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'''Toyotomi Hideyoshi''' (Japanese: '''豊臣 秀吉'''; 17 March 1537 – 18 September 1598) was a daimyo during the {{Wiki|Sengoku period}} of [[Japan]], and the second of Japan's three great unifiers. He succeeded his former liege [[Oda Nobunaga]] after the latter's assassination at the hands of the [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Yamauchi Taka]], and managed to unify all of Japan under his rule. However, Hideyoshi himself was later killed by Taka as well, paving the way for [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]'s {{Wiki|Tokugawa shogunate|ascension}} to shogun of Japan.
'''Toyotomi Hideyoshi''' (Japanese: '''豊臣 秀吉'''; 17 March 1537 – 18 September 1598) was a daimyo during the {{Wiki|Sengoku period}} of [[Japan]], and the second of Japan's three great unifiers. He succeeded his former liege [[Oda Nobunaga]] after the latter's assassination at the hands of the [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Yamauchi Taka]], and managed to unify all of Japan under his rule. However, Hideyoshi himself was later killed by Taka as well, paving the way for [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]'s {{Wiki|Tokugawa shogunate|ascension}} to shogun of Japan.



Revision as of 23:45, 27 June 2023

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Toyotomi Hideyoshi (Japanese: 豊臣 秀吉; 17 March 1537 – 18 September 1598) was a daimyo during the Sengoku period of Japan, and the second of Japan's three great unifiers. He succeeded his former liege Oda Nobunaga after the latter's assassination at the hands of the Assassin Yamauchi Taka, and managed to unify all of Japan under his rule. However, Hideyoshi himself was later killed by Taka as well, paving the way for Tokugawa Ieyasu's ascension to shogun of Japan.

After his death, the land was divided between forces loyal to the Toyotomi and the Tokugawa forces. At the Battle of Sekigahara, Ieyasu defeated the Toyotomi forces under Ishida Mitsunari and inherited Hideyoshi's legacy.

References