Iwatsuki Domain

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A rear gate from the Iwatsuki Castle site

The Iwatsuki Domain (岩槻藩 Iwatsuki-han) was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. Located in Musashi Province (parts of modern-day Saitama Prefecture), it was headquartered in Iwatsuki Castle.

In the han system, Iwatsuki 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 daimyo

  1. Kiyonaga
  2. Masanaga
  3. Tadafusa
  1. Tadatoshi
  • Abe clan (Fudai; 55,000->46,000->59,000->99,000->115,000->99,000 koku)
  1. Masatsugu
  2. Shigetsugu
  3. Sadataka
  4. Masaharu
  5. Masakuni
  • Shigetane
  • Toda clan (Fudai; 51,000 koku)
  1. Tadamasa
  1. Tadachika
  1. Nagashige
  2. Nagahiro
  • Nagai clan (Fudai; 33,000 koku)
  1. Naohiro
  2. Naohira
  3. Naonobu
  1. Tadamitsu
  2. Tadayoshi
  3. Tadatoshi
  4. Tadayasu
  5. Tadamasa
  6. Tadakata
  7. Tadayuki
  8. Tadatsura

References

Further reading

  • Bolitho, Harold. (1974). Treasures among men; the fudai daimyo in Tokugawa Japan. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Kodama Kōta 児玉幸多, Kitajima Masamoto 北島正元 (1966). Kantō no shohan 関東の諸藩. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Ōraisha.

External links

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