Makino (clan)
The Makino ( Japanese 牧野 氏 , Makino-shi ) were a family of the Japanese sword nobility ( Buke ) from the Mikawa province , which was derived from Takechiuchi no Sukune. With an income of 80,000 Koku , the Makino last residing in Kasama ( Ibaraki Prefecture ) with an income of 80,000 Koku and Nagaoka ( Niigata Prefecture ) with 74,000 Koku belonged to the larger Fudai daimyo of the Edo period .
genealogy
Mitsunari ( 光 成 ) 1614–1637 |
Tadanari ( 忠 成 ) 1635–1674 |
Tadatoki ( 忠 辰 ) 1665-1722 |
(1a) main line | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tadanari ( 忠 成 ) 1581–1655 |
Yasunari ( 康 成 ) 1617–1658 |
Yasumichi ( 康 道 ) 1650-1720 |
Yasushige ( 康 重 ) 1677-1723 |
(1b) Branch line | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Narisada ( 成 定 ) 1526-1567 |
Yasunari ( 康 成 ) 1555-1609 |
Sadanari ( 定 成 ) 1617–1658 |
Tadakiyo ( 忠 清 ) 1620–1693 |
Tadataka ( 忠 貴 ) 1662–1706 |
(1c) Branch line | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Norinari ( 儀 成 ) 1606-1660 |
Narisada ( 成 貞 ) 1634-1712 |
Nariharu ( 成 春 ) 1682–1707 |
Narinaka ( 成 央 ) 1699-1719 |
(1d) branch line | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1a) main line
The main line resided first in 1590 in Ōgo ( province of Kōzuke ), then from 1616 in Nagamine ( Echigo ) and finally from 1618 to 1868 in Nagaoka with 74,000 koku. Last daimyo was
- Tadakatsu ( 忠毅 ; 1859–1918), after 1868 vice count .
(1b) Branch line
This branch resided from 1634 in Yoita (Echigo), from 1702 to 1868 in Komoro ( Shinano ) with 15,000 Koku. After 1868 Vice Count.
(1c) Branch line
This branch resided from 1634 as Hatamoto in a permanent house ( jinya ) in Mineyama (Echigo). It was not until 1863 that the income of this branch was increased to 11,000 koku, with which the line received Damyo rank. From 1868 Vice Count.
(1d) branch line
This branch line resided from 1683 on Castle Sekiyado ( Shimousa ), from 1705 in Yoshida (Mikawa), from 1712 in Nobeoka ( Hyūga ) and finally from 1747 to 1868 in Kasama ( Hitachi ) with 80,000 Koku. Last daimyo was
- Sadakuni ( 貞 邦 ; 1857–1916), from 1868 Sadayasu ( 貞 寧 ), vice count.
(2) Another Makino line
This line resided at Tanabe Castle from 1668 with an income of 35,000 koku.
Nobushide ( 信 成 ) 1578-1650 |
Chikashide ( 親 成 ) 1607–1677 |
Tomoshide ( 富 成 ) 1628–1693 |
Hideshige ( 英 成 ) 1620–1693 |
(2) Another line | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
literature
- Edmond Papinot: Makino. Historical and Geographical Dictionary of Japan. Reprint of the 1910 edition. Tuttle, 1972, ISBN 0-8048-0996-8 .
- Miura, Masayuki (Ed.): Shiro to jinya . Tokoku-hen. Gakken, 2006. ISBN 978-4-05-604378-5 .
- Miyaji, Saichiro (Ed.): Bakumatsu shoshu saigo-no hanshu-tachi. Higashinihon-hen. Jinbunsha, 1997. ISBN 978-4-7959-1905-1 .
Remarks
- ↑ Only temporarily.
- ↑ Today a district of Maebashi .
- ↑ Today a district of Jōetsu .
- ↑ Today a district of Nagaoka.
- ↑ Today a district of Niigata .
- ↑ Today in a district of Noda .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Furusawa, Tsunetoshi: Kamon daichō . Kin'ensha, n.d., ISBN 4-321-31720-7 , p. 78
- ↑ Excerpt from the Daimyo-koji district map from around 1850.