The Principality of Owari ( 尾张 藩 Ovari-khan ) , also known as the Principality of Nagoya ( 名古屋 藩 藩 Nagoya-khan ) is the feudal principality ( khan ) in Japan of the Edo period (1610-1871). It was located in the provinces of Owari , Mino and Sinano (now the western part of Aichi Prefecture ).
Content
History
The administrative center of the principality: Nagoya Castle in Nagoya .
Khan's income: 619,500 coca of rice.
In 1595-1600, the province of Owari with a residence in Kiyosu Castle (income of 240 thousand koku) was under the control of the daimyo Fukushima Masanori (1561-1624), a vassal of Toyotomi Hideyoshi . In 1600, after the victory of Tokugawa Ieyasu at the Battle of Sekigahar, Fukushima Masanori was transferred from Owari to Aki Province, where he received the principality of Hiroshima .
In 1610, the Principality of Owari was handed over to the 6-year-old Tokugawa Yoshinao , the ninth son of the first shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu.
Owari Khan was ruled by the side branch of the Tokugawa Shogun dynasty, which belonged to the Shimpan Daimyo and had the status of the ruler of the province ( Japanese 国 主 kokushu ) . The princes of Ovari Khan took first place among the gosanke , the three most significant branches of the Tokugawa clan. The Principality of Owari was the largest domain of the family, not counting the possessions of the shoguns.
Owari Khan was liquidated in 1871.
Rulers of the Principality
| No. | Name | Years of rule | Years of life | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| one | Tokugawa Yoshinao | (徳 川 義 直 | 1610 - 1650 | 1601 - 1650 | The ninth son of the first Tokugawa shogun , Ieyasu |
| 2 | Tokugawa Mitsumoto | 徳 川 光 友 | 1650 - 1693 | 1625 - 1700 | Tokugawa Yoshinao's eldest son |
| 3 | Tokugawa Tsunanari | 徳 川 綱 誠 | 1693 - 1699 | 1652 - 1699 | Tokugawa Mitsumoto's eldest son |
| four | Tokugawa Yoshimichi | 徳 川 吉通 | 1699 - 1713 | 1689 - 1713 | Tokugawa Tsunanari's ninth son |
| five | Tokugawa Gorouta | 徳 川 五郎 太 | 1713 - 1713 | 1711 - 1713 | Tokugawa Yoshimichi's eldest son |
| 6 | Tokugawa Tsugutomo | 徳 川 継 友 | 1713 - 1730 | 1692 - 1731 | Tokugawa Tsunanari's eleventh son |
| 7 | Tokugawa Muneharu | 徳 川 宗 春 | 1730 - 1739 | 1696 - 1764 | Tokugawa Tsunanari's nineteenth son, Tsugutomo's younger brother |
| eight | Tokugawa Munekatsu | 徳 川 宗 勝 | 1739 - 1761 | 1705 - 1761 | The eldest son of Matsudaira Tomoaki , the grandson of Mitsumoto |
| 9 | Tokugawa Munetika | 徳 川 宗 睦 | 1761 - 1799 | 1733 - 1800 | Second Tokugawa son Munekatsu |
| ten | Tokugawa Naritomo | 徳 川 斉 朝 | 1800 - 1827 | 1793 - 1850 | Tokugawa's eldest son Harukuni |
| eleven | Tokugawa Nariharu | 徳 川 斉 温 | 1827 - 1839 | 1819 - 1839 | Tokugawa Ienari Shogun's nineteenth son, cousin and adopted son of Tokugawa Naritomo |
| 12 | Tokugawa Naritaka | 徳 川 斉 荘 | 1839 - 1845 | 1810 - 1845 | The twelfth son of the 11th shogun Tokugawa Ienari , the elder brother of Nariharu |
| 13 | Tokugawa Yoshitsugu | 徳 川 慶 臧 | 1845 - 1849 | 1836 - 1849 | The seventh son of Tokugawa Narimasa , adopted by Tokugawa Naritaka |
| 14 | Tokugawa Yoshikatsu | 徳 川 茂 承 | 1849 - 1858 | 1824 - 1883 | The second son of Matsudaira Yoshitatsu , the head of the Tokugawa clan Tayasu |
| 15 | Tokugawa Motinaga | 徳 川 茂 徳 | 1858 - 1863 | 1831 - 1884 | The fifth son of Matsudaira Yoshitatsu , the younger brother of Yoshikatsu |
| sixteen | Tokugawa Yoshinori | 徳 川 義 宜 | 1864 - 1870 | 1858 - 1875 | The third son of Tokugawa Yoshikatsu |
| 17 | Tokugawa Yoshikatsu | 徳 川 茂 承 | 1870 - 1871 | 1824 - 1883 | The second son of Matsudaira Yoshitatsu |
Literature
- Rubel V. A. Japanese civilization: traditional suspension and dominance. - Kyiv: “Akvilon-Pres”, 1997.
Links
- List of three hundred khans of the Edo period (Japanese) .