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The Otani clan was a low-ranking samurai family based in [[Edo]], with a stipend of 100 ''[[koku]]''.
The Otani clan was a low-ranking samurai family based in [[Edo]], with a stipend of 100 ''[[koku]]''.
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Notable members include [[Otani Heizo|Otani Heizô]], who was adopted into the Otani family, and his sons [[Otani Hikoshiro|Otani Hikoshirô]], [[Otani Saburoemon|Otani Saburôemon]], and [[Katsu Kokichi]] (the father of [[Katsu Kaishu|Katsu Kaishû]]).
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Notable members include [[Otani Heizo|Otani Heizô]] (d. [[1827]]), who was adopted into the Otani family, and who is chiefly notable because of his son by a concubine, [[Katsu Kokichi]] ([[1802]]-[[1850]]), who was adopted into the [[Katsu clan]] and was in turn the father of [[Katsu Kaishu|Katsu Kaishû]].
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Heizô was one of nine children of blind moneylender [[Yoneyama Kengyo|Yoneyama Kengyô]] (d. [[1772]]). Heizô had at least two sons with his wife Chisen'in: [[Otani Hikoshiro|Otani Hikoshirô]] ([[1777]]-[[1840]]), [[Otani Saburoemon|Otani Saburôemon]], and possibly a third son named Tessaku.
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Heizô's brother Kyokusai, with his wife Seiryûin, had at least one son. Otani Chûnojô, as he was known, had at least two sons in turn, named Chûjirô and Shintarô (d. [[1864]]). The latter was born to a concubine, and was adopted by Otani Hikoshirô (mentioned above) and his wife Yû, married to their daughter Tsuru, and renamed Otani Seiichirô.
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Another branch of the family included brothers Chûzô, Masanosuke, and Kurobe Tokusaburô, and Chûzô's son Juntarô.
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==References==
==References==
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*Craig, Teruko (trans.). ''Musui's Story: The Autobiography of a Tokugawa Samurai''. University of Arizona Press, 1988. p169.
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*Craig, Teruko (trans.). ''Musui's Story: The Autobiography of a Tokugawa Samurai''. University of Arizona Press, 1988. pp169-171.
[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Clans]]
[[Category:Clans]]