175:, was his elder half-sister, and thus Tadamitsu was Emperor Meiji's uncle. Emperor Meiji was raised in the Nakayama household until he was five years old. Tadamitsu, who was 7 years older, spent much time with the young prince, and after the prince returned to the Imperial Court, Tadamitsu served as his attendant during studies and games. The Nakamura clan was poor and did not have the money to construct a proper birth house when the prince was born, and was forced to borrow a large sum of money. On entering the Imperial Court, Tadamitsu discovered that it was equally impoverished, and it is believed that this ignited his hatred of the
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for an autopsy. The body made it as far as
Shimonoseki, where it was stolen by sympathizers and buried at the present location. The current gravestone was erected in October 1934 and gives his name as "Fujiwara Tadamitsu" as the Nakamura clan was a cadet branch of the
276:, five assassins from the Kyōjun faction of the Chōshū clan caught up with him and killed him. He was age 19 and six months. Chofū Domain made an official announcement that he died ten days after a brief illness in which medicines failed to work.
279:
Nakayama
Tadamitsu's grave is located within the precincts of Nakayama Jinja in what is now the city of Shimonoseki. He was initially buried at the place of the assassination, but the Tokugawa shogunate ordered that he be exhumed and taken to
268:, a sub-domain of Chōshū and together with two servants moved constantly incognito around the domain from village to village, sheltering in temples and in the mountains. In 1864, following the
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His wife Tomi gave birth to a daughter, Nakayama Naka, after
Tadamitsu's death. She married into the Saga family, which had close ties to the Nakayama. Her granddaughter was
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were eventually cornered and all but annihilated, but
Tadamitsu managed to escape and made his was via
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with the aim of assassinating foreigners and attacking local offices of the
Tokugawa shogunate in the
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and changed his name to "Mōri
Shunsai". Under the command of Kusaka Genzui, he participated in the
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220:, learning about the teachings and activities of the
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228:, a terrorist paramilitary organization based in
153:. His mother, Matsura Aiko was the daughter of
128:'s chamberlain and is noted as the captain of
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366:(国指定史跡事典) National Historic Site Encyclopedia
8:
293:in 1941. It is about a ten-minute walk from
216:. Later that year, he met with retainers of
264:back to Chōshū. Tadamitsu was entrusted to
185:movement. He had a close relationship with
395:(in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs
144:Nakayama Tadamitsu was the seventh son of
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364:Isomura, Yukio; Sakai, Hideya (2012).
42:Nakayama Tadayasu in 1879 picture book
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200:At the age of 19, he secretly left
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110:, 18 May 1845 – 13 December 1864)
1:
212:against foreign ships in the
124:Japan. He served briefly as
16:Japanese nobleman (1845–1864)
349:The Emperors of Modern Japan
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319:, the last monarch of the
315:, the younger brother of
311:, who married in 1937 to
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456:People murdered in Japan
167:and a famous swordsman.
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331:between 1932 and 1945.
274:First Chōshū expedition
291:National Historic Site
179:and advocation of the
171:'s biological mother,
132:. He was the uncle of
81:Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi
466:Deified Japanese men
210:Shimonoseki campaign
461:People of Bakumatsu
327:and the emperor of
254:Tenchūgumi incident
451:Japanese courtiers
347:Ben-Ami Shillony,
177:Tokugawa shogunate
446:People from Kyoto
151:Nakayama Tadayasu
101:Nakayama Tadayasu
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73:December 13, 1864
23:Nakayama Tadayasu
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122:Bakumatsu period
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270:Kinmon incident
234:Yamato Province
155:Matsura Kiyoshi
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397:. Retrieved
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321:Qing dynasty
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195:Maki Yasuomi
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147:Gon Dainagon
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75:(1864-12-13)
58:May 18, 1845
426:1864 deaths
421:1845 births
258:Tenchū-gumi
226:Tenchū-gumi
222:Mito school
218:Mito Domain
130:Tenchū-gumi
89:Nationality
415:Categories
399:August 20,
252:. In the
250:Kii Domain
54:1845-05-18
329:Manchukuo
309:Hiro Saga
282:Hiroshima
182:Sonnō jōi
140:Biography
272:and the
157:, ninth
118:courtier
114:nobleman
93:Japanese
393:"中山忠光墓"
368:. 学生社.
299:JR West
297:on the
120:during
83:, Japan
64:, Japan
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256:, the
160:daimyō
112:was a
335:Notes
325:China
313:Pujie
262:Osaka
242:Kyoto
202:Kyoto
62:Kyoto
436:Kuge
401:2021
370:ISBN
317:Puyi
248:and
230:Gojō
204:for
193:and
116:and
107:中山忠光
70:Died
48:Born
30:中山忠光
323:of
163:of
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356:^
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232:,
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52:(
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