Late Hōjō clan

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The Late Hōjō clan (後北条氏 Go-Hōjō-shi?) was one of the most powerful warrior clans in Japan in the Sengoku period.

The clan began when Ise Shinkurō, a high ranking officer in the shogunate[citation needed], began to conquer lands and build up his power at the beginning of the 16th century.

His son, Hōjō Ujitsuna, wanted his lineage to have a more illustrious name, and chose Hōjō, after the line of regents of the Kamakura shogunate. Ise Shinkurō was also posthumously renamed Hōjō Sōun.

The Late Hōjō, sometimes known as the Odawara Hōjō after their home castle of Odawara in Sagami Province, were not related to the earlier Hōjō clan. Their power rivaled that of the Tokugawa clan, but eventually Toyotomi Hideyoshi eradicated the power of the Hōjō in the Siege of Odawara (1590), banishing Hōjō Ujinao and his wife Toku Hime (a daughter of Tokugawa Ieyasu) to Mount Kōya, where Ujinao died in 1591.


Campaigns of the Hōjō
Arai - Edo - Nashinokidaira - Kamakura - Ozawahara - Musashi-Matsuyama 1537 - Kōnodai 1538 - Kawagoe - Odawara 1561 - Musashi-Matsuyama 1563 - Kōnodai 1564 - Hachigata 1568 - Odawara 1569 - Mimasetoge - Kanbara - Nirayama - Fukazawa - Omosu - Kanagawa - Hachigata 1590 - Odawara 1590 - Shimoda - Oshi

The heads of the Late Hōjō clan were

[edit] Reference

  • Turnbull, Stephen (2002). 'War in Japan: 1467-1615'. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.


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