Japanese daimyō
Viscount Oda Suemaru (織田 寿重丸, April 5, 1866 – June 26, 1871) was the fourth daimyō of the tozama feudal domain of Tendō, in Dewa Province, northern Japan. Oda Suemaru was a direct descendant of Oda Nobunaga, through Nobunaga's son Oda Nobukatsu.[citation needed]
Biography
Suemaru was born as the sixth son of Oda Nobumichi (the 2nd Lord Tendō). He was still in an infant when his brother, Oda Nobutoshi (the 3rd Lord Tendō) was placed under house arrest and ordered to retire due to his involvement in the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei of northern domains against the Meiji government during the Boshin War of the Meiji Restoration in December 1868. Nobutoshi was allowed to return to Tendō in July 1869. In the interim, the title of daimyō had been replaced with "domain governor" by the new government;[1] Soon after Nobutoshi's return to Tendō, he replaced Suemaru as governor and final lord of Tendō.
Suemaru died at the age of six, and his grave is at the Buddhist temple of Korin-ji in Bunkyō, Tokyo.[citation needed]
References
Oda Suemaru Born: 1853 Died: 6 June 1901
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Preceded by
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4th Daimyō of Tendō 1868–1869
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Succeeded by
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Preceded by
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12th Oda family head (desc. from Nobukatsu) 1868–1869
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Succeeded by
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