In 1597, upon the direction of
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, she married
Hosokawa Tadataka, the eldest son and heir of
Hosokawa Tadaoki, the first head of the Kokura domain in Buzen Province. Chiyo parents were close friends with Hideyoshi, so Maeda Toshiie was tasked with acting as one of the regents after Hideyoshi's death. Unfortunately, when Hideyoshi died, Toshiie also died some time later, so Japan, which had been unified under the Toyotomi clan, split into two factions, causing civil war again. The two factions were split between the Western army led by
Ishida Mitsunari and the Eastern army led by
Tokugawa Ieyasu, the struggle between these two army became known as the
Sekigahara Campaign.
Battle of Sekigahara The Western army was made up of Toyotomi clan loyalists, while the Eastern army was made up of Ieyasu's supporters. The Maeda clan was divided between both armies, Chiyo, her husband Tadakata and her brother
Maeda Toshinaga were part of the Western army, while
Maeda Toshimasa (1578) (Chiyo's brother) and Gohime (Chiyo's sister) who was
Ukita Hideie's wife were part of the Western. Chiyo had fled from the Hosokawa mansion to the Enemy clan's residence, this act harmed the image of the Hosokawa family, whereupon she was expelled and returned to the Maeda family. Her husband, Tadataka, defended Chiyo so he was also expelled from the Hosokawa family and attempted to rely upon the Maeda family but the Maeda family did not offer protection to the couple so they separated. Nevertheless, according to historical records, from 1605 to 1609, in Kyōto, Chiyo bore four daughters with Tadataka including Toku, Kichi, Fuku, and Man
Later life In 1605, she remarried
Murai Nagatsugu, a leader of the Eight Families of Kaga and elder of the Murai family of the Kaga domain with a fief of 17,000
koku. After her marriage, she did not bear a child with Nagatsugu but adopted Nagamitsu (later called Nagaie, the fourth son of Oda Nagataka). In 1613, after the death of Nagatsugu, she underwent the rites of tonsure and adopted the name of Shunkōin. She then engaged in the rebuilding of the Kumakabuto Shrine in Noto Province. In 1641, Shunkōin died in Kanazawa at the age of sixty-two. Her grave is on Mount Noda. Maeda Chiyo was the last child of Maeda Matsu and was the most cherished among her children. Many letters remain that were written by Matsu to Chiyo kept at the Tamagawa Municipal Library in Kanazawa and the Museum of the Maeda Tosa-no-kami Family. == References ==