Ōkubo Tadasuke
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In this Japanese name, the surname is Ōkubo.
Ōkubo Tadasuke (大久保 忠佐, 1537 – 9 November 1613) was a Japanese daimyō of the Sengoku period and early Edo period. He was the head of Numazu Domain in Suruga Province.[1]
In 1572, He participate in the battle of Hitokotosaka along with Honda Tadakatsu against Takeda clan forces.[2]
Tadasuke was established at Numazu in 1601.
Jōzan Yuasa, a samurai retainer of Okayama clan and confucian scholar who authored many anecdotes during Edo period, has recorded that Tadasuke once boasted he only ever received 13 wounds in battle during his lifetime as soldier.[3]
When he died in 1613, he left no heir; and the domain reverted to the Tokugawa shogunate.[1]