Akechi Mitsuhide (1528–1582) and Akechi Hidemitsu (1536–1582) were both daimyos in the Sengoku period. The second is Owada Tetsuo's Akechi Mitsuhide to Hidemitsu: Toki wa ima Ame ga shitashiru Satsuki kana (2019). It explains why the daimyo Hōjō family perished, even after five generations, and illuminates the role of the daimyo during the Sengoku era. The first biographical introduction to Hōjō Ujimasa's life story, this book details his participation in historical events and the influence of these events on his career choices. During his reign, the territorial expansion of the Hōjō family reached its peak. First, Kuroda Motoki's Hōjō Ujimasa: Kenkon wo seppa shi Taikyo ni kaesu (2018) is a biography of Hōjō Ujimasa (1539–1590), a daimyo (territorial lord) of the Sengoku period. I will single out several biographies related to this period. The drive to rediscover and retell the history of the Sengoku period through life stories has provided a directional guide for the biography market over the past two years. The period was initiated by the Ōnin War (1467–1477), which led to the collapse of the Japanese feudal system under the Ashikaga Shogunate, and it ended when the system was reestablished under the Tokugawa shogun by Tokugawa Ieyasu. Since Goza Yūichi's 2016 The Ōnin War became an unexpected bestseller, with annual sales reaching 280,000 copies, more and more readers are becoming interested in the history of the Sengoku (Warring States) period (1467–1600), a time of social upheavals, political intrigues, and incessant military conflicts. This trending interest in Japanese history has extended to earlier periods as well. As far away as the UK, academic communities involved in Japan Studies held conferences on the enduring significance of the Meiji Restoration. To mark the anniversary of the Meiji Restoration, the major media outlets raised a variety of related topics for public discussion. Retelling the History of the Sengoku Period
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