'Ōta Dōkan' (太田道灌) (
1432-
1486) was born as 'Ōta Sukenaga' (太田資長) into a
Japanese ''
daimyo'' family descending from
Minamoto no Yorimasa. He served as a vassal of the Ōgigayatsu branch of the
Uesugi family, and is reputed to have been an excellent tactician. However, he was killed after being accused of disloyalty during a period when the Uesugi family faced inner conflict. He is most well-known for having built, in
1457,
Edo Castle (now the
Imperial Palace). He took the name Dōkan, by which he is mainly known, the following year.
The castle was chosen as the home of
Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1590, and was used as the seat for the government. Every
October 1,
Tokyo celebrates its anniversary, in honor of the memory of the founder Ōta Dōkan.
Dōkan was also well-read in classical (
Heian period) literature and a skilled poet. Among the other monuments he built is the
Hirakawa Shrine, which is celebrated with a festival on
April 24-
25. The shrine, located on the Edo castle grounds, is dedicated to
Sugawara no Michizane, the ''
kami'' of poetry and scholarship.
Ōta Dōkan's
death poem is as follows:
| | ''Kakaru toki'' ''sakoso inochi no'' ''oshikarame'' ''kanete nakimi to'' ''omoishirazuba'' Ōta Dōkan | | Had I not known that I was dead already I would have mourned the loss of my life. (trans. Yoel Hoffmann) |
References
★ "Ōta Dōkan" (1985). ''Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan''. Tokyo: Kodansha Ltd.
★ Turnbull, Stephen (1998). ''The Samurai Sourcebook''. London: Cassell & Co.