Koga Domain
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File:Koga castle kannonjikuruwa dorui.jpg
Site of Koga Castle
The Koga Domain (古河藩 Koga-han?) was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Shimōsa Province (present-day Koga, Ibaraki). The first lord of Koga was Ogasawara Hidemasa, who was granted it as a fief following Tokugawa Ieyasu's move to the Kantō region.
In the han system, Koga was a political and economic abstraction based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields.[1] In other words, the domain was defined in terms of kokudaka, not land area.[2] This was different than the feudalism of the West.
List of lords
- Ogasawara clan (Fudai; 30,000 koku)
- Hidemasa
- Matsudaira (Toda) clan (Fudai; 30,000 koku)
- Yasunaga
- Ogasawara (Sakai) clan (Fudai; 20,000 koku)
- Nobuyuki
- Masanobu
- Okudaira clan (Fudai; 110,000 koku)
- Nagai clan (Fudai; 72,000 koku)
- Naokatsu
- Naomasa
- Toshikatsu
- Toshitaka
- Toshishige
- Toshihisa
- Toshimasu
- Hotta clan (Fudai; 90,000 koku)
- Matsudaira (Fujii) clan (Fudai; 90,000 koku)
- Nobuyuki
- Tadayuki
- Matsudaira (Ōkōchi) clan (Fudai; 70,000 koku)
- Honda clan (Fudai; 50,000 koku)
- Tadayoshi
- Tadahisa
- Matsudaira (Matsui) clan (Fudai; 50,000 koku)
- Yasuyoshi
- Toshisato
- Toshiakira
- Toshiatsu
- Toshitsura
- Toshinao
- Toshinori
- Toshitomo
References
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External links
- (Japanese) Koga on "Edo 300 HTML" (20 Oct. 2007)
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- ↑ Mass, Jeffrey P. and William B. Hauser. (1987). The Bakufu in Japanese History, p. 150.
- ↑ Elison, George and Bardwell L. Smith (1987). Warlords, Artists, & Commoners: Japan in the Sixteenth Century, p. 18.