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Amago Haruhisa (尼子 晴久,
March 8, 1514 –
January 9, 1561) was a daimyō
warlord in the
Izumo Province, Chūgoku
region of
western ****an. He was the second...
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Amago Kunihisa (尼子 国久, 1492 –
November 25, 1554) was a ****anese
warlord during the
Sengoku period of
western Honshu. He was a son of
Amago Tsunehisa. A...
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amago,
amagó, or
âmago in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Amago (尼子) is a ****anese word
meaning "child of a nun", and has
various other uses:
Amago clan...
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Amago Katsuhisa (尼子 勝久, 1553 –
August 8, 1578) was a
remnant of the
Amago clan, a
powerful feudal clan in the Chūgoku
region of ****an,
backed up by Yamanaka...
- The
Amago clan (尼子氏,
Amago-shi),
descended from the
Emperor Uda (868–897) by the
Kyogoku clan,
descending from the
Sasaki clan (Uda Genji).
Kyogoku Takahisa...
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Amago Tsunehisa (尼子 経久,
December 25, 1458 –
November 30, 1541) was a
powerful warlord who
gained the
hegemony in Chūgoku region, ****an
starting as a v****al...
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Amago Yoshihisa (尼子 義久, 1540 –
October 14, 1610) was a daimyō (lord) of
Izumo Province. He was the
eldest son of
Haruhisa and he was
given the childhood...
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Amago Okihisa (尼子 興久, 1497–1534) was the
third son of Tsunehisa. His
childhood name was Hikoshirō (彦四郎). He also
called himself En'ya
Okihisa (塩冶 興久)...
- marriage,
adoption and ********ination.
Sandwiched between the
powerful Amago and Ōuchi clans,
Motonari led his clan by
carefully balancing actions and...
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Amago Station (尼子駅,
Amago-eki) is a p****enger
railway station in
located in the town of Kōra,
Shiga Prefecture, ****an,
operated by the
private railway...