Shogun Hidetada (1605–1623)
In order to avoid his predecessor's fate, Ieyasu established a dynastic pattern soon after becoming shogun by abdicating in favor of Hidetada in
1605. Ieyasu retained significant power until his death in 1616; but Hidetada nevertheless assumed a role as formal head of the bakufu bureaucracy.
After Hidetada became shogun he married
Oeyo {of the
Oda family of the
Taira clan} and they had two sons,
Tokugawa Iemitsu and
Tokugawa Tadanaga. They also had two daughters, one of whom,
Sen hime, married twice. The other daughter,
Kazuko hime, married Emperor
Go-Mizunoo {of descent from the
Fujiwara clan}.
Much to the dismay of Ieyasu, in 1612, Shogun Hidetada engineered a marriage between
Sen hime and
Toyotomi Hideyori, who was living as a common citizen in Osaka Castle with his mother. When this failed to quell Hideyori's intrigues, Ōgosho Ieyasu and Shogun Hidetada brought an army to Osaka. Father and son once again disagreed on how to conduct this campaign against the recalcitrant Toyotomi forces in Osaka. Ieyasu favored a conservative approach, while Hidetada preferred a direct, brutal attack. Hidetada prevailed; in the ensuing attack Hideyori and his mother were forced to commit suicide. Even Hideyori's infant son (
Kunimatsu), grandson of Hidetada, was not spared. Ieyasu never forgave Hidetada for this loss. Only Sen
hime, Ieyasu's favorite granddaughter, was spared, and later re-married and had a new family.
After Ieyasu's death in 1616, Hidetada took control of the
bakufu. He strengthened the Tokugawa hold on power by improving relations with the Imperial court. To this end he married his daughter
Kazuko hime to Emperor
Go-Mizunoo. The product of that marriage, a girl, eventually succeeded to the throne of Japan to become
Empress Meishō. The city of
Edo was also heavily developed under his reign.