. . "Soga Seikan"@en . "\u66FE\u6211 \u6E05\u5B98\uFF08\u305D\u304C \u305B\u3044\u304B\u3093\u30011592\u5E74\uFF08\u6587\u7984\u5143\u5E74) - \uFF1F\uFF09\u306F\u674E\u6C0F\u671D\u9BAE\u51FA\u8EAB\u3067\u3001\u5CA1\u85E9\u521D\u4EE3\u85E9\u4E3B\u4E2D\u5DDD\u79C0\u6210\u306E\u5BB6\u81E3\u3068\u3057\u3066\u4ED5\u3048\u305F\u4EBA\u7269\u3067\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "57322768"^^ . . . . "\u66FE\u6211 \u6E05\u5B98\uFF08\u305D\u304C \u305B\u3044\u304B\u3093\u30011592\u5E74\uFF08\u6587\u7984\u5143\u5E74) - \uFF1F\uFF09\u306F\u674E\u6C0F\u671D\u9BAE\u51FA\u8EAB\u3067\u3001\u5CA1\u85E9\u521D\u4EE3\u85E9\u4E3B\u4E2D\u5DDD\u79C0\u6210\u306E\u5BB6\u81E3\u3068\u3057\u3066\u4ED5\u3048\u305F\u4EBA\u7269\u3067\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . "\u66FE\u6211\u6E05\u5B98"@ja . "2079"^^ . "1085251516"^^ . . "Soga Seikan (1592-?) was a samurai from Joseon who served Nakagawa Hidenari, the first daimy\u014D of Oka as a retainer. He was born in 1592 in Joseon. Hidenari participated in the Imjin war. In 1597, he heard crying near his camp in Suwon, and his retainer found a child by the river. The child looked so friendly that Hidenari invited him to join them. A prisoner told them that the child was the son of \u66FE\u6E05\u5B98 (Zeng Qing Guan), commanding officer of Joseon who led 500 soldiers, but the child's name was still unknown. Hidenari pitied the child and decided to raise him in the camp, naming him Seikan (\u6E05\u5B98), using the same character of his father."@en . "Soga Seikan (1592-?) was a samurai from Joseon who served Nakagawa Hidenari, the first daimy\u014D of Oka as a retainer. He was born in 1592 in Joseon. Hidenari participated in the Imjin war. In 1597, he heard crying near his camp in Suwon, and his retainer found a child by the river. The child looked so friendly that Hidenari invited him to join them. A prisoner told them that the child was the son of \u66FE\u6E05\u5B98 (Zeng Qing Guan), commanding officer of Joseon who led 500 soldiers, but the child's name was still unknown. Hidenari pitied the child and decided to raise him in the camp, naming him Seikan (\u6E05\u5B98), using the same character of his father. The following year, Hidenari returned to Japan with Seikan, where he was permitted to reside in Hidenari's residence in Osaka for the next few years. In 1601, Seikan moved Hidenari's territory, Bungo province and became Hidenari's retainer. Seikan was given the surname Soga(\u66FE\u6211) which resembles his father's surname, \u66FE. Eventually, he became Hidenari's page and was given a salary. In 1608, he was married to the daughter of Yaishi Jinbei, former retainer of \u014Ctomo clan. The details of his birth and death are unknown."@en . . . . . . . . . .