List of Han

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1789 map of Japan associated with Daikokuya Kōdayū.
1789 map of Japan associated with Daikokuya Kōdayū.

This is an incomplete list of the major Han of the Tokugawa period. Han were feudal domains that formed the effective basis of administration in Tokugawa-era Japan. The han are given along with their approximate borders compared with the modern prefecture system.

The han system was abolished by the Meiji government in 1871.

Contents

[edit] Hokkaidō

[edit] Tōhoku

In Mutsu Province

In Dewa Province

[edit] Kantō

In Hitachi Province

In Shimotsuke Province

  • Kurohane
  • Ōtawara (not to be confused with Odawara)
  • Kitsuregawa
  • Utsunomiya
  • Mibu
  • Fukiage
  • Sano
  • Ashikaga

In Kōzuke Province

In Shimousa Province

In Kazusa Province

In Awa Province

  • Awa-Katsuyama
  • Tateyama
  • Hōjō

In Musashi Province

In Sagami Province

[edit] Chūbu

In Echigo Province

In Shinano Province

In Kai Province

In Etchū Province

  • Toyama

In Kaga Province

In Echizen Province

In Wakasa Province

[edit] Tōkai

In Suruga Province

In Tōtōmi Province

In Mikawa Province

In Owari Province

  • Owari
  • Inuyama (sub-domain of Owari)

In Hida Province

  • Hida-Takayama

In Mino Province

  • Naegi
  • Iwamura
  • Kanō
  • Imao (sub-domain of Owari)
  • Takasu
  • Takatomi
  • Gujōhachiman
  • Ōgaki

[edit] Kansai

In Ise Province

In Shima Province

  • Toba

In Ōmi Province

  • Miyagawa
  • Katada
  • Ōmizo
  • Hikone
  • Hikoneshinden
  • Yamakami
  • Mikami
  • Nishōji
  • Minakuchi
  • Zeze

In Yamashiro Province

In Yamato Province

In Kii Province

In Izumi Province

In Kawachi Province

In Settsu Province

In Tanba Province

  • Tanba-Kameyama
  • Sonobe
  • Yamaga
  • Ayabe
  • Fukuchiyama
  • Sasayama
  • Kaibara

In Tango Province

In Harima Province

In Tajima Province

In Awaji Province

[edit] Chūgoku

In Inaba Province

In Hōki Province

  • Yonago
  • Kurayoshi
  • Kurosaka
  • Yabase

In Izumo Province

In Iwami Province

In Bizen Province

In Mimasaka Province

  • Tsuyama
  • Tsuyamashinden
  • Mimasaka-Katsuyama

In Bitchū Province

In Bingo Province

In Aki Province

In Suo Province

In Nagato Province


[edit] Shikoku

In Awa Province

In Sanuki Province

In Iyo Province

In Tosa Province

[edit] Kyūshū

In Chikuzen Province

In Chikugo Province

In Buzen Province

In Bungo Province

In Hizen Province

In Tsushima Province

In Higo Province

In Hyūga Province

In Satsuma and Ōsumi Provinces

  • Ryūkyū - Controlled as a quasi-independent nation for much of the Edo period by Satsuma; briefly became a han from 1872-1879.

[edit] References

  • Bolitho, Harold (1974). Treasures among Men: The Fudai Daimyo in Tokugawa Japan. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • (Japanese)"Edo 300 Han HTML" (ret. 5 Feb. 2008)