Difference between revisions of "Hamada han"
(Created page with "*''Territory: portions of Iwami province'' *''Castle: Hamada castle'' *''Lords: Matsui clan'' *''Kokudaka: '' *''Japanese'': 浜田藩 ''(Hamada han)'' Hamada...") |
|||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
*''Lords: [[Matsui clan]]'' | *''Lords: [[Matsui clan]]'' | ||
*''[[Kokudaka]]: '' | *''[[Kokudaka]]: '' | ||
− | *''Japanese'': | + | *''Japanese'': [[浜田]] 藩 ''(Hamada han)'' |
Hamada han was an [[Edo period]] [[han|feudal domain]] based at [[Hamada castle]] in [[Iwami province]] (today, [[Shimane prefecture]]). | Hamada han was an [[Edo period]] [[han|feudal domain]] based at [[Hamada castle]] in [[Iwami province]] (today, [[Shimane prefecture]]). |
Revision as of 11:39, 11 June 2017
- Territory: portions of Iwami province
- Castle: Hamada castle
- Lords: Matsui clan
- Kokudaka:
- Japanese: 浜田 藩 (Hamada han)
Hamada han was an Edo period feudal domain based at Hamada castle in Iwami province (today, Shimane prefecture).
The domain was first established in 1619, by Furuta Shigeharu, who was given that territory as his own, with a kokudaka of 57,000. The domain passed through the hands of the Matsudaira (Matsui) clan at 60,000 koku, the Honda clan at 50,000, and the Matsudaira (Matsui) again at 50,400 before coming to be ruled from 1836 onwards by the Matsudaira (Echi) clan, at 61,000 koku. In 1867, the Matsudaira were relocated to Tsuruta in Mimasaka province (today, Okayama prefecture), and so the domain was abolished even before the Meiji Restoration.
Hamada was one of six domains to regularly supply riverboats to the Ryukyuan embassies to Edo, along with five domains from the Inland Sea region and Kyushu.
References
- "Hamada han," Kotobank.org, accessed 12 July 2015.