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The Tagaya house was a group or lineage of sea-lords or pirates based in [[Kamagari]] and the surrounding islands in the [[Inland Sea]].

In the [[Muromachi period]], they were one of the most prominent groups offering protection services in the Inland Sea under the patronage of the [[Ouchi clan|Ôuchi clan]]. Tagaya leaders regularly extorted travelers in the Inland Sea, demanding payment for protection services or otherwise attacking and robbing the travelers. These protection services sometimes included "riding along," i.e. having Tagaya men ride aboard the travelers' ships with them. The Tagaya also managed their own shipping operations, shipping goods both locally within their local section of the Inland Sea as well as to the Kyoto/Osaka region.

By the [[Edo period]], the Tagaya became ''[[honjin]]'' operators, overseeing the chief elite lodgings at Kamagari.<ref>''Shimo-Kamagari chôshi: zusetsu tsûshi hen'', Kure, Hiroshima: Kure shiyakusho (2007), 72.</ref>

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==References==
*Peter Shapinsky, “Envoys and Escorts: Representation and Performance among Koxinga’s Japanese Pirate Ancestors,” in ''Sea Rovers, Silver, and Samurai'', ed. by Tonio Andrade and Xing Hang. UH Press (2016), 44-46.
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[[Category:Muromachi Period]]
[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Criminals, Bandits, and Pirates]]
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