| It was established in the 1020s, when [[Taira no Suemoto]], an official at the [[Dazaifu]], was granted the land by ''[[Kanpaku]]'' [[Fujiwara no Yorimichi]]. The estate's center was at a place called Shimazu, within Morokata district, in [[Hyuga province|Hyûga province]] (today, the Moromoto area in [[Miyakonojo|Miyakonojô]] city, [[Miyazaki prefecture]]), and so the whole estate came to be called "Shimazu." Over time, the estate grew to include parts of the neighboring provinces of [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Osumi province|Ôsumi]]. | | It was established in the 1020s, when [[Taira no Suemoto]], an official at the [[Dazaifu]], was granted the land by ''[[Kanpaku]]'' [[Fujiwara no Yorimichi]]. The estate's center was at a place called Shimazu, within Morokata district, in [[Hyuga province|Hyûga province]] (today, the Moromoto area in [[Miyakonojo|Miyakonojô]] city, [[Miyazaki prefecture]]), and so the whole estate came to be called "Shimazu." Over time, the estate grew to include parts of the neighboring provinces of [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Osumi province|Ôsumi]]. |
− | In [[1185]], [[Minamoto no Yoritomo]] and the [[Konoe family]] named [[Shimazu Tadahisa|Koremune Tadahisa]] ''geshi'' (or ''gesu'', 下司職) for that territory. | + | In [[1185]], [[Minamoto no Yoritomo]] and the [[Konoe family]] named [[Shimazu Tadahisa|Koremune Tadahisa]] ''geshi'' (or ''gesu'', 下司職) for that territory. Tadahisa was later named ''[[jito|jitô]]'', but lost this position in an incident concerning the [[Hiki clan]] in [[1203]]; he eventually regained his ''jitô'' status, but over only the portion of the territory lying within Satsuma province. Until the fall of the [[Kamakura shogunate]] in [[1333]], the remainder of the territory was administered by relatives of the [[Hojo clan (Hojo Regents)|Hôjô]]. |