About: Ueda Sōko

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Ueda Sōko (上田宗箇) (1563 – 30 May 1650) was a warlord who lived during the Momoyama and early Edo Periods. He is best known for founding the Ueda Sōko-ryū, a warrior class school of Japanese tea ceremony from Hiroshima. Ueda Sōko went by the name Satarō (佐太郎) in his younger days and later Shigeyasu (重安). He received his Zen practitioner's name of Chikuin (竹隠) by the 111th patriarch of Daitoku-ji, Shunoku Sōen. Today his death plaque is enshrined at the Sangen-in sub-temple of Daitoku-ji, beside that of his long time teacher in the Way of Tea, Furuta Oribe. Sōko was held in high esteem by Toyotomi Hideyoshi for military exploits and as a tea master. In the Battle of Sekigahara (1600), Sōko sided with Toyotomi's Western Army and was thus defeated. During the Siege of Osaka Summer Campaign (161

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  • Ueda Sōko (上田宗箇) (1563 – 30 May 1650) was a warlord who lived during the Momoyama and early Edo Periods. He is best known for founding the Ueda Sōko-ryū, a warrior class school of Japanese tea ceremony from Hiroshima. Ueda Sōko went by the name Satarō (佐太郎) in his younger days and later Shigeyasu (重安). He received his Zen practitioner's name of Chikuin (竹隠) by the 111th patriarch of Daitoku-ji, Shunoku Sōen. Today his death plaque is enshrined at the Sangen-in sub-temple of Daitoku-ji, beside that of his long time teacher in the Way of Tea, Furuta Oribe. Sōko was held in high esteem by Toyotomi Hideyoshi for military exploits and as a tea master. In the Battle of Sekigahara (1600), Sōko sided with Toyotomi's Western Army and was thus defeated. During the Siege of Osaka Summer Campaign (1615), Sōko fought with Asano Yoshinaga on the Tokugawa side, and for this Sōko was given a pardon by Tokugawa Ieyasu.In 1619, the Tokogawa shogunate assigned the Geishū Domain to Asano Nagaakira and Sōko relocated to Hiroshima serving Nagaakira. Sōko was given a fief of 17,000 koku of rice in west Hiroshima (present day Hatsukaichi and Ōtake) and the role of Chief Retainer of the Geishū Domain for the Asano. In 1632 (Year nine of Kan'ei Era) at the age of 70, Sōko retired from military duties and devoted himself to the Way of Tea. He immersed himself in a life of chanoyu: crafting tea equipage such as bamboo flower vases, chashaku tea scoops and firing raku ware tea bowls. Sōko developed his own school of chanoyu known as the Ueda Sōko-ryū. The school of Japanese tea ceremony continues in its 16th generation today, with an unbroken bloodline to Ueda Sōko.   (en)
  • 上田 重安(うえだ しげやす)は、安土桃山時代の武将、大名。江戸時代前期の浅野家の家老。通称は左太郎、主水正。関ヶ原の後に剃髪して宗箇と名乗ったので、上田 宗箇(うえだ そうこ)の名でも知られる。 茶道を千利休ついで古田織部に学び、上田宗箇流の流祖となって、茶人、造園家としても業績を残した。また数々の戦で一番槍の功を立てた歴戦の武将でもあった。 (ja)
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  • Niwa Nagahide,Toyotomi Hideyoshi,Asano Nagamasa,Asano Nagaakira,Tokugawa Ieyasu,Tokugawa Hidetada
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  • 56022051 (xsd:integer)
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  • 1032163559 (xsd:integer)
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dbp:birthDate
  • 1563 (xsd:integer)
dbp:birthPlace
  • Hoshizaki, Owari Province (en)
dbp:caption
  • Ueda Sōko's battle armour (en)
dbp:deathDate
  • 1650-05-30 (xsd:date)
  • (en)
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dbp:laterwork
  • Founder of the Ueda Sōko-ryū (en)
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  • Associated tea masters: Furuta Oribe, Sen no Rikyū, Kobori Enshū, Hosokawa Sansai (en)
dbp:name
  • Ueda Sōko (en)
  • 上田宗箇 (en)
dbp:otherName
  • Satarō 佐太郎, Shigeyasu 重安, Chikuin 竹隠 (en)
dbp:placeofburial
  • Kushiyama, Ōno, Hatsukaichi, Hiroshima and Sangen-in, Daitoku-ji, Kyoto (en)
dbp:rank
  • Karō, Daimyō (en)
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  • 上田 重安(うえだ しげやす)は、安土桃山時代の武将、大名。江戸時代前期の浅野家の家老。通称は左太郎、主水正。関ヶ原の後に剃髪して宗箇と名乗ったので、上田 宗箇(うえだ そうこ)の名でも知られる。 茶道を千利休ついで古田織部に学び、上田宗箇流の流祖となって、茶人、造園家としても業績を残した。また数々の戦で一番槍の功を立てた歴戦の武将でもあった。 (ja)
  • Ueda Sōko (上田宗箇) (1563 – 30 May 1650) was a warlord who lived during the Momoyama and early Edo Periods. He is best known for founding the Ueda Sōko-ryū, a warrior class school of Japanese tea ceremony from Hiroshima. Ueda Sōko went by the name Satarō (佐太郎) in his younger days and later Shigeyasu (重安). He received his Zen practitioner's name of Chikuin (竹隠) by the 111th patriarch of Daitoku-ji, Shunoku Sōen. Today his death plaque is enshrined at the Sangen-in sub-temple of Daitoku-ji, beside that of his long time teacher in the Way of Tea, Furuta Oribe. Sōko was held in high esteem by Toyotomi Hideyoshi for military exploits and as a tea master. In the Battle of Sekigahara (1600), Sōko sided with Toyotomi's Western Army and was thus defeated. During the Siege of Osaka Summer Campaign (161 (en)
rdfs:label
  • 上田重安 (ja)
  • Ueda Sōko (en)
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  • Ueda Sōko (en)
  • 上田宗箇 (en)
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