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Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath |  | Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath |  | Tokugawa Ieyasu redistributed the lands and fiefs of the participants, generally rewarding those who assisted him and displacing, punishing, or exiling those who fought against him. In doing so, Tokugawa gained control of many former Toyotomi territories. Ishida Mitsunori, Konishi Yukinaga, and Ankokuji Ekei were publicly executed. The influence and reputation of the Toyotomi clan and its remaining loyalists drastically decreased, although from the Toyotomi clan's point of view, the battle was technically only an internal conflict between To ...
See also:Battle of Sekigahara, Battle of Sekigahara - Background and pretext, Battle of Sekigahara - Beginning, Battle of Sekigahara - List of Commanders, Battle of Sekigahara - Eastern Army Tokugawa Force, Battle of Sekigahara - Western Army Ishida Force, Battle of Sekigahara - The Battle, Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath, Battle of Sekigahara - Trivia |  | | Battle of Sekigahara, Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath, Battle of Sekigahara - Background and pretext, Battle of Sekigahara - Beginning, Battle of Sekigahara - Eastern Army Tokugawa Force, Battle of Sekigahara - List of Commanders, Battle of Sekigahara - The Battle, Battle of Sekigahara - Trivia, Battle of Sekigahara - Western Army Ishida Force |  | |
|  |  | Battle of Sekigahara: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath
Battle of Sekigahara - Aftermath
Tokugawa Ieyasu redistributed the lands and fiefs of the participants, generally rewarding those who assisted him and displacing, punishing, or exiling those who fought against him. In doing so, Tokugawa gained control of many former Toyotomi territories. Ishida Mitsunori, Konishi Yukinaga, and Ankokuji Ekei were publicly executed. The influence and reputation of the Toyotomi clan and its remaining loyalists drastically decreased, although from the Toyotomi clan's point of view, the battle was technically only an internal conflict between Toyotomi vassals; however, in fact, Tokugawa Ieyasu was later made Seii Taishōgun, a position that had been left vacant since the fall of the Ashikaga shogunate. This change in official ranks also reversed the subordinate position of the Tokugawa clan. In any case, Tokugawa did not gain any casus belli to take action against the frail Toyotomi clan; rather, it would take more political manoeuvres for Tokugawa to destroy Toyotomi once and for all.
See also the Siege of Osaka.
Even though the battle demonstrated Tokugawa's authority, many clans, especially those on the western side, became bitter about their displacement or what they saw as a dishonorable defeat or punishment. For example, the Mori clan, which was displaced from its home provinces to Chōshū-han, remained angry toward the Tokugawa shogunate, because the clan never actually took part in the battle.
The Shimazu clan blamed the defeat on its poor intelligence-gathering. Whilst they were not displaced from their home province, Satsuma, they did not become completely loyal to the Tokugawa shogunate either. Taking advantage of its distance from the capital as well as its improved espionage, Satsuma-han, near the end of the Tokugawa shogunate, demonstrated that it was virtually an autonomous kingdom independent from the Tokugawa shogunate.
Tosa's ruling clan, the Chosokabe clan, was stripped of its title and domain and sent into exile. Former Chosokabe retainers never quite came to terms with the new ruling family, the Yamauchi clan. In fact, the Yamauchi clan made a distinction between its own retainers and former Chosokabe retainers, giving them lesser status as well as discriminating treatment. This class distinction continued even generations after the fall of the Chosokabe clan.
The three of these disgruntled groups would in two centuries collaborate to bring down the Tokugawa shogunate.
Other related archives1600, Akaza Naoyasu, Ankokuji Ekei, Ashikaga shogunate, Battles of Japan, Date Masamune, Edo, Edo period, Fukushima Masanori, Fushimi Castle, Gifu Prefecture, Hidenaga, Hidetada, Hideyori, Honda Tadakatsu, Horio Tadauji, Hosokawa Tadaoki, Ii Naomasa, Ishida Mitsunari, Japan, July 19, Kansai, Kato Kiyomasa, Kikkawa Hiroie, Kobayakawa Hideaki, Konishi Yukinaga, Korea, Kuroda Nagamasa, Kutsuki Mototsuna, Kyoto, Maeda Toshiie, Maeda Toshinaga, Mashita Nagamori, Mino province, Miyamoto Musashi, Mori Terumoto, Nakasendo, Naoe Kanetsugu, Natsuka Masaie, October 21, Oda Nagamasu, Oda Nobunaga, Ogawa Suketada, Osaka Castle, Sanada Masayuki, Satsuma, Seii Taishōgun, Sekigahara, September 15, Shimazu, Shimazu Yoshihiro, Shogunate, Siege of Osaka, Toda Katsushige, Tokaido, Tokugawa Ieyasu, Tokugawa bakufu, Tokugawa shogunate, Torii Mototada, Tosa, Toshinaga, Toyotomi, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Uesugi Kagekatsu, Ukita Hideie, Wakisaka Yasuharu, Yamauchi Katsutoyo, arquebusiers, casus belli, conspiracy, council of five regents, daimyo, emperor, han, intelligence-gathering, kensei, regents, shogunate, treason
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Aftermath", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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