Difference between revisions of "Uwajima han"
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*''Territory: one of fourteen districts of [[Iyo province]]'' | *''Territory: one of fourteen districts of [[Iyo province]]'' | ||
*''Castle: [[Uwajima castle]]'' | *''Castle: [[Uwajima castle]]'' | ||
*''Lords: [[Date clan]]'' | *''Lords: [[Date clan]]'' | ||
+ | *''[[Kokudaka]]: 100,000 [[koku]]'' | ||
+ | *''Japanese'': 宇和島藩 ''(Uwajima han)'' | ||
Uwajima ''han'' was a small [[han|domain]] located in [[Iyo province]] on the island of [[Shikoku]]. It was ruled from [[Uwajima castle]] by a branch family of the [[Date clan]] which ruled [[Sendai han]] in [[Mutsu province]] (in the [[Tohoku|Tôhoku]] region). Its rulers enjoyed honorary ''[[kuni-mochi]]'' ("province-holder") status, also known as ''junkunimochi'', despite the domain's small size. | Uwajima ''han'' was a small [[han|domain]] located in [[Iyo province]] on the island of [[Shikoku]]. It was ruled from [[Uwajima castle]] by a branch family of the [[Date clan]] which ruled [[Sendai han]] in [[Mutsu province]] (in the [[Tohoku|Tôhoku]] region). Its rulers enjoyed honorary ''[[kuni-mochi]]'' ("province-holder") status, also known as ''junkunimochi'', despite the domain's small size. | ||
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+ | [[Date Hidemune]], the eldest son of [[Date Masamune]], lord of Sendai, was appointed lord of Uwajima in [[1614]], and journeyed to the domain the following year; his younger half-brother, [[Date Tadamune]], succeeded their father as lord of Sendai, as Hidemune was the son of a concubine, and was thus less eligible to succeed. The Date clan then remained the [[daimyo]] of Uwajima through the end of the [[Edo period]]. | ||
===Daimyô of Uwajima=== | ===Daimyô of Uwajima=== | ||
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#[[Date Hidemune]] ([[1608]] - d. [[1658]]) | #[[Date Hidemune]] ([[1608]] - d. [[1658]]) | ||
#[[Date Munetoshi]] | #[[Date Munetoshi]] | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
*[[Luke Roberts|Roberts, Luke]]. ''Performing the Great Peace: Political Space and Open Secrets in Tokugawa Japan''. University of Hawaii Press, 2012. pp48, 114. | *[[Luke Roberts|Roberts, Luke]]. ''Performing the Great Peace: Political Space and Open Secrets in Tokugawa Japan''. University of Hawaii Press, 2012. pp48, 114. | ||
+ | *Explanatory displays at former gate to the Date clan's Tokyo mansion, [[Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum]]. | ||
[[Category:Han]] | [[Category:Han]] |
Revision as of 02:40, 23 November 2012
- Territory: one of fourteen districts of Iyo province
- Castle: Uwajima castle
- Lords: Date clan
- Kokudaka: 100,000 koku
- Japanese: 宇和島藩 (Uwajima han)
Uwajima han was a small domain located in Iyo province on the island of Shikoku. It was ruled from Uwajima castle by a branch family of the Date clan which ruled Sendai han in Mutsu province (in the Tôhoku region). Its rulers enjoyed honorary kuni-mochi ("province-holder") status, also known as junkunimochi, despite the domain's small size.
Date Hidemune, the eldest son of Date Masamune, lord of Sendai, was appointed lord of Uwajima in 1614, and journeyed to the domain the following year; his younger half-brother, Date Tadamune, succeeded their father as lord of Sendai, as Hidemune was the son of a concubine, and was thus less eligible to succeed. The Date clan then remained the daimyo of Uwajima through the end of the Edo period.
Daimyô of Uwajima
- Tôdô Takatora (until 1608)
- Date Hidemune (1608 - d. 1658)
- Date Munetoshi
- Date Muranaga (d. 1824)
- Date Munetada (1824 - 1871)
References
- Roberts, Luke. Performing the Great Peace: Political Space and Open Secrets in Tokugawa Japan. University of Hawaii Press, 2012. pp48, 114.
- Explanatory displays at former gate to the Date clan's Tokyo mansion, Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum.