How to use in-sentence of “daimyo”:
– The Ashikaga shogunate and some daimyo in many regions of Japan fought in this war.
– In the Edo period, the daimyo of Fukui Domain lived at Fukui.
– The first daimyo were called the.
– During the Edo period and early Meiji period, the Satake clan were daimyo in the area.
– He was adoptionadopted by the daimyo of Yonezawa, Uesugi Shigesada.

Example sentences of “daimyo”:
- Sendai was the castle town of the daimyo Date Masamune.
- In 1855, Gengo traveled to Edo and studied Rangaku with daimyo of the Sakura Domain, Guntaro Kimura.
- His his father-in-law, the daimyo of Owari province, told him he should resign as daimyo instead of this.
– Sendai was the castle town of the daimyo Date Masamune.
– In 1855, Gengo traveled to Edo and studied Rangaku with daimyo of the Sakura Domain, Guntaro Kimura.
– His his father-in-law, the daimyo of Owari province, told him he should resign as daimyo instead of this.
– This is how Uesugi came to be daimyo of Yonezawa.
– Three important and powerful daimyo were Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu.
– Tanuma was also a daimyo of the Sagara han.
– During the Edo period and early Meiji period, the Uesugi clan were daimyo in the area.
– During the Edo period and early Meiji period, the Date clan were daimyo in the area.
– Date was the daimyo of Sendai.
– He was the second son of a daimyo of the Akizuki clan.
– While many daimyo obeyed this order and rejected Catholicism, Justo proclaimed that he would maintain his religion and rather give up his land and property.
– But in 1581, one of the three daimyo who united Japan – Oda Nobunaga attacked ninja from Iga province.
– Parts of Shimotsuke were held by a several daimyo during the Sengoku period.
– The site of castle of the Kubota Castle built by Satake, a daimyo from Hitachi.
– Oda is a descendant of Oda Nobunaga who was an important daimyo during Japan’s Sengoku period.
– Rival groups of daimyo fought for military supremacy.
– In the Kamakura period, Hōjō Tokimasa was made daimyo of Ōmi in 1200.
