Seishin-ni

Summary

Seishin-ni (清心尼, 1585/1586 – June 1644), born as Hachinohe Neneko (八戸 子子子) or Nene (祢々), Mego (女古,女子)[1] was a Japanese noble woman from the Sengoku period and early Edo period. She became the 21st leader of the Hachinohe clan after the death of her husband, Hachinohe Naomasa, in 1614.[2][3]

Life edit

Hachinohe Neneko was born in 1585 or 1586, she was the daughter of the 19th head of Hachinohe clan, Hachinohe Naoe, and her mother was Lady Chiyoko (Nanbu Nobunao's daughter), a noble lady of the powerful Nanbu clan. In 1595, Naoe died early, and at the age of 10, Neneko married Hachinohe Naomasa, who was one year younger.

In June 1614, months before the Siege of Osaka began, Naomasa died in Takada, Echigo Province, and their son Hisamatsu died shortly afterwards, so Neneko became the head of the family. This was due to the order of Nanbu Toshinao, the lord of the Nanbu clan. Toshinao advised her to remarry, but she refused, shaved her hair, became a nun, and changed her name to Seishin-ni. Toshinao further recommended adoption with the Nanbu hanshi, but Seishin-ni also refused.[3]

In 1620, the Nitta clan, a family related to the Hachinohe clan, handed over Naoyoshi to marry their second daughter, succeeding the clan's leadership. In 1627, Toshinao transferred Naoyoshi from Nejo to Tono, Seishin-ni followed. As Naoyoshi was primarily in Morioka as the Southern Clan's main retainer, Seishin-ni actually ruled Tono.

Seishin-ni died at Yokota Castle in June 1644.

In popular culture edit

Novels edit

  • "Katadzuno!" (2014) by Kyoko Nakajima
  • "Seishin-ni" (2017) by Jikoku Matsuda Manga
  • "Katadzuno!" (2019) by Tomoko Sato, based on the original work by Kyoko Nakajima.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 柳谷 慶子 (2007). 近世の女性相続と介護. 吉川弘文館. p. 34. ISBN 9784642034203.
  2. ^ "清心尼公の墓を参詣して…". 奥羽*温故知新 (in Japanese).
  3. ^ a b cardiacsurgery. "おんな城主ものがたり その2 清心尼". Art & Bell by Tora (in Japanese).