Torii Tadanori

Torii Tadanori
Lord of Takatō
In office
1663–1689
Preceded byTorii Tadaharu
Succeeded byNaitō Kiyokazu
Personal details
NationalityJapanese

Torii Tadanori (鳥居 忠則; 1646–1689) was a Japanese daimyō of the early Edo period who ruled the Takatō Domain in Shinano Province (modern-day Nagano Prefecture).[1]

History

Tadanori was the son of Torii Tadaharu, the previous lord. He succeeded to family headship upon his father's death; however, he continued his father's draconian rule of the Takatō domain.

Scandal and death

During the shogunate's investigation into a scandal involving Takatō retainer Takasaka Gonbei, Tadanori was ordered confined to Edo Castle; he committed suicide during his confinement.[1] The Takatō domain was confiscated from the Torii family; however, as the Torii family was a famed fudai family dating back to Torii Mototada, Tadanori's heir Tadateru was granted four districts in Noto Province, and made the lord of the Shimomura Domain.

References

  1. ^ a b "鳥居忠則". 日本人名大辞典+Plus (in Japanese) (Digital ed.). Kodansha. Retrieved 2024-11-16 – via Kotobank.