Matsumae Yoshihiro

[3] After Toyotomi Hideyoshi defeated the Hōjō at Odawara in 1590, and took measures to check the power of the great clans of the north, Yoshihiro travelled to Kyōto, where in the twelfth month of that year he enjoyed an audience with the kampaku at the Jurakudai palace.

[3] Reporting on the state of affairs in Ezo, Yoshiro declined a grant of five thousand koku, but had bestowed upon him Junior Fifth Court Rank, Lower Grade and the office of Minbu Taifu (民部大輔) or Senior Vice Minister in the Ministry of Popular Affairs, thus gaining independence from the Andō.

[3][1] Receiving from Hideyoshi also three gorgeous costumes and two hundred ryō of silver, he departed again for the north, reaching the Oshima Peninsula in the third month of 1591.

[1] Later that year, Yoshihiro sent troops to help suppress the Kunohe Rebellion, the arrows of the contingent of Ainu seeing mention in Mikawa Go-fudoki (ja) for their remarkable quality of dealing death even upon the lightly injured.

[1] In the eleventh month of the first year of Bunroku (1592), Yoshihiro travelled to Ōsaka, but Hideyoshi was at Hizen Nagoya, in relation to the invasion of Korea; reaching his camp in Kyūshū, as recorded in Shinra no Kiroku, on the second day of the new year Yoshihiro enjoyed another audience with Hideyoshi, where the two discussed Ezo and the invasion.