Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Yanagawa Domain (Mutsu)

Yanagawa Domain
梁川藩
under Tokugawa shogunate Japan
Area
 • Coordinates37°51′18″N 140°36′40″E / 37.855053°N 140.610993°E / 37.855053; 140.610993
 • TypeHan
Historical eraEdo period
Today part ofFukushima Prefecture
Site of Yanagawa Castle (梁川城) in Yanagawa, now Date, Fukushima Prefecture
From Eight Views of Yanagawa (1812), by Kakizaki Hakyō (Hakodate City Central Library)

Yanagawa Domain (梁川藩, Yanagawa-han) was an intermittent and short-lived feudal domain in Edo period Japan, located in Mutsu Province, in Yanagawa, now the city of Date, Fukushima Prefecture.[1]

History

The domain was created in Tenna 3 (1683), with Matsudaira Yoshimasa, third son of Tokugawa Mitsutomo, its first daimyō.[1] After third lord Matsudaira Yoshizane died in 1727 without heir, the domain briefly lapsed, but four months later was renewed under Matsudaira Michiharu, seventh son of Tokugawa Tsunanari, before being abolished the following year, the territory reverting to the bakufu.[1] Eighty years later, in 1807, Matsumae Akihiro was transferred from Ezo-chi to the recreated domain, where the clan was based until his return to Matsumae in 1821, at which point the domain was once again abolished, this time for good, the territory reverting once more to the bakufu.[1]

List of daimyō

# Name Tenure Courtesy title Court Rank kokudaka
1 Matsudaira Yoshimasa (松平義昌) 1683– 30,000 koku
2 Matsudaira Yoshikata (松平義方) 30,000 koku
3 Matsudaira Yoshizane (松平義真) –1727 30,000 koku
4 Matsudaira Michiharu (松平通春) 1727–1728 30,000 koku
# Name Tenure Courtesy title Court Rank kokudaka
1 Matsumae Akihiro (松前章広) 1807–1821 9,000 koku

References

  1. ^ a b c d 梁川藩 [Yanagawa Domain]. Nihon Daimyō Daijiten 日本人名大辞典 (in Japanese). Kodansha. 2001.