- 1408,
Yoshimochi came into his own as a shōgun. The next year
Ashikaga Mochiuji became Kantō kubō. In 1411,
Yoshimochi broke off
relations with Ming China...
-
Ashikaga Mochiuji (足利持氏, 1398–1439) was the Kamakura-fu's
fourth Kantō kubō
during the
Muromachi period (15th century) in ****an.
During his long and troubled...
-
leadership of Kantō kubō
Ashikaga Mochiuji in 1438.
Yoshinori strengthened the
power of the
shogunate by
defeating Mochiuji, who
committed suicide the following...
- 1573.
Ashikaga Chachamaru Ashikaga Masatomo Ashikaga Mit****ne
Ashikaga Mochiuji Ashikaga Motouji Ashikaga Satouji Ashikaga Shigeuji Ashikaga Tadafuyu Ashikaga...
-
Yorimasa (1180)
Minamoto no Yo****sune (1189) Hōjō
Takatoki (1333)
Ashikaga Mochiuji (1439) Azai
Nagamasa (1573) Oda
Nobunaga (1582)
Takeda Katsuyori (1582)...
-
advisor to
Ashikaga Mochiuji, an
enemy of the
central Ashikaga shogunate and the Kantō kubō governor-general of the Kantō region.
Mochiuji, lord of the Uesugi...
- the
chief advisor to
Ashikaga Mochiuji, an
enemy of the
Ashikaga shogunate in
feudal ****an. When he was
rebuked by
Mochiuji in 1415, and
forced to resign...
-
Ashikaga Mochiuji and his
deputy Kantō
Kanrei Uesugi Norizane,
Mochiuji attacked Norizane in 1438 in what came to be
known as the Eikyō Rebellion.
Mochiuji was...
- and last Kantō kubō (Shōgun Deputy).
Fourth son of
fourth Kubō
Ashikaga Mochiuji, he
succeeded his
father only in 1449, a full
decade after his
death by...
-
Mochiuji, the Kantō Kubō at Kamakura, and
Uesugi Zenshū (Kanrei). 1416 (Ōei 23):
Uesugi rebels. 1417 (Ōei 24): Uesugi's
rebellion quelled by
Mochiuji...