Matsudaira (Fujii)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arms of Ueda-Fujii (Ueda- Stockrosen )
Arms of the Kaminoyama-Fujii (cloudy Sauerklee )
Ueda-Fujii residence in Edo

The Fujii-Matsudaira ( Japanese 藤井 松 平 家 , Fujii Matsudaira-ke ) were a family of the Japanese sword nobility ( Buke ), which was derived from Matsudaira Toshinaga , and who - residing in Fujii ( Mikawa Province ) - named themselves after this place. With an income of 53,000 Koku , the Fujii , who last resided in Ueda ( Nagano Prefecture ), were among the larger Fudai daimyo of the Edo period .

genealogy

  • Nobukazu ( 信 一 ; 1539-1624) accompanied Tokugawa Ieyasu to the Kantō area and settled in Nunokawa ( Shimousa ). In 1601 he was transferred to Tsuchiura ( Hitachi ) with 30,000 koku. He adopted Nobuyoshi from the Sakurai Matsudaira and gave him his property.
    • Nobuyoshi ( 信 吉 ; 1580-1620), Nobukazu's adopted son, took over from this Tsuchiura and was then transferred to Takasaki ( Kōzuke ) with 50,000 Koku in 1617 and finally in 1619 to Sasayama ( Tamba ).
      • Tadakuni ( 忠 国 ; 1597–1669), Nobuyoshi's eldest son, founded the main branch. This was moved from Sasayama in 1640 to Akashi ( Harima ) with 70,000 koku.
        • Nobuyuki ( 信 之 ; 1631–1686), son, was transferred to Kōriyama ( Yamato ) in 1679 and to Koga ( Shimousa ) in 1685 .
          • Tadayuki ( 忠 之 ; 1674–1695), son, lost his post in 1693 due to mental illness.
          • Nobumichi ( 信通 ; 1676-1722), brother Tadayukis, had Okidome (Yamato) 10,000 Koku and took over after his appointment to Head of Niwase ( Bitchū ) 20,000 Koku and then in 1697 Kaminoyama ( Dewa ) 30,000 Koku. This branch resided there until 1868. Then vice count .
      • Tadaharu ( 忠 晴 ; 1598–1669), second eldest son, founded a secondary branch, which from 1643 in Tanaka ( Suruga ) with 18,000 Koku, from 1644 in Kakegawa ( Tōtōmi ) with 28,000 Koku and from 1648 in Kameyama (Tamba).
        • Tadaaki ( 忠 昭 ; 1644–1683), second son
        • Tadachika ( 忠 周 ; 1661–1728), illegitimate third son of Tadaharu and later adopted by Tadaaki, took over Kameyama after his death and resided in Iwatsuki ( Musashi ) with 38,000 koku from 1680 , in Izushi ( Tajima ) from 1697 and finally from 1704 to 1868 resided in Ueda ( Shinano ) with 53,000 Koku. Then Vice Count.

Remarks

  1. Today a district of Anjō .
  2. Today a district of Ikaruga .
  3. Today a district of Okayama .
  4. Today a district of Fujieda .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Miura, Masayuki (ed.): Shiro to jinya. Tokoku-hen. Gakken, 2006. ISBN 978-4-05-604378-5 , pp. 130 and 42.
  2. Excerpt from the map of the district "Daimyo koji" from approx. 1850.
  3. 松 平 信 吉 . In: デ ジ タ ル 版 日本人 名 大 辞典 + Plus at kotobank.jp. Retrieved May 17, 2015 (Japanese).
  4. 松 平 忠 周 . In: デ ジ タ ル 版 日本人 名 大 辞典 + Plus at kotobank.jp. Retrieved May 17, 2015 (Japanese).

literature

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