Rōjū
The Rōjū (老中?), usually translated as Elder, was one of the highest-ranking government posts in Tokugawa Japan. The term refers either to individual Elders, or to the Council as a whole; under the first two shoguns, there were only two Rōjū. The number was then increased to five, and later reduced to four.
Duties
The Elders had a number of responsibilities, most clearly delineated in the 1634 ordinance that reorganized the government and created a number of new posts:
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- Relations with the Throne, the Court, and the Prince-Abbots.
- Supervision of those daimyo who controlled lands worth at least 10,000 koku.
- Managing the forms taken by official documents in official communications.
- Supervision of the internal affairs of the Shogun's domains.
- Coinage, public works, and enfiefment.
- Governmental relations and supervision of monasteries and shrines.
- Compilation of maps, charts, and other government records.
The Rōjū served not simultaneously, but in rotation, each serving the Shogun for a month at a time, communicating with the Shogun through a chamberlain, called Soba-yōnin. However, the Rōjū also served as members of the Hyōjōsho council, along with the Ō-Metsuke and representatives of various Bugyō (Commissions or Departments). As part of the Hyōjōsho, the Rōjū sometimes served a role similar to that of a supreme court, deciding succession disputes and other such disputed matters of state.
Under the reign of Tokugawa Tsunayoshi (1680–1709), however, the Rōjū lost nearly all their power, as the Shogun began to work more closely with the Tairō, Chamberlains, and others, including Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu, who held the power of a Tairō, but not the title. The Rōjū became little more than messengers, going through the motions of their proper roles as intermediaries between the Shogun and other offices, but not being able to exercise any power to change or decide policy. As Arai Hakuseki, a major Confucian poet and politician of the time wrote, "All the Rōjū did was to pass on his [Yoshiyasu's] instructions" (Sansom 141). Even after Tsunayoshi's death, the Rōjū did not regain their former power. They continued to exist, however, as a government post and a council with, officially if not in fact, all the powers and responsibilities they originally held, through the Edo period.
List of Rōjū
Note that each office-holder is listed once. Some may have served under multiple shogun, and as a result of multiple terms, the list may not fully accurate reflect the order in which the office was held. For example, Hotta Masayoshi served in 1857–58 after Abe Masahiro (1843–57), but also served earlier, and is listed earlier; he is not also listed after Abe.
- Aoyama Narishige (青山成重)(1608–1613)
- Sakai Tadatoshi (酒井忠利)(1609–1627)
- Sakai Tadayo (酒井忠世)(1610–1634)
- Doi Toshikatsu (土井利勝)(1610–1638)
- Andō Shigenobu (安藤重信)(1611–1621)
- Naitō Kiyotsugu (内藤清次)(1616–1617)
- Aoyama Tadatoshi (青山忠俊)(1616–1623)
- Inoue Masanari (井上正就)(1617–1628)
- Nagai Naomasa (永井尚政)(1622–1633)
- Abe Masataka (阿部正喬)(1711–1717)
- Kuze Shigeyuki (久世重之)(1713–1720)
- Matsudaira Nobutsune (松平信庸)(1714–1716)
- Toda Tadazane (戸田忠真)(1714–1729)
- Mizuno Tadayuki (水野忠之)(1717–1730)
- Andō Nobutomo (安藤信友)(1722–1732)
- Matsudaira Norisato (松平乗邑)(1723–1745)
- Matsudaira Tadachika (松平忠周)(1724–1728)
- Ōkubo Tsuneharu (大久保常春)(1728)
- Sakai Tadaoto (酒井忠音)(1728–1735)
- Matsudaira Nobutoki (松平信祝)(1730–1744)
- Matsudaira Terusada (松平輝貞)(1730–1745)
- Kuroda Naokuni (黒田直邦)(1732–1735)
- Honda Tadanaga (本多忠良)(1734–1746).[1]
- Toki Yoritoshi (土岐頼稔)(1742–1744)
- Sakai Tadazumi (酒井忠恭)(1744–1749)
- Matsudaira Norikata (松平乗賢)(1745–1746)
- Hotta Masasuke (堀田正亮)(1745–1761)
- Nishio Tadanao (西尾忠尚)(1746–1760)
- Honda Masayoshi (本多正珍)(1746–1758)
- Matsudaira Takechika (松平武元)(1746–1779)
- Sakai Tadayori (酒井忠寄)(1749–1764)
- Matsudaira Terutaka (松平輝高)(1758–1781)
- Inoue Masatsune (井上正経)(1760–1763)
- Akimoto Sumitomo (秋元凉朝)(1747–1764, 1765–1767)
- Matsudaira Yasutoshi (松平康福)(1762–1788)
- Abe Masasuke (阿部正右)(1764–1769)
- Itakura Katsukiyo (板倉勝清)(1769–1780)
- Tanuma Okitsugu (田沼意次)(1769–1786)
- Abe Masachika (阿部正允)(1780)
- Kuze Hiroakira (久世広明)(1781–1785)
- Mizuno Tadatomo (水野忠友)(1781–1788, 1796–1802)
- Torii Tadaoki (鳥居忠意)(1781–1793)
- Makino Sadanaga (牧野貞長)(1784–1790)
Notes
- ^ Screech, Timon. (2006). Secret Memoirs of the Shoguns: Isaac Titsingh and Japan, 1779–1822, p. 242n91. Also known as "Honda Tadayoshi"
References
- The list of rōjū is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia article.
- Sansom, George Bailey. (1963). A History of Japan: 1615–1867. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 10-ISBN 0-8047-0527-5; 13-ISBN 978-0-804-70527-1
- Screech, Timon. (2006). Secret Memoirs of the Shoguns: Isaac Titsingh and Japan, 1779–1822. London: RoutledgeCurzon. 10-ISBN 0-700-71720-X; 13-ISBN 978-0-700-71720-0
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This bureaucracy evolved in an ad hoc manner, responding to perceived needs.
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