Mōri_Tsunemitsu

Mōri Tsunemitsu

Mōri Tsunemitsu

Kamakura-period samurai


Mōri Tsunemitsu (毛利 経光, ? – ?) was a samurai during the Kamakura period and a gokenin of the Kamakura shogunate. He was the fourth son of Mōri Suemitsu, the founder of the Mōri clan.[1]

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After his father committed seppuku from his defeat in battle, Tsunemitsu survived.[2] He was allowed to retain the family's position of jitō of the estates of Sahashi in Echigo and Yoshida in Aki, the combined value of which, as recorded in the fourteenth century, was 3,000 kanmon per year.[3][4]

See also


Notes

  1. Mass, Jeffrey P. (1993). The Bakufu in Japanese History. Stanford University Press. p. 209. ISBN 0804722102.
  2. Mass, Jeffrey P. (1993). The Bakufu in Japanese History. Stanford University Press. p. 112. ISBN 0804722102.
  3. Mass, Jeffrey P. (1993). The Bakufu in Japanese History. Stanford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 0804722102.
  4. 1 kanmon equals 1000 mon

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