- and son. He
became a
daimyo through Gekokujō of Toki
Yorinari at Mino
Province in 1542.
Yorinari was
forced out of Mino by Saitō Dōsan. The
Saito fortress...
- Toki
Yorinari (土岐 頼芸, 1502–1582), also
known as Toki Yoriaki, was a ****anese
samurai warrior of in the
Sengoku period. He was
shugo of Mino Province. He...
- his lord Toki
Yorinari. He then
installed his
eldest son, Yo****atsu, born to his side wife Miyoshino, who had been
given to him by
Yorinari, as Mino Shugo...
-
possessions in 1542
during the
civil wars that
decimated Mino Province. Toki
Yorinari (then
governor of Mino) was
defeated by Saitō Dōsan. Toki
Sadamasa (1551–1597)...
-
served as a head
retainer under Saitō Dōsan
after Dōsan
overthrew Toki
Yorinari (the
original ruler of Mino) and
became daimyō of Mino Province. Later...
-
Yorichika Yorinari Yorifusa Yoritō
Yorimoto Yoritoshi Mutsu Ishikawa clan Yori(kaze?)
Yoriharu Yori(kage?)
Yoriyasu (several clans) (several clans) Shinjitsu*...
-
Nobushige Takeda Shingen Takenaka Hanbei Tani
Tadasumi Tōdō
Takatora Toki
Yorinari Tochimitsu Gantyoki Tokugawa Ieyasu Tokugawa Hidetada Tokugawa Nariaki...
-
descendants possessed hereditarily the
office of daigeki.
Kiyohara no
Yorinari (1122–1189), son of the
Daigeki Kiyohara no Suketada, was
governor of Etchū...
-
control 1541, Dōsan
attacked and
overthrew the
shugo of Mino province, Toki
Yorinari. He then
adopted the name "Saitō" from a
defunct samurai clan and set himself...
- fact not Dōsan's real son (that is, that he was
actually the son of Toki
Yorinari (Toki Yoshiyori), the
shugo of Mino
Province who Dōsan
displaced in influence)...