Yamagata Domain

Yamagata Domain

Yamagata Domain (山形藩, -"han") was a Japanese fief ("han"), located in Dewa province, in the Tōhoku region (north-eastern Honshū). Modern-day Yamagata Prefecture is roughly contiguous with the domain, and its capital city, also called Yamagata, grew up out of the daimyo's (feudal lord's) castle town. Unlike some "han" whose control was relatively stable throughout the Edo period (1603-1867), Yamagata changed hands a great number of times within a very short space of time.

Originally populated by the Ezo (aboriginal peoples), Yamagata came to be the fief of the Ōshū branch of the Fujiwara family in the Heian period (794-1185).

In the Sengoku (1467-1603) and Edo periods, the territory changed hands a number of times, and came to play an important role in the battles immediately leading up to the Sekigahara Campaign of 1600. At the time, Yamagata was controlled by Mogami Yoshiaki who had taken it from the Uesugi family. Along with a number of allies, he defended the domain from the army of Naoe Kanetsugu, an ally of Ishida Mitsunari, who made his way towards Yamagata from the neighboring Yonezawa Domain, with an army of 20,000. Ultimately, though Mogami and others engaged Naoe's forces a number of times, no battle was fought at Yamagata Castle. With the help of Date Masamune, Naoe's armies were held off until news of Ishida Mitsunari's defeat by Tokugawa Ieyasu at Sekigahara was heard, and Naoe withdrew.

Following Sekigahara, Yamagata was formally established as a "han" by the Tokugawa shogunate, and assigned to the Mogami clan along with an income of 570,000 "koku". However, it was reassigned to the Torii family of samurai in 1622, with an income of 220,000 "koku". They held it but briefly; in 1636, the domain reverted to the control of the shogunate, due to the lack of a Torii heir. The Okudaira and Matsudaira families, branches of the shogunal Tokugawa clan, would control Yamagata intermittently from then on, in between other daimyo families.

Some time later, Yamagata's lord Okudaira Tadamasa died, many of his retainers and would-be heirs committed "junshi", killing themselves in order to loyally follow their lord into death. Thus, the "han" fell to Hotta Masanaka. However, Masanaka's father, Hotta Masatoshi, killed someone inside the shogun's capital of Edo castle, and thus had his family's lands seized.

After a number of further generations of Tokugawa branch family lords, the domain came to be held by the Akimoto family, and then the Mizuno family.

The line of lords of Yamagata

*Mogami clan, 1600-1622 (Tozama; 57,000 koku)

#Yoshiaki
#Iechika
#Yoshitoshi

*Torii clan, 1622-1636 (Fudai; 220,000->240,000 koku)

#Tadamasa
#Tadatsune

*Hoshina clan, 1636-1643 (Shinpan; 200,000 koku)

#Masayuki

*Matsudaira (Echizen) clan, 1644-1648 (Shinpan; 150,000 koku)

#Naomoto

*Matsudaira (Okudaira) clan, 1648-1668 (Shinpan; 150,000 koku)

#Tadahiro

*Okudaira clan, 1668-1685 (Fudai 90,000 koku)

#Masayoshi
#Masaakira

*Hotta clan, 1685-1686 (Fudai; 100,000 koku)

#Masanaka

*Matsudaira (Echizen) clan, 1686-1692 (Shinpan; 90,000 koku)

#Naonori

*Matsudaira (Okudaira) clan, 1692-1700 (Shinpan; 100,000 koku)

#Tadahiro
#Tadamasa

*Hotta clan, 1700-1746 (Fudai; 100,000 koku)

#Masatora
#Masaharu
#Masasuke

*Matsudaira (Ogyū) clan, 1746-1764 (Fudai; 60,000 koku)

#Norisuke

*Period as tenryō, 1764-1767

*Akimoto clan, 1767-1845 (Fudai; 60,000 koku)

#Suketomo
#Tsunetomo
#Hisatomo
#Yukitomo

*Mizuno clan, 1845-1870 (Fudai; 50,000 koku)

#Tadakiyo
#Tadahiro

References

* [http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~me4k-skri/han/mutudewa/yamagata.html Genealogy of the lords of Yamagata] (Japanese)
*Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.


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