Han school
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The Han school (藩校; hankō) was an educational institution in the Edo period of Japan, originally established to educate children of daimyo (provincial feudal lords) and their retainers in the domains outside of capital. These institutions were also known as Hangaku (藩学), Hangakkō (藩学校) or Hankō (藩黌).
These schools existed until 1871, when the domains were abolished after the Meiji Restoration of 1868. The hanko were at first narrowly defined as schools of Confucian studies for the cultivation of the samurai elite, and attendance was both expected of and limited to the children of this class. Late in the period, however, children of other social classes were permitted to attend, and the curriculum was expanded from its core in the Confucian classics to include training in classical Japanese studies (Kokugaku), medicine, and the various branches of Western Learning, including mathematics, astronomy, military science, and ballistics. Students entered at age 7 or 8 and usually completed their courses of study between the ages of 15 and 20. By the 1860s there were about 255 hanko nationwide.
The Hanko, which predominated in provincial reagions, were similar to and paralleled the terakoya or 'temple-school' system of education which was more prominant in the major urban centers of the capital, Edo, and Osaka and Kyoto. The major difference between two systems was that hanko were state institutions organized by the local domain government, and terkoya were private institutions organized by local Buddhist temples.