Difference between revisions of "Okubo Tadahiro"
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Jump to navigationJump to search (Created page with "*''Titles: Ise no kami'' *''Japanese'': 大久保 忠寛 ''(Ookubo Tadahiro)'' Ôkubo Tadahiro was a Tokugawa shogunate official who served in several ''[[bugyo|bugy...") |
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Ôkubo Tadahiro was a [[Tokugawa shogunate]] official who served in several ''[[bugyo|bugyô]]'' (Magistrate) positions in the [[Bakumatsu period]]. | Ôkubo Tadahiro was a [[Tokugawa shogunate]] official who served in several ''[[bugyo|bugyô]]'' (Magistrate) positions in the [[Bakumatsu period]]. | ||
− | After serving as ''[[Nagasaki bugyo|Nagasaki bugyô]]'' for a time in [[1857]], he was then named ''kinrizuki'' (a shogunate official attached to the imperial court) until [[1859]], when he was reassigned to the position of [[Kyoto]] ''[[machi bugyo|machi bugyô]]''.<ref>Ishin Shiryô Kôyô 維新史料綱要, vol 3, 143.</ref> | + | After serving as ''[[Nagasaki bugyo|Nagasaki bugyô]]'' for a time in [[1857]], he was then named ''kinrizuki'' (a shogunate official attached to the imperial court) until [[1859]], when he was reassigned to the position of [[Kyoto]] ''[[machi bugyo|machi bugyô]]''.<ref>Ishin Shiryô Kôyô 維新史料綱要, vol 3, 143.</ref> Toward the end of the 8th month of 1859, he was dismissed from the position of ''[[Nishinomaru rusui]]'' amidst the dismissal and (in some cases) house confinement of a number of prominent officials associated with foreign affairs.<ref>Ishin Shiryô Kôyô 維新史料綱要, vol 3 (1937), 210.</ref> |
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Latest revision as of 02:01, 12 August 2020
- Titles: Ise no kami
- Japanese: 大久保 忠寛 (Ookubo Tadahiro)
Ôkubo Tadahiro was a Tokugawa shogunate official who served in several bugyô (Magistrate) positions in the Bakumatsu period.
After serving as Nagasaki bugyô for a time in 1857, he was then named kinrizuki (a shogunate official attached to the imperial court) until 1859, when he was reassigned to the position of Kyoto machi bugyô.[1] Toward the end of the 8th month of 1859, he was dismissed from the position of Nishinomaru rusui amidst the dismissal and (in some cases) house confinement of a number of prominent officials associated with foreign affairs.[2]