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#tsukiyama sena
lecialucille · 2 years
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☆゚.*。from ameto yuki
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visualnovelmoments · 5 years
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Gratitude.
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onnajosshumiwa · 2 years
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It took me a lot, but I've finally made an official Family Tree for the Ii clan! Here you can see all the OCs I've been working on for this fanon and ooof, I'm glad it's finally done!
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One day I'll be dropping the complete artworks for each of them but today's not the day lol
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odaclan · 2 years
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The cast for 6 major characters in the upcoming 2023 “Dousuru Ieyasu” (What will you do, Ieyasu?) Taiga drama has been revealed.
The character description are interesting. They’ve broken away from the “Tsukiyama-dono is evil” image, making her a good wife that Ieyasu loves. The marriage might eventually break down after Okehazama anyway, but it at least wasn’t depicted as being terrible from the start.
Yoshimoto is also neither a bumbling fool nor an evil tormentor. He is a noble figure who Ieyasu deeply respects. The actor being a Kyogen actor is interesting, though. 
Nobunaga is a pretty typical Nobunaga, but I’m not sure what to make of Hideyoshi. He sounds like Ieyasu just doesn’t like him for being the “obnoxiously over-friendly” sort, but the description does sound like it’s implying that Hideyoshi is a little bit shady.
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Tokugawa Ieyasu: Matsumoto Jun
He once served the Imagawa family. Later becomes independent as lord of Okazaki Castle and unifies Mikawa. Sekigahara and the Edo shogunate are not even a twinkle in his eye yet.
A naïve and unreliable prince. He is timid and still indecisive. While considerate of others' feelings and listens to their opinions, he is sometimes stubborn. He is also has somewhat of a geeky side to him.
Always torn between ideals and reality, he carries burdens he does not want to carry and takes paths he does not want to follow. As he fought to keep up with the geniuses and fierce generals around him, he gradually awakens his talent.
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Oda Nobunaga: Okada Junichi The kind of man Ieyasu wishes to be like
A solitary charismatic figure who defies conventional wisdom, and has an uncanny ability to think out of the box and create innovative tactics. He can be kind at times, while fierce at others. While everyone else is in awe of him, Ieyasu attaches himself tightly to Nobunaga in order to learn from him.
For some reason Nobunaga takes an unusual interest in Ieyasu.
(More characters behind page cut)
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Sena/Tsukiyama-dono: Arimura Kasumi The woman who understood Ieyasu the best
Ieyasu's main wife. She is the daughter of Sekiguchi Chikanaga, a vassal of the Imagawa family. She is a bright young woman, cheerful as the sun. She was Ieyasu's first love, and they became a harmonious married couple. Together they had Nobuyasu and Princess Kame. Before the battle with Oda Nobunaga (the Battle of Okehazama), she sends Ieyasu off with a smile, but from that day on her fate begins to change.
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Toyotomi Hideyoshi: Muro Tsuyoshi The man who lives to the utmost in the warring era
He rises from the bottom, and achieved great success, eventually becoming Ieyasu's greatest rival. He is a man with great desires, that he boldly expresses with all his might, and pursued with all his might. He is the kind of man who had the time of his life in the turbulent times of the Sengoku. He is incredibly intelligent and always talks quickly. He is cheerful and personable, and skillfully ingrained himself to other people. The very kind of person Ieyasu doesn’t like the most. 
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Imagawa Yoshimoto: Nomura Mansai The man who led Ieyasu into turbulent times
The daimyo of Suruga. A noble lord. Smart. Snobbish. Calm. An educated man and politician who is well versed in the culture of the court nobles, he is an idealist who benevolently upholds a righteous governance for the sake of the people. He takes a keen interest in the intelligent Ieyasu, who had been taken as a hostage, and gives him a thorough education. He is a man Ieyasu respects like a father.
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Takeda Shingen: Abe Hiroshi The greatest legend of the Sengoku
He anticipates everything Ieyasu does and crushes him as if he were twisting the hand of a baby. He is like a living textbook for Ieyasu, showing him the severity of surviving in the Sengoku.
Shingen gave Ieyasu hell in life and even death, but Ieyasu soon learns that this suffering is what makes him stronger.
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hunny-pp · 3 years
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sena and shikanosuke paintings that were done in one layer and color
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nightkarmaqueen · 3 years
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[History] This Song But--
This song but make it Lady Tsukiyama after Ieyasu secured his alliance with Nobunaga
Lady Tsukiyama, crying on the Hamamatsu Castle’s hallway : CAN I JUST STAY HERE?! SPEND THE REST OF MY DAYS HERE?!
Ieyasu, back facing Lady Tsukiyama : ...
Or we can make it as Nobuyasu before Ieyasu exiled him to Futamata Castle!
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atemourisan · 3 years
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I honestly feel so bad for Sena both in history and in the games.
Since ofc Ieyasu couldn't stand her personality in real life and had her killed in real life since Oda Nobunaga ordered him to, And ofc Ieyasu cheated on her with his favorite Saigo No Tsubone and many of his concubines, I am aware that it was part of the norm for a daimyo or a samurai to have concubines but after learning that Sena was described to be a jealousy kind of woman, I do still feel bad for her.
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samuraifacts · 3 years
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The True Cost of an Alliance
 So for anyone who doesn’t know I am unapologetically a fan of the Sengoku Musou/Samurai Warriors series.  While It was actually the series Kessen that got me into the Sengoku Period to begin with it was Sengoku Musou that really helped keep me interested in the era. With Samurai Warriors 5 coming this year and the introduction of a rather unexpected character named Sena (whom I will be referring to as Lady Tsukiyama) I thought this would be the perfect time to discuss one of the most infamous incidents of the period.    This is a facts tumblr so I’m not going to really touch on them until after the story is done, but I will start by saying that this event has spawned several tales of both ghosts and curses throughout Japanese history. Now that I have your attention let me set the scene for you. It is the year 1579. Oda Nobunaga and his clan have taken over all of central Japan. To the West is the Mori clan, and to the East is the Uesugi. The mighty Takeda clan had been decimated at the battle of Nagashino and the Oda-Tokugawa alliance was taking over more and more Takeda land by the year. While the Takeda’s home province of Kai would not fall for another four years, no one would consider the Takeda clan a viable opponent to the Oda-Tokugawa alliance at this point.    Nobunaga’s alliance with Ieyasu, forged after the fall of the Imagawa in 1560 and sealed three years later in 1563 by a marriage of Nobunaga’s five year old daughter Tokuhime to Ieyasu’s five year old son Nobuyasu was considered unparalleled at this point. However, in 1579 Ieyasu would learn the true cost of this alliance. His eldest son Nobuyasu was considered a rising star in Japanese politics. He seemed to have a natural talent for leadership and battle alike and was being perfectly groomed by Ieyasu to be the next head of the Tokugawa clan. He had a loving wife whom he treated well and was said to be quite popular across the Tokugawa and Oda controlled provinces. Ieyasu even put Nobuyasu in charge of his home castle, Okazaki. Nobuyasu was deeply loved by his father and adored by his mother Lady Tsukiyama. So much so, in fact, that his wife Tokuhime apparently had a long standing grudge with her mother in law. While we don’t know the exact reason some speculate that the two butted heads quite a bit over what was best for Nobuyasu, how Tokuhime could be a better wife, and what Tokuhime could and couldn’t do to properly respect her inlaws. One tale states that Tokuhime only gave birth to two daughters for Nobuyasu and failed to produce an heir. Wanting a grandson Lady Tsukiyama arranged for the daughter of a Takeda retainer to become Nobuyasu's concubine in hopes of the concubine having a son. While this certainly wasn’t unheard of at this time it apparently this didn’t sit well with the 21 year old.    I want to take a brief pause to say that some sources also say that Tokuhime and Nobuyasu’s marriage was horrible, Nobuyasu was a mama’s boy, he never took his wife’s side and despised her for arguing with his mother, etc. etc. but we can’t verify any of that and given that Tokuhime didn’t seem to have any direct problem with Nobuyasu himself I’m going to say this was unlikely. Anyway, back to the story of Nobunaga’s angry daughter.    Deciding she had enough of her mother in law’s interference into her marriage Tokuhime wrote a letter to her father. For anyone who knows about Nobunaga, I’m sure you’ve realized this can’t go anywhere good. Tokuhime told her father that since the concubine was from the Takeda, clearly Ieasyu’s wife was colluding with the Takeda forces and had been in direct contact with Takeda Katsuyori to undermine the Oda-Tokugawa alliance and possibly even get the Tokugawa to switch sides. Obviously this didn’t sit well with Nobunaga and Nobunaga demanded that in order to keep the Oda-Tokugawa alliance alive Ieyasu would have to execute his wife.    Understanding how important the alliance was, being aware that his son had in fact received a Takeda clan daughter as a concubine, and not wanting a war to break out in which he would be pinned between the Oda, Hojo, and Takeda, Ieyasu agreed. On 9 September 1579, Lady Tsukiyama (Sena in Samurai Warriors 5) was beheaded on the shore of Lake Sanaru, in Hamamatsu on Ieyasu’s order. Her primary grave is at Seiryū temple in Hamamatsu. However, her head rests in Hachioji Shrine. Sadly the tragedy doesn’t stop there. Remember the entire point of this was to maintain the Oda-Tokugawa alliance. Nobuyasu now had a reason to despise the Oda and when he became head of the Tokugawa household would likely have no sympathy if the Oda ever found themselves in danger. Knowing that his son would now have a grudge Ieyasu would also order his first born son, the rising star Nobuyasu, to commit seppuku. This meant Tokuhime would live the rest of her days as a widow, returning to the Oda clan and that leadership of the Tokugawa after Ieyasu died would go to Tokugawa Hidetada. ultimately this would prove a good thing as it would mean Hidetada’s son Iemitsu would become Shogun. Though we are left to wonder how history may have changed if Nobuyasu had been allowed to live or if his wife never sent that letter to Nobunaga.   Now as I said at the opening this in and of itself isn’t a ghost story. However, for the next 400+ years several tales would arise of seeing the ghosts of Lady Tsukiyama and Matsudaira Nobuyasu. When Nobunaga died a few years later at the hands of his retainer Akechi Mitsuhide some would say it was Lady Tsukiyama’s curse. Some would even go so far as to say that it was actually planned out by the Akechi and Tokugawa together in revenge for the loss of Ieyasu’s son and wife. Even when it came to Ieyasu losing the battle of Komaki and Nagakute it would be labeled as his late wife’s curse. Just like at any point throughout history whenever something bad happened to the Oda or the Tokugawa people would be quick to find a horrible story from the past and claim that it must be a curse from someone involved with that event.    Will Sena’s fate be the same in Samurai Warriors 5? I doubt it. Koei tends to leave out particularly gruesome things like this from their titles. However, it will be curious to see what fate they have in store for Ieayasu’s wife and how long she lasts within the game’s world. Though, some of you may recognize this story from Nioh 1 as the wraith of Lady Tsukiyama appears as a demon mourning the death of her son before attacking William.
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professor-tammi · 3 years
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Reveals from today’s SW5 livestream:
(From Famitsu: Oichi / Nagamasa / Toshiie / Tadakatsu) / Hanbei Takenaka
Kanbei Kuroda / NEW: Kazuuji Nakamura (Koga ninja in service to the Toyotomi)
NEW: Sena (aka Lady Tsukiyama; Yoshimoto’s niece, joins the Tokugawa) / NEW: Shikanosuke Yamanaka (known for resisting the Mouri; will be an ally of Mitsuhide)
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lecialucille · 3 years
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visualnovelmoments · 6 years
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Reassuring.
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odaclan · 3 years
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The death of Ieyasu’s son and wife was not ordered by Nobunaga
As with many other things, this is a story that is recently being shot full of holes and its veracity called into question.
The story that went around was such:
Tokuhime, Nobunaga’s daughter, fought with her husband Nobuyasu, who was Ieyasu’s son. She then wrote a letter of twelve accusations, accusing Tsukiyama-dono (Nobuyasu’s mother) of trying to sow discord between her and her husband, as well as being in communication to rebel with the Takeda. She also accused of her husband of being cruel. She entrusted this letter to Sakai Tadatsugu, who delivered it to her father Nobunaga. Furious about this, Nobunaga ordered the deaths of both Tsukiyama-dono and Nobuyasu. Nobuyasu was ordered to seppuku, and Tsukiyama was essentially assassinated. 
The problem with this is its source. 
The account of Nobunaga’s meddling was written in Mikawa Monogatari 三河物語. This is recently considered to be a biased narrative, written approximately around the time of the shogun Iemitsu. As it is meant to prop up the budding new shogunate, its contents is dubious. Other Mikawa Monogatari accounts have been called into question, such as Ieyasu’s presence in the Kanegasaki Retreat. 
The account of Nobuyasu and Tsukiyama-dono’s cruelty and immorality was documented in Mikawa Gofudoki 三河後風土記. This is likewise suspected of being a Tokugawa propaganda, written approximately in 1610. 
The killing of family members is actually considered scandalous if there is no good reason for it. Therefore some sort of excuse needs to be made to explain Ieyasu’s action, lest it becomes a stain in the shogunate’s records. “Excessive cruelty” and “treason” makes for a valid reason for the order of execution. 
In accounts that are considered more reliable, such as the diary of Matsudaira Ietada, only the fact that “Nobuyasu and his wife fought” was corroborated. 
Even then, some parts of the relevant texts has been ruined, so it’s rather difficult to verify the claim today. It was written that Nobuyasu had a fight with “御xx”. With two kanji damaged, it’s hard to tell who he fought with. It could have been his wife, sure, as her name is usually written as such in documents: 御新造. On the other hand it could also have been “senior vassals” 御家門, “his grandmother” 御前様, or even his mother Tsukiyama-dono 御母様.
In Azuchi Nikki 安土日記 (Azuchi Diary, an earlier draft of Oota Gyuuichi’s Shinchoukouki), it was recorded that Nobunaga only said “Ieyasu should do whatever he wants”. In fact, Oota Gyuuichi originally wrote in Azuchi Nikki that “Nobuyasu was plotting a rebellion, and Ieyasu’s vassals told Nobunaga this”. Later, this was edited out of the final Shinchoukouki, presumably out of fear of the Tokugawa (the “final” edition of the Shinchoukouki would’ve been completed/finalized during the time of Tokugawa shoguns)
It seems like what actually happened was that due to concerns of treason, Ieyasu had them both killed. Nobunaga’s name was thrown in post-mortem as a scapegoat to preserve Ieyasu’s “clean” image. 
Ieyasu has been described as a paranoid person, after all, so I wouldn’t put it past him to have overreacted and making a rash decision. After subjugating the Ikkou-shuu (Honganji sect) riot in Mikawa, Ieyasu banned the faith from his lands altogether. Anyone who is a follower of this faith must convert to another Buddhist sect. Later, he launched the Sieges of Osaka over a convoluted offense in the arrangement of words engraved on a bell donated by the Toyotomi. 
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visualnovelmoments · 6 years
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Such a smart boy, isn’t he?
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visualnovelmoments · 6 years
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With interest.
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visualnovelmoments · 6 years
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Hardware.
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