Inoue (clan)

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Inoue coat of arms in Tsurumai and Takaoka (Inoue falcon feathers)
Inoue coat of arms in Shimotsuma (falcon feathers in five clasps)
An Inoue residence in Edo

The Inoue ( Japanese 井上 氏 , Inoue-shi ) were a family of the Japanese sword nobility ( Buke ) from the Mikawa province , which was derived from Minamoto no Yorisue ( Seiwa-Genji ). With an income of 60,000 Koku , the Inoue , who last resided in Tsurumai ( Chiba Prefecture ), were among the larger Fudai daimyo of the Edo period .

genealogy

Main branch

The main branch resided successively from 1623 in Yokosuka ( Tōtōmi ) with 55,000 Koku, from 1645 in Kasama ( Hitachi ), from 1692 in Gujō ( Mino ), from 1697 in Kameyama ( Tamba ), from 1702 in Shimodate (Hitachi), from 1703 in Kasama, from 1747 in Iwakitaira ( Mutsu ) with 60,000 Koku, from 1758 in Hamamatsu (Tōtōmi), from 1817 in Tanagura (Mutsu), from 1836 in Tatebayashi ( Kōzuke ), from 1845 again in Hamamatsu, and finally shortly before the Meiji Restoration only in a permanent house ( jinya ) in Tsurumai ( Kazusa ). After 1868 Vice Count .

Secondary branches

A secondary branch was established in Shimotsuma ( Shimousa ) from 1712 . He resided there in a permanent house until 1868 with 10,000 koku. After 1868 Vice Count.

Another branch resided in a permanent house in Takaoka ( Shimousa ) from 1640 until 1868 with 14,000 koku. After 1868 Vice Count.

Remarks

  1. Today a district of Ichihara .
  2. Today a district of Kakegawa .
  3. Part of Chikusei today .
  4. Today a part of Narita .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Miura, Masayuki (ed.): Shiro to jinya. Tokoku-hen. Gakken, 2006. ISBN 978-4-05-604378-5 .
  2. Excerpt from the map "Atago-shita" from approx. 1850.

literature

  • Papinot, Edmond: Historical and Geographical Dictionary of Japan. Reprinted by Tuttle, 1972 edition of 1910 edition. ISBN 0-8048-0996-8 .