- Karō
were top-ranking
samurai officials and advisors in service to thedaimyo of feudalJapan .In the
Edo period , the policy of "sankin kōtai " required each daimyo to place a "karō" inEdo and another in the home "han" (feudal domain). A "karō" who was in charge of a castle was called the "jōdai karō" (城代家老), while the one in Edo was called the "Edo karō" (江戸家老). A general term for a domain-based "karō" is "kunigarō" (国家老).Some domains referred to this position as "bugyō" (奉行) or "toshiyori" (年寄).
An example of events involving a "karō" comes from one of the most famous of all samurai tales, "
Kanadehon Chushingura ". The final Asano daimyo of the Ako "han" wasAsano Naganori . While he was in Edo, he was sentenced to commitseppuku for the offense of drawing a sword againstKira Yoshinaka inEdo Castle . When theshogunate abolished the Ako "han", all the Ako samurai becameronin .Oishi Kuranosuke , the "jōdai karō", led 46 other ronin in a vendetta against Kira. As a result of his leadership in theForty-seven Ronin affair, Oishi went down in history as the most famous of all "karō".The shogunate post of "
rōjū " (Elder) had many similarities to that of "karō".Partial List of Famous "Karō"
*
Oishi Kuranosuke
*Zusho Hirosato
*Yamakawa Hiroshi
*Saigo Tanomo
*Naoe Kanetsugu
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.