In 1600, Tamenobu received the courtesy title of
Ukyo-no-daifu. With his third son,
Tsugaru Nobuhira, he participated in the
Battle of Sekigahara as part of the Eastern Army under
Tokugawa Ieyasu. His eldest son, Tsugaru Nobutake, was serving
Toyotomi Hideyori at the time as a page in
Osaka Castle. So, the situation of the Tsugaru clan was similar to that of the
Sanada clan in that it was divided between the two armies. After the battle, he took in the orphaned children of Ishida Mitsunari and provided them shelter in Tsugaru. He later married Nobuhira to Mitsunari's daughter. His reward for his efforts at the Battle of Sekigahara were remarkably low - only an additional 2000
koku in
Kozuke Province, which brought his
kokudaka to
47,000 koku. Tamenobu also feared a rebellion within his domains during his absence and had the suspected leader, Morioka Nobumoto, put to death before his departure. The rebellion occurred anyway, and the rebels briefly occupied Horikoshi Castle. After receiving word of the Western Army's defeat, they surrendered without a fight. Afterwards, Tamenobu decided to relocate his seat to a location called Takaoka, sandwiched between the
Iwaki River and the Tabuchi River. Here, he began work on a new castle on a massive scale. The new castle was
Hirosaki Castle. In 1607, Tamenobu received word that his eldest son, Nobutatsu, was ill in
Kyoto and set out from Hirosaki to visit him. However, Nobutake died in October, before Tamenobu arrived, and Tamenobu himself died in Kyoto in January the next year at the age of 58. His grave is at the Tsugaru clan temple of Kakushū-ji in Hirosaki. As Tamenobu's second son, Nobukata, had died in 1597, the title went to his third son, Nobuhira. This immediately resulted in an
O-Ie Sōdō, as many retainers felt that Nobutake's son was the legitimate heir. However, the Tokugawa shogunate intervened and proclaimed Nobuhira as the next
daimyō. ==References==