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Where did the Imperial Three House stems come from? Which three are the LPL Mizoya And why are they called Mizoya?

author:Strait Net

Recently, the Royal Three Houses have been on the hot search, and many people have discussed the most is the Royal Three Houses in the LPL League of Legends Professional League, the Royal Three Houses are actually a social term, so what is the Meaning of the Imperial Three Houses? Which three LPL royal three? Let's talk about it.

What does it mean to be a terrier

Mizoya, a social term from the Edo period in Japan, originally referred to the three branches of the Owari Tokugawa family, the Kishu Tokugawa family, and the Mito Tokugawa family that had the right to inherit the shogunate at that time, in addition to the Tokugawa family, and now the concept extends to Pokemon, voice actors, and even e-sports.

Now the term is mostly used to refer to the three most influential people or forces in a certain field. It is equivalent to the three giants and three big people in the Chinese.

Which three are the LPL Royal Three Houses

Recently, many people say that the Royal Three Houses refer to the EDG team, RNG team and WE team in the LPL League of Legends Professional League, these three teams are the old strong teams of the LPL, and these three teams will be basically seen in various Lol events. Therefore, it is called the LPL Imperial Three Houses.

By the way, today, I will give you a popularization of other "Royal Three Houses"

The Three Houses of the Publishing House: Shueisha, Kodansha, and Elementary School

The three royal families in the game console: Microsoft, Sony, and Nintendo

Voiced by the Three Family Fingers: Yukari Tamura, Nana Mizuki

Three special cameras: Kamen Rider series, Super Sentai series, and Ultraman series.

About the "Royal Three Houses" knowledge science

The word "Gosanjia" is the Tokugawa Mizoya. There are several different divisions:

There were three branches of the Tokugawa family that qualified to serve as shoguns' heirs: the Tokugawa clan (honji), the Owari Tokugawa clan (Owari domain, whose ancestor was Tokugawa Yoshinaga, the ninth son of Tokugawa Ieyasu), and the Tokugawa clan (Wakayama domain, whose ancestor was Tokugawa Raisan, the tenth son of Tokugawa Ieyasu)

Three families who served as Ōnayan: Owari Tokugawa clan, Kishu Tokugawa clan, and Suruga Tokugawa clan (Tokugawa Tadaocho, third son of the second shogun Tokugawa Hidetada, who later died without heirs)

The Tokugawa Imperial Family of the middle and late Edo shogunate: the Owari Tokugawa family, the Kishu Tokugawa family, and the Mito Tokugawa family. The ancestor of the Mito Tokugawa family was Tokugawa Raijo, the eleventh son of Tokugawa Ieyasu. However, according to Tokugawa Ieyasu's regulations, only the first two were qualified to serve as shoguns, and the Mito Tokugawa family's duty was to assist the shogunate's "deputy shoguns" and were qualified to propose shogun candidates, but they could not directly serve as shoguns. Although the last shogun, Tokugawa Keiki, came from the Mito Tokugawa family, he was qualified to serve as a shogun because of the Hitotsubashi family, who had passed on to the "Imperial Sanqing". It is precisely because of this auxiliary role that the head of the Mito Tokugawa family lived in Edo for a long time, and was the only one in the "Gosan family" who did not need to attend the work. Zhu Shunshui, a Ming dynasty widow who defected to towkawa's Kwangguni Gate, also lived in Nippori near Edo Castle, not Mito Castle.

The eighth shogun of the Edo shogunate, Tokugawa Yoshimune, was succeeded by the Tokugawa clan from Kishu to the throne when the Clan was extinct. He added three branches that qualified him as shoguns, called the "Gosankei", namely the Ta'an family (Tokugawa Munetake, the second son of Tokugawa Yoshimune), the Ichibashi family (Tokugawa Yoshimune's fourth son, Tokugawa Muneyoshi), and the Shimizu family (Tokugawa Shigeyoshi, the second son of Tokugawa Ieyasu, tokugawa Yoshimune), which were named after the three families' residences, Ta'anmon, Hitotsubashi Gate, and Kiyomizu Gate.

After the end of the shogunate era, the term "Imperial Three Houses" was retained in Japanese, describing the three most bullish in a certain field, somewhat similar to the Chinese meaning of "Three Giants". Similar words in Japanese include "double wall", "three pillars", "three feathered birds", "four kings", "five regents", "six gods", "seven heroes", "ten jie" and so on.

In the old Japanese Navy's Eighty-Eight Fleet plan, two Nagato-class battleships (Nagato and Mutsu) were followed by two Kaga-class battleships (Kaga and Tosa), followed by four Kii-class battleships, Kii, Owari, Suruga, and Omi, three of which were named after the Tokugawa clan domain (Kishu is Kii's nickname).

That's all there is to it all, so stay tuned for more information.

Source: Babao.com