or is a Japanese family name. Throughout the course of the Sengoku period (16th century) of Japan, the famed Takeda clan of Kai Province had many descendant branch families.
People
- , Japanese rower
- , retired Japanese game designer and executive
- , Japanese botanist
- , Japanese actress
- , Japanese voice actress
- , Japanese professional wrestler and mixed martial artist
- , Japanese speed skater
- , Japanese figure skater
- , Japanese sport wrestler
- , Japanese swimmer
- Shinzaburo Takeda, Mexican artist
- , Japanese swimmer
- , reviver of DaitÃ
Â-ryÃ
« aiki-jÃ
«jutsu
- Takeda-no-miya, one of the former Ã
Âke, or cadet branches of the Japanese imperial house established during the Meiji period by a scion of the Fushimi-no-miya. Not related to the samurai family.
- Takeda clan, the family of Takeda Shingen, and a relatively important and powerful one therefore, in Japan's Sengoku period
- Takeda Nobutora â daimyÃ
Â, Shingen's father
- Takeda Shingen â one of the most famous daimyÃ
Âs in Japanese history
- Takeda Nobushige â Shingen's younger brother, held their father's favour to be heir of the clan, continued to support his older brother throughout his life, he also wrote the KyÃ
«jÃ
«kyÃ
« Kakun, a set of 99 short rules for Takeda house members
- Takeda Nobukado â brother and adviser to Shingen
- Takeda Katsuyori â Shingen's son, Katsuyori commanded his father's armies after his death, and saw the fall of the Takeda family
- Takeda Yoshinobu â son and initial heir, later executed and succeeded by Katsuyori
- , Japanese speed skater
- , Japanese retired equestrian, former member of the IOC
- , Japanese rower
- scholar of Japanese Literature
Fictional characters
See also
References