The Principality of Toyoka ( Jap. 豊 藩 藩 Toyoka-khan ) is the feudal principality ( khan ) in Japan of the Edo period (1600-1871). Toyoka Khan was located in the province of Tajima (modern Hyogo Prefecture ) on the island of Honshu .
The administrative center of the principality is Toyoka Castle (the modern city of Toyoka in Hyogo Prefecture ), then the fortified house (jin'ya) of Toyoka.
Khan's income:
- 1600-1653 - 20,000 → 25,000 → 10,000 coca rice
- 1668-1871 - 35,000 → 15,000 coca rice
Content
- 1 History
- 2 Daimyo List
- 3 notes
- 4 Sources
- 5 Links
History
The Principality of Toyoka was created in 1600 after the Battle of Sekigahar . In this battle, Sugihara Nagafusa (1574–1629) fought in the Western coalition under the command of Isis Mitsunari , who was defeated. But Sugihira Nagafusa was married to the daughter of Asano Nagamasa, who fought on the side of the victor Tokugawa Ieyasu . In the same year, Nagafusa received from the Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu in the possession of Toyoka Khan in the province of Tajima (25,000 Koku ). In 1629, Nagafus was succeeded by his son, Sugihara Sigenaga (1616–1644), who did not leave a male heir. The successor of the latter in 1644 was his nephew and adopted son, Sugihara Shigeharu (1637-1653), who died childless at the age of 17.
Between 1653 and 1668, Toyoka Khan was under the direct control of the Tokugawa Shogunate .
In 1668, Kyogoku Takamori (1650-1709) was transferred to Toyoku, who had previously ruled in Tanabe Khan in the province of Tango (1663-1668). His descendants ran the domain until the Meiji Restoration .
In 1871, Toyoka Khan was liquidated. On the territory of the former principality, Toyoka Prefecture was originally created, which in 1876 was included in the composition of modern Hyogo Prefecture .
Daimyo List
- Sugihara clan ( tozama daimyo ) 1600–1653
| No. | Name | Years of rule | Years of life | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| one | Sugihara Nagafusa | 杉原 長 房 | 1600 - 1629 | 1574 - 1629 | |
| 2 | Sugihara Sygenaga | 杉原 重 長 | 1629 - 1644 | 1616 - 1644 | The only son of the previous |
| 3 | Sugihara Shigeharu | 杉原 重 玄 | 1645 - 1653 | 1637 - 1653 | nephew of the previous |
- Kegoku clan ( tozama daimyo ) 1668-1871
| No. | Name | Years of rule | Years of life | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| one | Kyogoku Takamori [1] | 京 極高 盛 | 1668 - 1674 | 1650 - 1709 | The eldest son of Kyokoku Takanao (1633-1663), 2nd daimyo of Tanabe Khan (1636-1663) |
| 2 | Kyogoku Takazumi | 京 極高 住 | 1674 - 1714 | 1660 - 1730 | The younger brother of the previous |
| 3 | Kyogoku Takayoshi | 京 極高 栄 | 1714 - 1721 | 1690 - 1721 | The eldest son of the previous |
| four | Kyogoku Takanori | 京 極高 寛 | 1721 - 1726 | 1717 - 1726 | The eldest son of the previous |
| 5 | Kyogoku Takanaga | 京 極高 永 | 1726 - 1760 | 1720 - 1760 | The younger brother of the previous |
| 6 | Kyogoku Takakatsu | 京 極高 品 | 1760 - 1791 | 1741 - 1792 | The eldest son of the previous |
| 7 | Kyogoku Takaari | 京 極高 有 | 1791 - 1831 | 1775 - 1841 | the second son of Kyokoku Takahisa (1729-1808), the 6th daimyo of Mineyama Khan (1765-1808), the adopted son of the previous |
| 8 | Kyogoku Takayuki | 京 極高 行 | 1831 - 1847 | 1794 - 1847 | The eldest son of the previous |
| 9 | Kyogoku Takaatsu | 京 極高 厚 | 1847 - 1871 | 1829 - 1905 | The eldest son of the previous |
Notes
- ↑ 3rd daimyo of Tanabe Khan in the province of Tango (1663-1668)
Sources
- Papinot, E (1910). Historical and Geographic Dictionary of Japan. Tuttle (reprint) 1972. (English)