clan's surname, the official de facto control of Ii clan's territories including Iinoya castle was run by Naotora, until Ii Naomasa become old enough to inherit the position of Ii clan's leader.[10]

Biography

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Naotora's grave and other Ii family members.

During the early days of Naotora's reign in 1564, Niino Chikanori, a retainer of Ii clan, sieged the Hikuma castle to prove Naotora's loyalty to Imagawa Ujizane; Otazu and Tsurutatsu fought to defend the castle and Chikanori was killed. Naotora was presumed to have difficulty securing clan leadership because of the innumerable resistances from the Imagawa clan retainers. After numerous threats from Imagawa retainers to the Ii clan, Naotora finally allied with Tokugawa Ieyasu and actively participated in the Tokugawa expansions of the Matsudaira clan in Totomi and Mikawa Provinces.[20][21]

At the same year, Ono Michiyoshi removed Naotora from leadership of the Iinoya region with the help of former Imagawa's retainers. Naotora escaped to Ryōtan-ji Temple in Hamamatsu, and later sent Naomasa to Ieyasu and sent Naomasa to his care. Later, Michiyoshi was finally captured by the Tokugawa clan and was executed, before his head was disgraced in public.[22]

Death

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There are two versions regarding the death of Naotora:

  • In 1572, when Takeda Shingen personally invaded Iinoya and other castles in Totomi and Mikawa, Ii Naotora was killed during a clash with the Takeda clan's army.[1]
  • In 1582, Naotora died of a disease at Ryōtan-ji temple; the position of Ii clan's head was succeeded by Ii Naomasa.[23]
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See also

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Footnotes

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Note

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  1. ^ Kazuto Hongo theory source.[1]
  2. ^ "Ii clan Biography" source.[2]
  3. ^ "Ii clan Biography" soure.[2]
  4. ^ Kazuto Hongo theory source.[1]
  5. ^ "Ii clan Biography" source.[2]
  6. ^ "Ii clan Biography" source.[2]
  7. ^ Motoki Kuroda source[3]
  8. ^ "Ii clan Biography" theory.[2]
  9. ^ museum specializing in the historical examination of armor, arms, and swords, run by Tatsuo Ii, who was adopted by a descendant of the Ii clan[15]
  10. ^ a correspondence which dated from 1735, now preserved in Ii's Samurai art Museum.[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Kazuto Hongō (本郷和人) (2023). "井伊直政の「特別扱い」(上)有能で苛烈な忠臣筆頭" [Naomasa Ii's "Special Treatment" (upper) Treatment of a competent and intense loyalty part 1]. Sankei online (in Japanese). The Sankei Shimbun. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "「井伊直虎」女性でなかった? 井伊美術館が新史料". 日本経済新聞. 2016-12-15. Retrieved 2016-12-16.
  3. ^ a b c 黒田 2017, § 直虎の出自.
  4. ^ "井伊直虎(次郎法師)|井伊家の歴史|遠州の古刹 龍潭寺". www.ryotanji.com. Retrieved 2019-05-06.
  5. ^ 静岡県立図書館所蔵「井伊家伝記」
  6. ^ a b c "おんな城主・井伊直虎、実は男だった!?京都の美術館が発表 NHK来年の大河ドラマ主人公". 産経新聞. 2016-12-15. Retrieved 2017-01-08.
  7. ^ a b c "おんな城主・井伊直虎、実は男だった!?京都の美術館が発表 NHK来年の大河ドラマ主人公". sankei.com (in Japanese). The Sankei Shinbun. 2016. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  8. ^ a b "新史料「守安公書記」". 井 伊 美 術 館 Ii Museum of art (in Japanese). Ii Art Museum. 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  9. ^ a b Michifumi Isoda (2017). 日本史の内幕 - 戦国女性の素顔から幕末・近代の謎まで (in Japanese). 中央公論新社. pp. 114–6. ISBN 978-4121024558.
  10. ^ a b Watanabe Daimon (2022). "2017年大注目! 大河ドラマの舞台・井伊谷を歩く". rekishikaido (in Japanese). PHP Online. p. 2. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
  11. ^ a b Japan Institute of History and cultures; Daimon Watanabe (2017). 歴史新書 井伊一族のすべて [New history book: All about the Ii family]. Yosensha. Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  12. ^ 祖山法忍『井伊家伝記』国文学研究資料館:井伊家伝記:NO=13、NO=14、NO=24、NO=25、NO=26、NO=27、NO=28、NO=29、NO=30
  13. ^ 野田浩子 (2016). "井伊家伝記". 彦根城博物館研究紀要 “Hikone Castle Museum Research Bulletin.”. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  14. ^ Atsushi Wakabayashi (若林淳之) (1955). 今川氏真の苦悶-今川政権の終焉- (in Japanese). Shizuoka University Faculty of Education. p. 91. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  15. ^ Kyoto Ii clan's museum
  16. ^ 井伊達夫 2016.
  17. ^ "唯一現存する、直虎の花押(かおう)が記された古文書を所蔵". city.hamamatsu.shizuoka (in Japanese). Hamamatsu City. 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  18. ^ "『河手家系譜』重要部分" [Important parts of the "Kawate Family Genealogy"]. Ii Museum (in Japanese). 井伊美術館. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  19. ^ Watanabe Daimon. "大河ドラマでも話題になった井伊直虎は、女性だったのか? それとも男性だったのか". yahoo.co.jp/expert/articles/ (in Japanese). 渡邊大門 無断転載を禁じます。 © LY Corporation. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
  20. ^ 基樹, 黒田 (2017-05-26). 井伊直虎の真実 (in Japanese). Kadokawa / 角川学芸出版.
  21. ^ 基樹, 黒田 (2017-05-26). 井伊直虎の真実 (in Japanese). Kadokawa / 角川学芸出版.
  22. ^ a b 夏目琢史 (October 2016). 井伊直虎: 女領主・山の民・悪党 (in Japanese). 講談社. ISBN 9784062883948.
  23. ^ 石田雅彦 (August 2016). おんな城主井伊直虎: その謎と魅力 (in Japanese). アスペクト. ISBN 9784757224704.
  24. ^ "井伊裕子 プロフィール". www.hmv.co.jp (in Japanese). Lawson Entertainment, Inc. 1998. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
  25. ^ a b 梓澤要 (2016-08-25). 城主になった女井伊直虎 (in Japanese). NHK出版. ISBN 9784140817070.

Bibliography

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