. . . "Obata Kagenori"@en . "Obata Kagenori (\u5C0F\u5E61\u666F\u61B2) (1572-1663), also known as Obata Kanb\u0113 (\u5C0F\u5E61\u52D8\u5175\u885B), was a Confucian scholar and samurai retainer of the Takeda clan during Japan's Sengoku period. He is perhaps most well known for his completion of the K\u014Dy\u014D Gunkan, the chronicle of the Takeda clan's military campaigns begun by K\u014Dsaka Masanobu, and for founding the K\u014Dsh\u016B-ry\u016B Gungaku, a school for studying the arts of war. Kagenori was the third son of Obata Masamori, and fought under Tokugawa Ieyasu at the battle of Sekigahara in 1600, and at the siege of Osaka fifteen years later."@en . "Obata Kagenori (\u5C0F\u5E61\u666F\u61B2) (1572-1663), also known as Obata Kanb\u0113 (\u5C0F\u5E61\u52D8\u5175\u885B), was a Confucian scholar and samurai retainer of the Takeda clan during Japan's Sengoku period. He is perhaps most well known for his completion of the K\u014Dy\u014D Gunkan, the chronicle of the Takeda clan's military campaigns begun by K\u014Dsaka Masanobu, and for founding the K\u014Dsh\u016B-ry\u016B Gungaku, a school for studying the arts of war. Kagenori was the third son of Obata Masamori, and fought under Tokugawa Ieyasu at the battle of Sekigahara in 1600, and at the siege of Osaka fifteen years later."@en . . .