Katō Kiyomasa

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Katō Kiyomasa
Katō Kiyomasa.jpg
Portrait of Katō Kiyomasa
Lord of Kumamoto
In office
1587–1611
Preceded by Sassa Narimasa
Succeeded by Katō Tadahiro
Personal details
Born (1561-07-25)July 25, 1561
Owari Province, Japan
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Kumamoto, Japan
Nationality Japanese

Katō Kiyomasa (加藤 清正?, July 25, 1561 – August 2, 1611) was a Japanese daimyō of the Azuchi-Momoyama and Edo period. His court title was Higo-no-kami. His child name was Yashamaru, and first name was Toranosuke.

Origins and early career

Kiyomasa was born in what is now Nakamura-ku, Nagoya (situated in contemporary Aichi District, Owari Province) to Katō Kiyotada. Kiyotada's wife, Ito, was a cousin of Toyotomi Hideyoshi's mother.[1] Kiyotada died while his son (then known as Toranosuke) was still young. Soon after, Toranosuke entered with Hideyoshi, and in 1576, at age 15, was granted a reward of 170 koku. He fought in Hideyoshi's army at the Battle of Yamazaki, and later, at the Battle of Shizugatake. Owing to his achievement in that battle, he became known as one of the Seven Spears of Shizugatake.[2] Hideyoshi rewarded Kiyomasa with a reward of 3,000 koku.

When Hideyoshi became the kampaku in the summer of 1585, Kiyomasa received the court title of Kazue no Kami (主計頭) and junior 5th court rank, lower grade (ju go-i no ge 従五位下). In 1586, after Higo Province was confiscated from Sassa Narimasa, he was granted 250,000 koku of land in Higo (roughly half of the province), and given Kumamoto Castle as his provincial residence.

During the Seven-Year War

Kiyomasa hunting a tiger in Korea. Tiger hunting was a common pastime for the samurai during the war.

Kiyomasa was one of the three senior commanders during the Seven-Year War (1592–1598) against the Korean dynasty of Joseon. Together with Konishi Yukinaga, he captured Seoul, Busan and many other cities. He defeated the last of the Korean regulars at the Battle of Imjin River and pacified Hamgyong.

Kiyomasa was an excellent architect of castles and fortification. During the Imjin war, he built several Japanese style castles in Korea to better defend the conquered lands. Ulsan castle was one of the fortresses that Kiyomasa built, and it proved its worth when Sino-Korean forces attacked it with a far superior force, yet the outnumbered Japanese were able to successfully defend the castle until reinforcements arrived, which forced the Sino-Korean force to retreat.

The Korean king Seonjo abandoned Seoul before Kiyomasa's forces. Kiyomasa held two Korean princes who had deserted as hostages and used them to force lower-ranking Korean officials to surrender.[3][4] During the war, he apparently hunted tigers for sport, using a spear, and later presented the pelts to Hideyoshi.[5] Some versions of the story says he was in fact hunting tiger to catch them alive, in order to bring their meat to Hideyoshi, as he thought it would improve his lord's health, but later, the tiger was killed because of the lack of food.

Kiyomasa's most famous battle is the Siege of Ulsan (蔚山城の戦い) on December 22, 1597. Kiyomasa led the defense of the castle, successfully holding Chinese general Yang Hao's (楊鎬) army at bay, which numbered 60,000.[citation needed] He defended Ulsan until November 23, 1598. However, his bravery was not reported to Hideyoshi by his rival's overseer Ishida Mitsunari. After Hideyoshi's death, he clashed with Mitsunari, and approached Tokugawa Ieyasu.[6]

William Scott Wilson describes Kato Kiyomasa thus: "He was a military man first and last, outlawing even the recitation of poetry, putting the martial arts above all else. His precepts show the single-mindedness and Spartan attitudes of the man, [they] demonstrate emphatically that the warrior's first duty in the early 17th century was simply to 'grasp the sword and die'. Contemporary accounts of Kato describe him as awe-inspiring, yet not unfriendly, and a natural leader of men."

Later life

A devoted member of Nichiren Buddhism, Kiyomasa encouraged the building of Nichiren temples.[7] He did not see eye-to-eye with Ishida Mitsunari, and Hideyoshi recalled him to Kyoto. He came into conflict with Konishi, who ruled the neighboring domain in Higo, and was a Christian. Kiyomasa was noted for brutally suppressing Christianity.[8] At the battle of Hondo, he ordered his men to cut open the bellies of all pregnant Christian women and cut off their infant's heads.[9]

During the Battle of Sekigahara, Kiyomasa remained in Kyūshū. Believing that the Toyotomi would fall without the help of the Tokugawa (and the hatred he had of Ishida Mitsunari commanding the Toyotomi forces), he sided with the eastern army of Tokugawa Ieyasu. For his loyalty to the Tokugawa, Kiyomasa was rewarded with the former territories of his rival Konishi (who had sided with Ishida), which when added to his existing territory, increased the Kumamoto domain to around 530,000 koku.[citation needed]

In his later years, Kiyomasa tried to work as a mediator for the increasingly complicated relationship between Tokugawa Ieyasu and Toyotomi Hideyori. In 1611, en route by sea to Kumamoto after one such meeting, he fell ill, and died shortly after his arrival. He was buried at Honmyō-ji temple in Kumamoto, but also has graves in Yamagata Prefecture and Tokyo. Kiyomasa is also enshrined in many Shinto shrines in Japan, including Katō Shrine in Kumamoto.

In 1910, Kiyomasa was posthumously promoted to junior 3rd court rank (jusanmi 従三位).

In popular culture

Katō Kiyomasa is a character in the Koei video games Kessen, Kessen III, Samurai Warriors 3, Samurai Warriors 4, Mōri Motonari: Chikai no Sanshi and Age of Empires III. He is a playable character in Pokémon Conquest (Pokémon + Nobunaga's Ambition in Japan), with his partner Pokémon being Fraxure and Haxorus.[10]

References

  1. E. Papinot, Historical and Geographical Dictionary of Japan, Yokohama: Kelly & Walsh, 1910, reprint, Rutland, Vermont: Charles Tuttle, 1972, pp. 262-263
  2. Naramoto Tatsuya (1994). Nihon no kassen: monoshiri jiten. (Tokyo: Shufu to Seikatsusha), p. 327
  3. [History of Ming] [1] 昖棄王城,令次子琿攝國事,奔平壤。已,複走義州,願內屬。七月,兵部議令駐劄險要,以待天兵;號召通國勤王,以圖恢復。而是時倭已入王京,毀墳墓,劫王子、陪臣,剽府庫,八道幾盡沒,旦暮且渡鴨綠江,請援之使絡繹於道。
  4. 北関大捷碑 "其秋清正 入北道、兵鋭甚、鐡嶺以北無城守焉、於是鞠敬仁等叛、應賊、敬仁者會寧府吏也、素志不卒、及賊到富寧、隙危扇亂、執兩王子及宰臣、□播者、並傳諸長吏、與賊效欸"
  5. NHK(Nippon Hōsō Kyōkai) "そのとき、歴史が動いた"(第315回) [2]
  6. 森山豊明 『語る日本史データベース』(page 141)
  7. William E. Griffis (1913). The Mikado's Empire. (New York: Harper & Brothers), p. 163
  8. Griffis, p. 163
  9. Luís Frois, Furoisu Nihon-shi 12, trans. Matsuda Kiichi and Kawasaki Momota (Tokyo: Chuo-koron-shinsha, 2000), p. 32.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Further reading

  • Kitajima Manji 北島万次 (2007). Katō Kiyomasa Chōsen shinryaku no jitsuzō 加藤清正: 朝鮮侵略の実像. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan 吉川弘文館.

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by
none
Lord of Kumamoto
1587-1611
Succeeded by
Katō Tadahiro