Oda clan
The Oda clan was a family of Japanese daimyōs who were to become an important political force in the unification of Japan in the mid-16th century. Though they had the climax of their fame under Oda Nobunaga and fell from the spotlight soon after, several branches of the family continued as daimyō houses until the Meiji Restoration.
History
Origins
The Oda family in the time of Nobunaga claimed descent from the Taira clan, by Taira no Chikazane, a grandson of Taira no Shigemori.Taira no Chikazane established himself at Oda and took its name. His descendants, senior retainers of the Shiba clan, shugo of Echizen, Owari and other provinces, followed the latter to Owari Province and received Inuyama Castle in 1435. This castle was built towards 1435, by Shiba Yoshitake who entrusted its safety to the Oda family. The Oda had been shugo-dai for several generations.
Independence
In 1452, after the death of Shiba Yoshitake the vassals of the Shiba, like the Oda in Owari Province and the Asakura clan in Echizen Province, refused the succession of Shiba Yoshitoshi and supported Shiba Yoshikado, and began to divide the large domains of their suzerains among themselves, and had become gradually independent in the domains which had been confided to them. In 1475, the Oda had occupied the greater portion of Owari Province, but the Shiba would continue to try to regain authority until Shiba Yoshikane, who had to leave Owari.The other famous castle of the Oda is Kiyosu Castle, built between 1394 and 1427 by Shiba Yoshishige who entrusted the castle to the Oda clan, and named Oda Toshisada vice-governor of the province. Toshisada had four sons. The fourth son, Nobusada, who lived in Katsubata Castle, was the father of Nobuhide and the grandfather of Oda Nobunaga.
Nobunaga's reign
Nobuhide took Nagoya Castle in 1525, and built Furuwatari Castle. Oda Nobutomo held Kiyosu Castle, but he was besieged and killed in 1555 by his nephew Oda Nobunaga who operated from Nagoya Castle. This led to the family being divided into several branches, until the branch led by Oda Nobunaga eclipsed the others and unified its control over Owari.Then turning to neighboring rivals, it, one by one achieved dominance over the Imagawa, Saitō, Azai, Asakura, Takeda and other clans, until Nobunaga held control over central Japan. However, Nobunaga's plans for national domination were thwarted when he fell victim to the treachery of his vassal Akechi Mitsuhide who killed him at the Incident at Honnō-ji in the summer of 1582. The Oda remained titular overlords of central Japan for a short time, before being surpassed by the family of one of Nobunaga's chief generals, Hashiba Hideyoshi.
Edo period
Though the Oda were effectively eclipsed by Toyotomi Hideyoshi following Nobunaga's death, it is not often known that the Oda continued to be a presence in Japanese politics. One branch of the family became hatamoto retainers to the Tokugawa shōgun, while other branches became minor daimyō lords. As of the end of the Edo period, these included Tendō Domain, Yanagimoto han, Kaiju han, and Kaibara han.During the reign of the daimyō Nobutoshi, the Oda of Tendō Domain were signatories to the pact that created the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei.
Descendants
Descendants of the Oda Clan can be found throughout Japan, mainly in the south and southwest.Notable figures
- Oda Chikazane
- Oda Nobuhide
- Oda Nobuhiro
- Oda Nobunaga
- Oda Nobuyuki
- Oichi
- Oda Nobukane
- Oda Nagamasu
- Oda Nobuharu
- Oda Nobuzumi
- Oda Nobutada
- Oda Nobutaka
- Oda Nobukatsu
- Hashiba Hidekatsu
- Oda Katsunaga
- Oda Hidekatsu
- Oda Hidenobu
- Oda Nobutoshi
Oda's clan Retainers families
- Hirate clan
- Takigawa clan
- Sakuma clan
- Fuwa clan
- Hayashi clan
- Shibata clan
- Niwa clan
- Maeda clan
- Sassa clan
- Akechi clan
- Hashiba clan
- Tokugawa clan
Nobunaga's notable retainers
- Hirate Masahide
- Hayashi Hidesada
- Murai Sadakatsu
- Kawajiri Hidetaka
- Mizuno Nobumoto
- Sakuma Nobumori
- Shibata Katsuie
- Takigawa Kazumasu
- Mori Yoshinari
- Sakai Masahisa
- Niwa Nagahide
- Ikeda Tsuneoki
- Sassa Narimasa
- Maeda Toshiie
- Toyotomi Hideyoshi
- Hachisuka Masakatsu
- Hori Hidemasa
- Sakuma Morimasa
- Yamauchi Katsutoyo
- Hasegawa Hidekazu
- Naitō Shōsuke
- Harada Naomasa
- Yanada Masatsuna
- Ōta Gyūichi
- Iio Sadamune
- Takenaka Hanbei
- Kuroda Yoshitaka
- Akechi Mitsuhide
- Ujiie Bokuzen
- Inaba Yoshimichi
- Andō Morinari
- Matsunaga Hisahide
- Kuki Yoshitaka
- Kani Saizō
- Kanamori Nagachika
- Gamō Katahide
- Gamō Ujisato
- Mori Ranmaru
- Asakura Kageakira
- Fuwa Mitsuharu
- Araki Murashige
- Hirate Kiyohide
- Hosokawa Fujitaka
- Ikeda Nobuteru
- Ikoma Ienaga
- Maeda Gen'i
- Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Murai Sadakatsu
- Nakagawa Kiyohide
- Takayama Ukon
- Tsutsui Junkei
- Wada Koremasa
- Yamauchi Kazutoyo
- Asano Nagamasa
- Hachisuka Hikoemon
- Ishida Mitsunari
- Murai Nagato
- Tsutsui Junkei
- Sakon Shima
- Kuroda Kanbei
- Yamanuchi Katsutoyo
- Horio Mosuke
- Kitabatake Toshikatsu
- Maeno Suemon
- Tōdō Takatora
- Akada Shigeyoshi
- Akada Shigetaka
- Aochi Shigetsuna
- Atagi Nobuyasu
- Chō Tsuratatsu
- Endō Taneshige
- Fukutomi Hidekatsu
- Gotō Takaharu
- Hachiya Yoritaka
- Hatakeyama Sadamasa
- Hayashi Shinjiro
- Hirate Norihide
- Horiuchi Ujiyoshi
- Ikai Nobusada
- Inaba Masashige
- Kaganoi Shigemochi
- Kanemitsu Masayoshi
- Katō Yoshiaki
- Kawajiri Hidetaka
- Kotsokuri Tomomasa
- Kyōgoku Takatsugu
- Maeba Yoshitsugu
- Maeda Toshiharu
- Maeno Nagayasu
- Mikumo Shigemochi
Clan castles
- Nagoya Castle
- Kiyosu Castle
- Komakiyama Castle
- Gifu Castle
- Azuchi Castle
Others notable ladies
- Lady Otsuya
- Tokuhime
- Kitsuno
- Nōhime
- Dota Gozen