Ieyasu: Difference between revisions

13 bytes removed ,  15 August 2012
m
no edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 86: Line 86:


==Historical origin==
==Historical origin==
Ieyasu is based on the real-life {{wp|Tokugawa Ieyasu}} of Japanese history. Hidetada ({{wp|Tokugawa Hidetada}}) was his son. {{OBP|Hanzō|Conquest}}, {{wp|Tenkai}}, and Hatsume ({{jwp|初芽局|Hatsume no Tsubone}}) were in direct service to Ieyasu, and [[Tadakatsu]], Tadatsugu ({{wp|Sakai Tadatsugu}}), Yasumasa ({{wp|Sakakibara Yasumasa}}) and Naomasa ({{wp|Ii Naomasa}}) were the "Elite Four" of Ieyasu's army, the {{wp|Shitennō (Tokugawa clan)|Shitennō}}. Munenori ({{wp|Yagyū Munenori}}) was a retainer of the {{wp|Tokugawa clan}} and Hidetada's swordsmanship teacher.
Ieyasu is based on the real-life {{wp|Tokugawa Ieyasu}} of Japanese history. Hidetada ({{wp|Tokugawa Hidetada}}) was his son. [[Hanzō]], {{wp|Tenkai}}, and Hatsume ({{jwp|初芽局|Hatsume no Tsubone}}) were in direct service to Ieyasu, and [[Tadakatsu]], Tadatsugu ({{wp|Sakai Tadatsugu}}), Yasumasa ({{wp|Sakakibara Yasumasa}}) and Naomasa ({{wp|Ii Naomasa}}) were the "Elite Four" of Ieyasu's army, the {{wp|Shitennō (Tokugawa clan)|Shitennō}}. Munenori ({{wp|Yagyū Munenori}}) was a retainer of the {{wp|Tokugawa clan}} and Hidetada's swordsmanship teacher.


==Trivia==
==Trivia==