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  1. Tokugawa Nariaki (徳川 斉昭, April 4, 1800 – September 29, 1860) was a Japanese daimyō who ruled the Mito Domain (now Ibaraki Prefecture) and contributed to the rise of nationalism and the Meiji Restoration.

  2. Tokugawa Nariaki (born April 4, 1800, Edo, Japan—died Sept. 29, 1860, Mito, Hitachi Province) was a Japanese advocate of reform measures designed to place more power in the hands of the emperor and the great lords and to keep foreigners out of Japan.

  3. 29 de sept. de 2012 · Tokugawa Nariaki (徳川斉昭, 1800-1860) was the ninth daimyō of the Mito domain (modern-day Ibaraki Prefecture) and father of the fifteenth and last Tokugawa shōgun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu.

  4. Tokugawa Hidetada (徳川 秀忠,?) fue shōgun Tokugawa desde 1605 hasta su abdicación en 1623. Nació el 2 de mayo de 1579 con el nombre de Nagamaru y fue el tercer hijo de Ieyasu.

  5. Tokugawa Nariaki was a lord of Mito han, and a prominent presence in Bakumatsu period politics. His son, Tokugawa Yoshinobu , went on to become the last shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate . He married a court lady named Yoshiko , born in 1804 the twelfth daughter of Imperial Prince Orihito (Arisugawa no miya).

  6. Tokugawa Nariaki (1800–1860) was one of the leading Japanese political and military leaders of the nineteenth century. As possessor of the Mito territories, he was one of the most powerful and influential daimyo, or feudal lords, and a member of a collateral branch of the Tokugawa family.

  7. Tokugawa Nariaki was the ninth daimyo of Mito and father of the last shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu. He was a reactionary who despised everything Western. He advocated answering foreign demands on Japanese sovereignty with cannon fire and the tempered razor-sharp steel of the Japanese sword.