Nagai (clan)

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Nagai Coat of Arms (Kanō)
Mon Nagai Kujira-svg.svg
Mon Nagai Takatsuki-svg.svg


Left: Shinjō / Kujira
right: Takatsuki
Residence of the Kanō-Nagai in Edo
Shinjō-Nagai residence in Edo

The Nagai ( Japanese 永 井 氏 , Nagai-shi ) were a family of the Japanese sword nobility ( Buke ) from the province of Mikawa , which was derived from Taira no Yoshitane . The Nagai residing with an income of 36,000 Koku in Kanō or 33,000 Koku in Takatsuki belonged to the smaller Fudai daimyō of the Edo period at the end of the Edo period .

genealogy

Older branch

  • Naokatsu ( 直 勝 ; 1563-1626) served Tokugawa Ieyasu , who in 1600 gave him an income of 12,000. After the Ōsaka campaign , he received first Obata ( Kōzuke ) with 17,000 Koku in 1616 , then Kasama ( Hitachi ) with 35,000 Koku and finally in 1622 Koga ( Shimousa ) with 75,000 Koku.
  • Naomasa ( 尚 政 ; 1587–1668), Naokatsu's eldest son, received Uruido ( Kazusa ) with 15,000 koku in 1619 , inherited Koga after the death of his father and was transferred to Yodo ( Yamashiro ) with 100,000 koku in 1633 .
  • Naoyuki ( 尚 征 ; 1614–1673), Naomasa's son, was moved to Miyazu ( Tango ) with 75,000 koku in 1669 .
  • Naonaga ( 尚 長 ; 1654-1680), Naoyuki's son, was killed by Naitō Tadakatsu at a ceremony in the temple Zōjō-ji . His property was confiscated by the shogunate in 1680.
  • Naomitsu ( 直 圓 ; 1671-1736), Naonaga's brother, received after his death Shinjō ( Yamato ), his descendants in 1863 Kujira (Yamato), where they resided until 1868 in a permanent house ( Jinya ). Then Vice Count .

Younger branch

  • Naohiro ( 直 敬 ; 1664-1711), a nephew of Naoyuki, founded a branch that started in 1687 in Karasuyama ( Shimotsuke ), from 1702 in Akō ( Harima ), from 1706 in Iiyama ( Shinano ), from 1711 in Iwatsuki and finally from 1756 until 1868 resided in Kanō ( Mino ) with 36,000 Koku. After 1868 Vice Count.

Another branch

  • Naokiyo ( 直 清 ; 1591–1671), a brother of Naomasa, founded a branch that resided in Takatsuki ( Settsu ) with 35,000 koku from 1649 to 1868 . After 1868 Vice Count.

Remarks

  1. Today a district of Kanra .
  2. Today a district of Ichihara .
  3. Today as Yodo-honmachi a district of Fushimi-ku (Kyōto) .
  4. Today a district of Katsuragi .
  5. Today a district of Gose .
  6. Today a district of Gifu .

Individual evidence

  1. Miura, Masayuki (ed.): Shiro to jinya. Tokoku-hen . Gakken, 2006. ISBN 978-4-05-604378-5 . P. 122.
  2. a b Miura, Masayuki (ed.): Shiro to jinya. Saikoku-hen . Gakken, 2006. ISBN 978-4-05-604379-2 . Pp. 19 and 43.
  3. Extract from the map of the district "Nihonbashi-Kita" from approx. 1850.
  4. Excerpt from the "Banchō" district map from around 1850.
  5. 永 井 尚 政 . In: デ ジ タ ル 版 日本人 名 大 辞典 + Plus at kotobank.jp. Retrieved May 29, 2015 (Japanese).
  6. 永 井 直 壮 . In: デ ジ タ ル 版 日本人 名 大 辞典 + Plus at kotobank.jp. Retrieved May 29, 2015 (Japanese).

literature

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