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Izushi han was a 58,000 ''[[koku]]'' [[han|domain]] in [[Tajima province]], ruled by the ''tozama [[daimyo|daimyô]]'' of the [[Sengoku clan]].
 
Izushi han was a 58,000 ''[[koku]]'' [[han|domain]] in [[Tajima province]], ruled by the ''tozama [[daimyo|daimyô]]'' of the [[Sengoku clan]].
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The Sengoku were a "castle-holding" (''shiro-nushi'' or ''shiro-mochi'') ''daimyô'' family, among the upper ranks of those assigned to the ''yanagi-no-ma'' of [[Edo castle]]. Their upper mansion (''[[daimyo yashiki|kami yashiki]]'') in [[Edo]] was located in the Nishinokubo neighborhood (today, [[Minato-ku]], Kamiyachô).
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The Sengoku were a "castle-holding" (''shiro-nushi'' or ''shiro-mochi'') ''daimyô'' family, the earliest to be assigned to the ''yanagi-no-ma'' of [[Edo castle]] (and thus boasting a certain elite status among that group of ''daimyô''). Their upper mansion (''[[daimyo yashiki|kami yashiki]]'') in [[Edo]] was located in the Nishinokubo neighborhood (today, [[Minato-ku]], Kamiyachô).
    
As the result of an internal [[O-Ie Sodo|succession dispute]], the domain's ''[[kokudaka]]'' was reduced in [[1835]] by 28,000 ''koku'', such that through the end of the [[Edo period]], the domain's ''kokudaka'' was only 30,000 ''koku''. The ''daimyô'' at that time was [[Sengoku Hisatoshi|Sengoku Sanuki-no-kami Hisatoshi]].
 
As the result of an internal [[O-Ie Sodo|succession dispute]], the domain's ''[[kokudaka]]'' was reduced in [[1835]] by 28,000 ''koku'', such that through the end of the [[Edo period]], the domain's ''kokudaka'' was only 30,000 ''koku''. The ''daimyô'' at that time was [[Sengoku Hisatoshi|Sengoku Sanuki-no-kami Hisatoshi]].
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