Katagiri Katsumoto
Katagiri Katsumoto was a Japanese warlord of Ibaraki, in the Azuchi–Momoyama period through early Edo period.
In his youth he was famed as one of the Seven Spears of Shizugatake, during the Battle of Shizugatake in May 1583.
Biography
Katsumoto hailed from an ancient samurai clan with a long and distinguished history. In the early Heian period, Katagiri clan served the Minamoto family, traditional head of the samurai that supplied early shōguns and their government, and ruled the southernmost part of Shinano region for nearly 500 years.Despite his lineage and the promising start at Battle of Shizugatake, Katsumoto's rise under Toyotomi Hideyoshi was relatively slow compared to his fellow "seven spears", which included Katō Kiyomasa and Fukushima Masanori. Katsumoto was more of a court samurai than a warrior; Katsumoto was kept in the Osaka region, the capital of Japan de facto under the Toyotomi family, and his holdings were in Ibaraki area in the north..
Following Hideyoshi's death in 1598, Katsumoto was appointed the chamberlain of the Toyotomi household. After the Sekigahara campaign in 1600, he was with Toyotomi Hideyori, the only son and heir of Hideyoshi, Katsumoto sought to negotiate a compromise with Ieyasu, Toyotomi clan lost most of his territory which was under management of a 'western daimyō', and Hideyori was degraded to an ordinary daimyō, not a ruler of Japan.
However in 1614, Yodo-dono, mother of young Hideyori, was hopelessly out of touch with the new Tokugawa ruler. Yodo-dono grew increasingly suspicious of Katsumoto's loyalty, and finally banished Katsumoto from Osaka castle which directly resulted in the Siege of Osaka by Ieyasu's 200,000-strong army. The following summer, in 1615, the Toyotomi family was annihilated, Yodo-dono and Hideyori committed suicide within the burning castle.