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{{Cleanup|reason=Article contains significant spelling, grammatical, formatting, and stylistic errors throughout.|date=June 2024}}
{{Short description|Samurai of the Sengoku era; major samurai ally of the Tokugawa clan}}
{{family name hatnote|Ōkubo|lang=Japanese}}
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|commands = [[Futamata Castle]], [[Komoro Castle]]<br>[[Odawara Castle]]
| allegiance = [[File:Okubo mon.jpg|15px]] [[Okubo clan]]<br>[[File:Tokugawa family crest.svg|15px]] [[Tokugawa clan]]
|battles = [[Battle of Azukizaka (1564)]]<br>[[Battle of Mikatagahara]] (1573)<br>[[Battle of Nagashino]] (1575)<br>[[Battle of Komaki-Nagakute]] (1584)<br>[[Siege of Odawara (1590)]]
}}
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== Biography ==
Ōkubo Tadayo was the eldest son of Ōkubo Tadakazu, a hereditary retainer of the [[Tokugawa clan]]. He was born in what is now part of the city of [[Okazaki, Aichi|Okazaki]] in [[Mikawa Province]]. Tadayo's
In 1574, Ōga Yashirō, a minor official of Tokugawa clan, colluded with the Takeda clan to overthrow Tokugawa Ieyasu. On the order of the Okazaki magistrate, Ōoka Tadasuke, Tadayo immediately caught Yashirō and paraded him around [[Hamamatsu Castle]], before Tadayo execute Yashirō brutally by mutilating him alive with a saw, while Tadayo crucified the wife and children of Yashirō.<ref name="OgaYashiro; Watanabe Daimon1">{{cite web |author1=Watanabe Daimon |title=
Tadayo accompanied Tokugawa Ieyasu in all of his campaigns, including in the [[Battle of Nagashino]] (1575).<ref name="Steve">{{cite book|last1=Turnbull|first1=Stephen|title=The Samurai|date=1977|publisher=Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc.|location=New York|isbn=9780026205405|pages=156–160}}</ref>
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