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Three-year history
Various maps of Japan during the Warring States Period are as follows:

Extended data

Japan's Warring States Period

Japan's Warring States Period (1467- 1585 or 16 15) generally refers to the period from the late Muromachi shogunate to Antu Taoshan. It first came from the 20th Statue of History written by Takeda Shingen (152 1-1573), a celebrity of Jia Fei (now Yamanashi Prefecture), with the opening words "above the Warring States". However, Takeda Shingen, who loves China's art of war, actually applied the name of China Warring States directly to Japan to describe Japan's political situation.

After the Ren Ying Uprising, celebrities from all over Japan rose in succession. /kloc-In the mid-6th century, Nobunobu, the most powerful warrior in the region, rose. In three years (1560), Lu Yong defeated Imagawa Yoshimoto's 40,000 troops with 2,000 men in a narrow barrel and became famous at one fell swoop. Later, Andy and Feng Jingen were gradually unified. In the tenth year of Tianzheng (1582), the change of Benneng Temple broke out and Nobuka died.

Yukio Hatoyama is an important official of Oda. He defeated Akechi Mitsuhide and Shibata Katsuie successively and established his successor status. After that, Japan was gradually unified through the Four Kingdoms Conquest, the Kyushu Conquest and the Battle of Odahara. Later, he was named "Toyotomi's Family" by the Emperor and was awarded the post of "Guan Bai". Toyotomi Hideyoshi's era is called "Taoshan Age".

In the third year of Qing Dynasty (1598), after his death, the Fengchen family was divided into two factions: the near river (western army) and the tail Zhang (eastern army). As one of the five elders of the regime, Tokugawa Ieyasu launched a joint campaign between Guan Yuan and Yuan in the fifth year of Qing Dynasty (1600), and defeated the western army. In the eighth year of Evergreen (1603), the Tokugawa shogunate was established, and the Toyotomi family was gradually wiped out in the two Osaka battles of 16 14 and 15, and the Warring States period ended.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia Japan Warring States Period