The Principality of Tahara ( Jap. 田原 藩 Tahara Khan ) is a feudal princedom ( khan ) in Japan of the Edo period (1601–1871). Tahara Khan was located in the province of Mikawa (modern Aichi Prefecture ) on the island of Honshu .
The administrative center of the Khan: Tahara Castle in the province of Mikawa (the modern city of Takhara in the southeast of the modern Aichi Prefecture ).
Content
History
During the Muromachi and Sengoku periods , most of the Atsumi peninsula was under the control of the Tod clan. Originally, the clan of Tod recognized the suzerainty of the clan Imagawa , and later fell under the authority of the Tokugawa clan. After the battle of Odawara in 1590, Toyotomi Hideyoshi transferred the Kanto region under the rule of Tokugawa Ieyasu . Rod Toda was deprived of their possessions, which received Ikeda Terumasa , vassal Hideyoshi. Rod Toda accompanied Ieyasu in Edo and received the title of hatamoto , he was granted the Shimoda domain in Izu province (5,000 koku ).
After the establishment of the shogunate Tokugawa Toda Katatsugu received the title daimyo , his income was increased to 10,000 koku . Toda Katatsugu received permission to return to Tahara Castle, which in 1601 became the center of the newly created principality of Tahara. In 1664, his son and successor, Toda Tadamasa , was transferred to Amakusa Khan in the province of Bungo (21,000 kokus), and the Miyake clan , who owned it before the Meiji Restoration, was transferred to Tahara Khan.
According to the census of 1696, 20,343 people lived in the principality of Takhar and there were 4,314 households. The principality had a main residence ( kamiyasiki ) in Edo. At the end of the Edo period, daimyo Tahara Khan owned 34 villages in the Atsumi district in Mikawa province.
A native of Tahara Khan was a Japanese artist and scholar Watanabe Kazan (1793-1854).
In July 1871, Tahara Khan was liquidated. On the territory of the former principality, the Tahara prefecture was originally established, which became part of the Nukat prefecture in November of 1871 and later became part of the modern Aichi prefecture.
Daimyo List
# | Name and years of life | Years of government | Title | Rank | Kokudara | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The genus Toda ( fuday-daimyo ) 1601-1664 | ||||||
one | Todo Takatsugu (1565–1615) (戸 田 尊 次) | 1601-1615 | Tosa-no-kami (土 佐 頭) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 10,000 koku | Hatamoto's son Toda Tadatsugu (1531–1597) |
2 | Toda Tadayoshi (1586–1647) (戸 田忠 能) | 1615-1647 | Inaba no kami (因 幡 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 10,000 koku | son of Toda Takatsugu |
3 | Tada Tadamasa (1632–1699) [1] (戸 田忠昌) | 1647-1664 | Yamashiro no kami (山城 守) | Fourth Lower (従 四位 下), Jiju (侍 従) | 10,000 koku | grandson of Toda Takatsugu |
Rhode Miyake ( fudai daimyo ) 1664-1871 | ||||||
one | Miyake Yasukatsu (1628–1687) [2] (三 宅 康 勝) | 1664-1687 | Noto-no-kami (能 登 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | the son of Miyake Yasumori (1600-1658), daimyo Ise Kameyama-Khan (1632-1666) and Koromo-Khan (1636-1657) |
2 | Miyake Yasuo (1659-1726) (三 宅 康 雄) | 1687-1726 | Bizen-no-kami (備 前 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | son Miyake Yasukatsu |
3 | Miyake Yasunori (1683-1753) (三 宅 康 徳) | 1726-1745 | Bingo-no-kami (備 後 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | son Miyake Yasunao |
four | Yasuta Miyake (1710–1791) (三 宅 康 高) | 1745-1755 | Bizen-no-kami (備 前 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | son Miyake Yasunori |
five | Miyake Yasuyuki (1729-1803) (三 宅 康 之) | 1755-1780 | Bingo-no-kami (備 後 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | grandson Miyake Yasuo |
6 | Miyake Yasutake (1763-1785) (三 宅 康 武) | 1780-1785 | Bizen-no-kami (備 前 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | 4th son of Miyake Yasuyuki |
7 | Miyake Yasukuni (1764–1792) (三 宅 康邦) | 1785-1792 | Noto-no-kami (能 登 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | 5th son Miyake Yasuyuki |
eight | Miyake Yasutomo (1764–1809) (三 宅 康 友) | 1792-1809 | Bizen-no-kami (備 前 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | 4th son of Miyake Yasutaki |
9 | Miyake Yasukazu (1798–1823) (三 宅 康 和) | 1809-1823 | Tsushima-no-kami (対 馬 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | grandson Miyake Yasutaki |
ten | Miyake Yasuteru (1800–1827) (三 宅 康明) | 1823-1827 | Bizen-no-kami (備 前 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下) | 12,000 koku | 3rd son of Miyake Yasutomo |
eleven | Miyake Yasunao (1811–1893) (三 宅 康 直) | 1828-1850 | Tosa-no-kami (土 佐 守) | Fourth Lower (従 四位 下) | 12,000 koku | 9th son of Sakai Tadazane |
12 | Miyake Yasuyoshi (1831–1895) (三 宅 康 保) | 1850-1871 | Bizen-no-kami (備 前 守) | Fifth lower (従 五位 下), Viscount | 12,000 koku | grandson Miyake Yasuteru |
Notes
- ↑ 1st Daimyo Amakusa Khan (1664–1671), 1st Daimyo Ivatsuki Khan (1682–1686) and 1st Daimyo Sakura Khan (1686–1699), 7th Sesidy Kyoto (1678–1681)
- ↑ 2nd daimyo of Koroma Khan (1658—1664)
Sources
- Papinot, E (1910). Historical and Geographic Dictionary of Japan. Tuttle (reprint) 1972 .