Difference between revisions of "Kariya han"

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(Created page with "*''Castle: Kariya castle'' *''Lords: Matsudaira clan, Doi clan'' *''Kokudaka: 23,000 koku'' *''Japanese'': 刈谷藩 ''(Kariya han)'' Kariya han was an [[Edo peri...")
 
 
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*''Japanese'': 刈谷藩 ''(Kariya han)''
 
*''Japanese'': 刈谷藩 ''(Kariya han)''
  
Kariya han was an [[Edo period]] [[han|domain]] located in [[Mikawa province]]. A small domain with a ''[[kokudaka]]'' of 23,000 ''[[koku]'', it was ruled by a number of different clans over the course of the 1600s-1740s; from the 1740s until the end of the Edo period, the domain was ruled by the [[Doi clan]].<ref>The Doi, incidentally, were associated with the Kari-no-ma ("Hall of Geese") at [[Edo castle#Omote|Edo castle]].</ref>
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Kariya han was an [[Edo period]] [[han|domain]] located in [[Mikawa province]]. A small domain with a ''[[kokudaka]]'' of 23,000 ''[[koku]]'', it was ruled by a number of different clans over the course of the 1600s-1740s; from the 1740s until the end of the Edo period, the domain was ruled by the [[Doi clan]].<ref>The Doi, incidentally, were associated with the Kari-no-ma ("Hall of Geese") at [[Edo castle#Omote|Edo castle]].</ref>
  
 
Among the domain's many lords was, for a brief time in [[1649]] to [[1651]], [[Matsudaira Sadamasa]], a nephew of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]. After protesting against policies enacted in the aftermath of [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu|Tokugawa Iemitsu's]] death in 1651, Sadamasa was declared by the shogunate unfit for rule, and was [[attainder]]ed.
 
Among the domain's many lords was, for a brief time in [[1649]] to [[1651]], [[Matsudaira Sadamasa]], a nephew of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]. After protesting against policies enacted in the aftermath of [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu|Tokugawa Iemitsu's]] death in 1651, Sadamasa was declared by the shogunate unfit for rule, and was [[attainder]]ed.

Latest revision as of 01:30, 28 February 2017

Kariya han was an Edo period domain located in Mikawa province. A small domain with a kokudaka of 23,000 koku, it was ruled by a number of different clans over the course of the 1600s-1740s; from the 1740s until the end of the Edo period, the domain was ruled by the Doi clan.[1]

Among the domain's many lords was, for a brief time in 1649 to 1651, Matsudaira Sadamasa, a nephew of Tokugawa Ieyasu. After protesting against policies enacted in the aftermath of Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu's death in 1651, Sadamasa was declared by the shogunate unfit for rule, and was attaindered.

References

  • Asao Naohiro (ed.), Fudai daimyô Ii ke no girei, Hikone Castle Museum (2004), 330.
  1. The Doi, incidentally, were associated with the Kari-no-ma ("Hall of Geese") at Edo castle.