Inaba (clan)

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Inaba coat of arms
Inaba residence in Edo
( Jimbō-chō area )

The Inaba ( Japanese 稲 葉氏 , Inaba-shi ) were a family of the Japanese sword nobility ( Buke ), which was derived from Kōno Michitaka and thus from Iyo-shinnō, a son of the emperor Kammu . With an income of 115,000 Koku , the Inaba residing in Yodo (today: Yodo-honmachi, Fushimi-ku , Kyoto ) belonged to the larger Fudai daimyo of the Edo period .

genealogy

  • Michihiro
    • Sadamichi ( 貞 道 , 1551-1606), Michihiros son, received the fief of Hachiman ( Mino Province ) in 1585 with an income of 40,000 koku. In 1600 he was transferred to Usuki Castle ( Bungo ) with 56,000 koku. He and his descendants resided there until 1868. Then Vice Count .
    • Masanari ( 正 成 , 1571–1628) served first Oda Nobunaga , then Toyotomi Hideyoshi . He took part in the Korean campaign under the command of Kobayakawa Hideaki . In 1619 he received the Itoigawa ( Echigo ) fief with 25,000 koku. His descendants resided from 1632 on Odawara Castle ( Sagami ) with 105,000 koku, from 1685 on Takada Castle (Echigo), from 1701 on Sakura Castle ( Shimōsa ) and finally from 1723 until the Meiji Restoration at Yodo Castle ( Yamashiro ).
      • Masamichi ( 正 往 / 正 通 , 1640-1716).
        • Masatomo ( 正 知 , 1685-1729) continued the main line in Yodo. The last daimyo was
          • Masakuni ( 正邦 , 1834-1898). The family held the honorary title Nagato no kami , after 1868 the title Vice Count.
        • Masaaki ( 正 明 , 1723-1793) founded a branch line, which in 1781 with an increase to 10,000 koku received daimyo rank and in 1783 in Tateyama ( Awa ) at the site of the ruined castle a permanent house ( jinya ) built. After 1868 Vice Count.

Individual evidence

  1. Furusawa, Tsunetoshi: Kamon daichō . Kin'ensha, n.d., ISBN 4-321-31720-7 , p. 96.
  2. Excerpt from the Surugadai district map from around 1850.

literature

  • Edmond Papinot: Historical and Geographical Dictionary of Japan. Reprint of the 1910 edition. Tuttle, 1972, ISBN 0-8048-0996-8 .
  • Kato, M .: Yodo-jo. In: Miura, Masayuki (ed.): Shiro to jinya. Saikoku-hen. Gakken, 2006. ISBN 978-4-05-604379-2 .
  • Miyaji, Saichiro (Ed.): Bakumatsu shoshu saigo-no hanshu-tachi. Nishinihon-hen. Jinbunsha, 1997. ISBN 978-4-7959-1906-8 .