Shoya

Revision as of 19:05, 3 October 2014 by LordAmeth (talk | contribs)
  • Japanese: 庄屋 (shouya)

Shôya were village headmen in the Edo period.

Their responsibilities often included managing tax and census reports, overseeing tax collection, serving as a representative for the village & intermediary in communicating with higher authorities, and otherwise working for the good of the village and to maintain order. Such "census reports" were rarely true censuses, re-counting or re-accounting for the total population of the village, but rather often took the form of reporting specifically on births, deaths, changes of residence, marriages, adoptions, and the like within these small, relatively tight-knit communities.[1]

In some regions, headmen were also called outside of their villages to aid in other business, such as assessments of public work projects and the associated burden of corvée labor and material contributions from various villages, or in investigating fires, shipwrecks and the like alongside other officials.

The shôya was often aided by village "elders" known as kumigashira or hyakushô kashira. Villagers were often grouped into co-responsible groupings known as goningumi ("five person groups") or kumiai, each of which was then responsible to the kumigashira. In some domains, other levels of official positions existed between these.

Whether the position of shôya was hereditary varied from one region or domain to the next; in some regions, such as in Fukuoka han, it was also not uncommon for village headmen to be appointed from other villages.

References

  • Arai Hakuseki, Joyce Ackroyd (trans.), Told Round a Brushwood Fire, University of Tokyo Press (1979), 323.
  • Arne Kalland, Fishing Villages in Tokugawa Japan, University of Hawaii Press (1995), 25-27.
  1. Kalland, 30.