Motonari Mōri (毛利 元就, Mōri Motonari) is the 52nd clan head of the Mōri family. His wife is Lady Myōkyū from the Kikkawa Clan, and they're Takakage Kobayakawa, Motoharu Kikkawa and Takamoto Mōri's biological parents, and Hiroie Kikkawa, Terumoto Mōri and Hidemoto Mōri's grandparents. Known as a studious and wise ruler, he is best known for defending his clan from destruction and emerging as a powerful lord within western Japan. After his death, folklore famously ties Motonari to a legendary tale regarding his sons and three arrows, saying that three together are much harder to break than one alone.
His Samurai Warriors counterpart reached seventh place in Gamecity's Sengoku Musou 3: Empires character popularity poll. According to the Sengoku Musou Seiyuu Ougi 2012 Aki questionnaire, he placed seventh for the character fans would want as a lover. For the Samurai Warriors 4 poll, he placed eleventh. In the first character popularity poll for Sengoku Musou Shoot, he was voted to twelfth place with players. This personage has a character song titled Taiga Toutou.
His Nobunaga's Ambition counterpart is fourteenth place in Gamecity's character popularity ranking for 2015. The Nobunaga no Yabou 201X poll for 4-star officers puts him in twenty-fourth place. He placed second in the Nobunaga no Yabou Taishi poll for most favorite father; fans voted him tenth for the best leader poll.
| Mōri clan 毛利氏 | |
|---|---|
Mōri clan (mon) | |
| Home province | Sagami Aki |
| Parent house | |
| Titles | various |
| Founder | Mōri Suemitsu (毛利季光) |
| Final ruler | Mōri Takachika (毛利敬親) |
| Current head | Mōri Motohide (毛利元栄) |
| Founding year | 13th century (first half) |
| Dissolution | still extant |
| Ruled until | 1868, after the Boshin War and during the (Meiji Restoration), Mōri Takachika is the first daimyō to hand over his lands to Emperor Meiji. |
The Mōri clan (毛利氏, Mōri-shi; Japanese pronunciation: [moꜜː.ɾʲi, moː.ɾʲiꜜ.ɕi][1]) was a Japanese samurai clan descended from Ōe no Hiromoto. Ōe no Hiromoto was descended from the Fujiwara clan. The family's most illustrious member, Mōri Motonari, greatly expanded the clan's power in Aki Province. During the Edo period his descendants became daimyō of the Chōshū Domain under the Tokugawa shogunate. After the Meiji Restoration with the abolition of the han system and daimyō, the Mōri clan became part of the new nobility.[2]
Origins

LIVEMORI MOTONARI
SAMURAI WISDOM
In one generation, Mori Motonari rose from a minor lord to ruler of most of western Japan despite bitter betrayal. His wisdom still echoes today.
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