Matsudaira Shungaku

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Matsudaira Shungaku, as seen in a photo in the 1942 reprint of the Tokugawa reiten roku
  • Titles: Echizen no kami
  • Other Names: 松平慶永 (Matsudaira Keiei, Matsudaira Yoshinaga)
  • Japanese: 松平春嶽 (Matsudaira Shungaku)

Matsudaira Shungaku was the last daimyô of Echizen han, and played a prominent role in Bakumatsu politics.

In 1862, Shungaku received a document containing "three emergency measures" from Kiyokawa Hachirô. He then formed the Rôshigumi, hiring a group of ronin to help guard Shogun Tokugawa Iemochi on a 1863 trip to Kyoto. In conjunction with these responsibilities, Shungaku was named seiji sôsaishoku, a high-ranking government oversight position.

In the last years of the Bakumatsu period, Shungaku, along with Yamauchi Yôdô, were among those who debated the possibility of a more democratic form of government, based on public opinion.

In 1870, Shungaku invited William Griffis to Japan, to teach physical sciences as an oyatoi gaikokujin.

In 1881, he helped compile the Tokugawa reiten roku, alongside Ikeda Mochimasa and Date Munenari.[1]

Shungaku's son Tokugawa Yoshichika was adopted into the Owari Tokugawa clan, and succeeded Tokugawa Yoshikatsu to become the head of that branch house.

References

  1. Tokugawa Reiten Roku 徳川禮典録, vol 1., Tokyo: Owari Tokugawa Reimeikai (1942), 1-2.