Hostage, survivor, architect — tracing the iron patience, cold strategy, and inexorable rise of the man who simply outlasted them all
Ieyasu's patience had one final test left: the boy Hideyoshi had begged him to protect, and the mother who would burn the castle down around them both rather than watch him kneel. Hideyori and Yodo-dono weren't just obstacles to the peace Ieyasu had spent a lifetime building — they were the last people alive who remembered what he'd promised, and what he still owed.
If you'd like to walk the ground where that promise finally broke, A Lord, a Concubine, and a Shogun's Lie follows that story across the very ground where it unfolded.
A resource from Osaka Castle Walks with Edward