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| *''Japanese'': [[三宅]]氏 ''(Miyake-shi)'' | | *''Japanese'': [[三宅]]氏 ''(Miyake-shi)'' |
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− | The Miyake of [[Mikawa province]] were founded by a son of [[Kojima Takanori]] in the mid-14th Century. They at first fought with the [[Matsudaira clan]] during the 16th Century, then became retainers of them after [[1558]] during the time of [[Miyake Masasada]]. | + | The Miyake of [[Mikawa province]] is often said to have been descended from a son of the 14th century [[Southern Court]] samurai [[Kojima Takanori]], but many historians consider this specious.<ref name=taiyo>''Edo Daimyô Hyakke'' 江戸大名百家. ''Bessatsu Taiyô'' 別冊太陽. Spring 1978. p126.</ref> More solid records of the Miyake begin in [[1558]] with [[Miyake Takasada]] and his son [[Miyake Yasusada]] serving under [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]].<ref name=taiyo/> It was at this time that Yasusada was granted the honor of including the "yasu" from the name of his lord Ieyasu in his own name; the Miyake would continue to pass on the honored syllable "yasu" to succeeding generations through the end of the [[Edo period]]. |
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− | In [[1592]], [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] named [[Miyake Yasusada]] (a son of Miyake Masasada) a councilor. In [[1604]], Yasusada became ''daimyô'' of [[Koromo han]], a 10,000-[[koku]] fief in Mikawa. Yasusada's son Yasunobu was moved to the 20,000 ''koku'' fief [[Ise-Kameyama han]] in [[1620]], though the clan returned to Koromo han, ruling it from [[1636]]-[[1664]]. From 1664 through the end of the [[Edo period]], the Miyake were lords of [[Tahara han]], a 12,000 ''koku'' domain in Mikawa. | + | In [[1592]], Tokugawa Ieyasu named Miyake Yasusada a councilor. In [[1604]], Yasusada became ''daimyô'' of [[Koromo han]], a 10,000-[[koku]] fief in Mikawa. Yasusada's son Yasunobu was moved to the 20,000 ''koku'' fief [[Ise-Kameyama han]] in [[1620]], though the clan returned to Koromo han, ruling it from [[1636]]-[[1664]]. The fourth Miyake lord, [[Miyake Yasukatsu]], was moved in [[1664]] to [[Tahara han]], a 12,000 ''koku'' domain in Mikawa, and the Miyake remained the lords of Tahara through the end of the Edo period. |
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| ==Lords of the Miyake clan== | | ==Lords of the Miyake clan== |
| ''(As was quite common among Edo period daimyô, the actual death dates, and the dates officially reported and recorded often differ. The actual death date is given here first.)'' | | ''(As was quite common among Edo period daimyô, the actual death dates, and the dates officially reported and recorded often differ. The actual death date is given here first.)'' |
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| + | *[[Miyake Takasada]] |
| *[[Miyake Masasada]] | | *[[Miyake Masasada]] |
| *[[Miyake Yasusada]] | | *[[Miyake Yasusada]] |
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| *[[Miyake Yasutomo]] (d. [[1809]]/3/20; official 5/6) | | *[[Miyake Yasutomo]] (d. [[1809]]/3/20; official 5/6) |
| *[[Miyake Yasukazu]] (d. [[1823]]/2/8; official 5/16) | | *[[Miyake Yasukazu]] (d. [[1823]]/2/8; official 5/16) |
− | *[[Miyake Yasuaki]] (d. [[1827]]/7/10; official 10/23) | + | *[[Miyake Yasuteru]] (d. [[1827]]/7/10; official 10/23) |
| *[[Miyake Yasunao]] (d. [[1893]]/8/9)<ref name=same/> | | *[[Miyake Yasunao]] (d. [[1893]]/8/9)<ref name=same/> |
| + | *[[Miyake Yasumori]] |
| *[[Miyake Yasuyoshi]] (d. [[1895]]/1/23)<ref name=same/> | | *[[Miyake Yasuyoshi]] (d. [[1895]]/1/23)<ref name=same/> |
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