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| *''Japanese'': 松江藩 (Matsue-han) | | *''Japanese'': 松江藩 (Matsue-han) |
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− | Matsue han, based at [[Matsue castle]], ruled Shimane District in [[Izumo province]]. It was originally a ''tozama'' domain ruled by the [[Horio clan|Horio]] and [[Kyogoku clan|Kyôgoku clans]], and then became a ''shinpan'' domain when the [[Matsudaira clan (Echizen)|Echizen Matsudaira clan]] became the lords of Matsue, from the 1630s onwards. | + | Matsue han, based at [[Matsue castle]], ruled Shimane District in [[Izumo province]]. It was originally a ''tozama'' domain ruled by the [[Horio clan|Horio]] and [[Kyogoku clan|Kyôgoku clans]], and then became a ''shinpan'' domain when the [[Matsudaira clan (Echizen)|Echizen Matsudaira clan]] became the lords of Matsue, from the 1630s onwards. Along with [[Fukui han]], also ruled by the Echizen Matsudaira, Matsue was one of two ''shinpan'' domains of ''[[kunimochi]]'' status.<ref>[[Mark Ravina]], ''Land and Lordship in Early Modern Japan'', Stanford University Press (1999), 19.</ref> |
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| Following the [[battle of Sekigahara]], [[Horio Tadauji]] was granted Izumo and [[Oki province]]s, with a ''[[kokudaka]]'' of 240,000 ''[[koku]]''. He and his father [[Horio Yoshiharu]] based themselves at Matsue castle beginning in [[1611]], but after their successor [[Horio Tadaharu]] died without heirs, they lost control of the domain. [[Kyogoku Tadataka|Kyôgoku Tadataka]], who simultaneously oversaw the territory associated with the [[Iwami Ginzan]] silver mine<!--石見銀山の大森代官所支配-->, then became lord of Matsue in [[1634]], but he too died without an heir. As a result, in [[1638]], [[Matsudaira Naomasa]] was reassigned from [[Matsumoto han]] in [[Shinano province]], and became lord of Matsue with a ''kokudaka'' of 186,000 ''koku''. His descendants would remain the lords of Matsue for the remainder of the [[Edo period]], until the [[abolition of the han]] in the 1870s. | | Following the [[battle of Sekigahara]], [[Horio Tadauji]] was granted Izumo and [[Oki province]]s, with a ''[[kokudaka]]'' of 240,000 ''[[koku]]''. He and his father [[Horio Yoshiharu]] based themselves at Matsue castle beginning in [[1611]], but after their successor [[Horio Tadaharu]] died without heirs, they lost control of the domain. [[Kyogoku Tadataka|Kyôgoku Tadataka]], who simultaneously oversaw the territory associated with the [[Iwami Ginzan]] silver mine<!--石見銀山の大森代官所支配-->, then became lord of Matsue in [[1634]], but he too died without an heir. As a result, in [[1638]], [[Matsudaira Naomasa]] was reassigned from [[Matsumoto han]] in [[Shinano province]], and became lord of Matsue with a ''kokudaka'' of 186,000 ''koku''. His descendants would remain the lords of Matsue for the remainder of the [[Edo period]], until the [[abolition of the han]] in the 1870s. |
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| #[[Horio Yoshiharu]] | | #[[Horio Yoshiharu]] |
| #[[Horio Tadauji]] | | #[[Horio Tadauji]] |
− | #[[Horio Tadaharu]] | + | #[[Horio Tadaharu]] (d. 1634) |
− | #[[Kyogoku Tadataka|Kyôgoku Tadataka]] | + | #[[Kyogoku Tadataka|Kyôgoku Tadataka]] (1634-1638) |
− | #[[Matsudaira Naomasa]]<!--直政--> | + | #[[Matsudaira Naomasa]]<!--直政--> (from 1638) |
| #[[Matsudaira Tsunataka]]<!--綱隆--> | | #[[Matsudaira Tsunataka]]<!--綱隆--> |
| #[[Matsudaira Tsunachika]]<!--綱近--> | | #[[Matsudaira Tsunachika]]<!--綱近--> |
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| #[[Matsudaira Nobusumi]]<!--宣維--> | | #[[Matsudaira Nobusumi]]<!--宣維--> |
| #[[Matsudaira Munenobu]]<!--宗衍--> | | #[[Matsudaira Munenobu]]<!--宗衍--> |
− | #[[Matsudaira Fumai|Matsudaira Harusato]] (Fumai) | + | #[[Matsudaira Fumai|Matsudaira Harusato]] (Fumai, 1767-1818) |
| #[[Matsudaira Naritsune]]<!--齊恒--> | | #[[Matsudaira Naritsune]]<!--齊恒--> |
| #[[Matsudaira Naritaka]]<!--齊貴--> | | #[[Matsudaira Naritaka]]<!--齊貴--> |
− | #[[Matsudaira Sadayasu]]<!--定安--> | + | #[[Matsudaira Sadayasu]]<!--定安--> (until 1871) |
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| {{stub}} | | {{stub}} |