- Takatō Domain
The nihongo|Takatō Domain|高遠藩|Takatō-han was a Japanese feudal domain of the
Edo period , located in southernShinano province . Its capital was atTakatō Castle , in what is today the city of Ina,Nagano Prefecture .History
The territory was first consolidated under the name Takatō in the
Sengoku Period byTakatō Yoritsugu (d. 1552). After the castle fell toTakeda Shingen in the Siege of Takatō in1545 , it was given over to one of Shingen's sons,Nishina Morinobu . Takatō then came under the control ofHoshina Masatoshi , a retainer ofTokugawa Ieyasu , following the defeat and subsequent destruction of theTakeda clan following the second Siege of Takatō in1582 ."Han" Establishment
The territory became an official "han" (feudal domain) following the
Battle of Sekigahara in1600 , and the establishment of theTokugawa shogunate in1603 .Hoshina Masamitsu , the grandson of Masatoshi, became the firstEdo period "daimyō " of Takatō, and the domain was officially ranked at an income of 25,000 "koku ". Masamitsu raised an illegitimate son ofshogun Tokugawa Hidetada as his own, under the nameHoshina Masayuki , and was rewarded with a 5,000 "koku" increase for his domain in 1618. Following Hidetada's death in1632 , Masayuki was made lord ofYamagata Domain inDewa Province in 1636, with an income of 200,000 "koku".Torii Tadaharu replaced him as lord of Takatō, with an income of 32,000. The next lord,Torii Tadanori , however, died in an incident atEdo Castle in1689 , leaving the clan's succession in the hands of the shogunate. Tadanori's successor in the family,Torii Tadahide , was given a 10,000 "koku" holding, theShimomura Domain inNoto Province . As a result, Takatō came briefly to be administered directly by the shogunate until1691 , whenNaitō Kiyokazu left hisTondabayashi Domain inSettsu Province to become lord of Takatō. The domain began to have financial troubles beginning under the following lord,Naitō Yorinori , who made efforts at reforms and innovations to solve the problems. TheEjima-Ikushima affair occurred around the same time, resulting in a shogunal consort named Ejima, banished from Edo, being left in the custody of Takatō.Development
The seventh Naitō lord of Takatō,
Naitō Yoriyasu , oversaw numerous development projects, including a trading market, amulberry plantation operated directly by the domain, educational institutions and land intensification projects. These changes, however, brought numerous peasant revolts, and instability to the realm.Towards the end of the Edo period, the final lord,
Naitō Yorinao , established "han"-supported schools and took part in the campaigns of theChōshū Domain . During the1868 Boshin War , however, Naitō sided with the newly-founded Meiji government army against the last supporters of the shogunate.Naitō remained governor of Takatō when the lands were formally handed over to the Emperor. In
1871 , the domains were abolished, and Takatō became "Takatō Prefecture", only to be subsumed into Tsukama Prefecture and, eventually, into Nagano Prefecture, which remains today.Notable Persons
Takatō was the birthplace of the Meiji period educator
Izawa Shūji .Lords of Takatō
*
Hoshina clan (25,000 "koku", later 30,000)
*#Hoshina Masamitsu
*#Hoshina Masayuki *
Torii clan (32,000 "koku")
*#Torii Tadaharu
*#Torii Tadanori *
Naitō clan (33,000 "koku")
*#Naitō Kiyokazu
*#Naitō Yorinori
*#Naitō Yoriyuki
*#Naitō Yoritaka
*#Naitō Nagayoshi
*#Naitō Yorimochi
*#Naitō Yoriyasu
*#Naitō Yorinao References
*"This article is derived from the content on the corresponding page on the Japanese Wikipedia."
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