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The Hachiôji One-Thousand ''[[Doshin|Dôshin]]'' were a special detachment of guards based at [[Hachioji castle|Hachiôji]] and assigned to defend the border of [[Musashi province]] with [[Kai province]].
 
The Hachiôji One-Thousand ''[[Doshin|Dôshin]]'' were a special detachment of guards based at [[Hachioji castle|Hachiôji]] and assigned to defend the border of [[Musashi province]] with [[Kai province]].
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Named "one thousand" as a result of having numbered roughly that many during the [[battle of Sekigahara]], the group was maintained down into the [[Edo period]]. They stand apart from many similar guardsmen detachments in that the Hachiôji guards were of farmer/peasant lineage, and yet acted as [[samurai]], too, in their role as guardsmen.
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Named "one thousand" as a result of having numbered roughly that many during the [[battle of Sekigahara]], the group was maintained down into the [[Edo period]]. They stand apart from many similar guardsmen detachments in that the Hachiôji guards were of farmer/peasant lineage, and yet acted as [[samurai]], too, in their role as guardsmen. Following the end of the wars of the [[Sengoku period]], the group came to serve as shogunal guards accompanying the shogun on his journeys to [[Kyoto]], [[Nikko|Nikkô]], and elsewhere, as well as helping to guard [[Edo castle]] at times when it was under renovation or repair.
    
The house of the detachment's leader has been maintained and restored, and can be visited at the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum, in Koganei Park, in western Tokyo.
 
The house of the detachment's leader has been maintained and restored, and can be visited at the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum, in Koganei Park, in western Tokyo.
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