Kaga Domain
The Kaga Domain (加賀藩, Kaga-han) was a major feudal domain of the Tokugawa shogunate in early modern Japan, governed by the Maeda clan as tozama daimyō from its establishment in 1583 until the Meiji Restoration in 1871.[1] Centered in Kanazawa, it encompassed most of Kaga Province, significant portions of Etchū Province, and all of Noto Province—corresponding to modern-day Ishikawa Prefecture and parts of Toyama Prefecture—with an assessed rice yield (kokudaka) exceeding one million koku, rendering it the wealthiest and largest single domain under the shogunate.[2] Founded by Maeda Toshiie, a key retainer who rose through service to Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the domain achieved stability through land surveys, public order enforcement, and agricultural development that capitalized on fertile plains and coastal resources like rice and salt production.[3] Under successive Maeda lords, particularly the third, Maeda Toshitsune, it flourished culturally, with substantial investments in arts, crafts, and infrastructure that fostered enduring traditions such as Kaga lacquerware, gold leaf, and textiles, while maintaining conservative policies to preserve its privileged status despite its outer origins.[4] This wealth enabled high-ranking shogunal appointments for Maeda leaders, underscoring the domain's political influence far from Edo.[5]Overview
Geographical and Territorial Extent
The Kaga Domain's territory primarily spanned Kaga Province, the entirety of Noto Province, and significant portions of Ecchū Province in the Hokuriku region of Honshū island.[6] This area corresponds to modern Ishikawa Prefecture and the southern part of Toyama Prefecture, with Kanazawa serving as the central administrative hub in Kaga Province.[7] The domain's boundaries were shaped by historical provincial divisions established during the Nara period, encompassing approximately 4,000 square kilometers of varied landscape.[8] Geographically, the domain fronted the Sea of Japan along its northern coastline, extending from the Noto Peninsula westward, which provided natural maritime boundaries and access points.[9] To the south and east, rugged mountainous terrain, including extensions of the Japanese Alps, formed defensive barriers isolating the domain from neighboring regions like Echizen and Shinano provinces.[10] Key rivers such as the Sai and Asano flowed through the central Kanazawa area, while extensive forested highlands in the interior contributed to the region's topographic diversity and strategic depth.[9] These features—coastal exposure combined with inland elevations rising to over 1,000 meters—enhanced the domain's defensibility and internal cohesion.[8]Economic Scale and Koku Assessment
The Kaga Domain possessed an official kokudaka rating of 1,025,000 koku, equivalent to the annual rice yield from that volume of paddy fields, establishing it as the wealthiest domain ruled by a single daimyō throughout the Edo period.[11] This assessment stemmed from comprehensive cadastral surveys conducted under the Tokugawa regime, which fixed domains' productive capacities to determine military and fiscal obligations.[12] As a tozama domain, Kaga's rating surpassed all other non-shogunal holdings, including prominent fudai and collateral houses, underscoring the Maeda clan's exceptional economic position despite their outsider status post-Sekigahara.[2] The nominal kokudaka understated the domain's true economic output, as daimyō routinely concealed portions of arable land—known as kenmitsu fields—and diversified revenues from forestry, mining, and regional commerce to mitigate tax burdens and alternate attendance costs.[12] For Kaga, these practices amplified liquidity, with effective yields estimated at 1.03 million koku or higher in equivalent terms by late Edo evaluations.[2] This hidden prosperity ensured the Maeda upheld sankin-kōtai mandates—requiring lavish processions and Edo residences every other year—without incurring bankruptcy, a feat unattainable for most domains under 500,000 koku.[2] In comparison, the Tokugawa shogunate's direct holdings totaled approximately 4 million koku, dwarfing Kaga but distributed across multiple administrative units rather than consolidated under one lord.[12] Kaga's scale thus conferred de facto financial autonomy, rivaling shogunal branches in per-domain wealth and insulating the Maeda from over-reliance on central subsidies or loans during fiscal strains like the Kyōhō Reforms.[2] This preeminence, unchallenged from the early 17th century onward, reflected rigorous land surveys under Maeda Toshiie and successors, prioritizing verifiable agrarian baselines over inflated claims.[11]Historical Foundations
Establishment under Maeda Toshiie
Maeda Toshiie (1538–1599), initially a retainer of Oda Nobunaga since 1551, rose through military service in key battles including Okehazama in 1560, Anegawa in 1570, and Nagashino in 1575, earning progressive land grants such as 30,000 koku in Echizen Province by 1575 and Noto Province by 1581.[13] Following Nobunaga's death in 1582, Toshiie pragmatically allied with Toyotomi Hideyoshi during the Shizugatake Campaign of 1583 against former Oda ally Shibata Katsuie, a decision rooted in Sengoku-era survival strategies amid shifting power dynamics.[13] This loyalty secured him control over Kaga Province, previously embroiled in prolonged Ikkō-ikki uprisings that Nobunaga had struggled to suppress, with Hideyoshi's forces enabling the reassignment of these fertile lands totaling around 830,000 koku alongside Noto.[3][14] Upon entering Kanazawa on June 14, 1583, Toshiie designated it as the administrative base for his expanding holdings, initiating construction and fortification of Kanazawa Castle to consolidate authority over fragmented territories.[3] He pursued initial stabilization through land surveys to assess productivity, enforcement of Hideyoshi's sword hunt edict to curb peasant militarization, and military suppressions, including clashes with rival Sassa Narimasa in the Kanazawa area in 1584 and the capture of Toyama Castle in Etchū Province in 1585, forging alliances with local powers to integrate resistant elements.[13][3] These actions causally linked his prior battlefield alliances to the domain's foundational security, transforming Kaga from a hotspot of sectarian rebellion into a unified fief under Maeda oversight by the late 1580s. Appointed one of Hideyoshi's Five Elders (go-tairō) in 1598 to safeguard the young Toyotomi Hideyori, Toshiie maintained a stabilizing neutrality amid regency tensions until his death from illness on April 27, 1599, at Fushimi Castle.[13][3] His passing created a power vacuum that accelerated rivalries, yet the Maeda clan's inherited strategic restraint—exemplified by his widow Matsu's diplomatic hostage role and son Toshinaga's alignment with Tokugawa Ieyasu—ensured non-participation in the decisive Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, preserving Kaga's autonomy and facilitating its integration into the emerging Tokugawa order without punitive reconfiguration.[3]Consolidation and Early Challenges
Following the death of Maeda Toshiie in 1599, his eldest son Toshinaga (1562–1658) assumed leadership of the Kaga Domain, inheriting its substantial holdings assessed at over 1 million koku. To avert internal disputes and demonstrate orderly succession to the nascent Tokugawa shogunate, Toshinaga initially shared administrative responsibilities with his younger brother Toshimasu, who was granted a cadet branch domain (Daishōji) carved from the family's Etchū territories, while Toshinaga retained the core Kaga, Noto, and main Etchū lands.[15] This division stabilized the clan's internal structure, preventing factional strife that had plagued other powerful houses during the regime change, and aligned with shogunal preferences for daimyō families to maintain unity without over-centralization that might invite intervention.[16] Toshinaga further solidified the domain's viability under Tokugawa oversight by actively supporting Ieyasu at the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, contributing forces that helped secure the shogunate's victory; in recognition, his holdings were augmented by confiscated lands, elevating the assessment to approximately 1.25 million koku by 1605.[15] Such demonstrations of loyalty were essential for a *tozama* daimyō like the Maeda, whose vast wealth rivaled the shogun's own, as failure to affirm allegiance could have prompted punitive reductions or reassignments, as occurred with other non-Tokugawa loyalists. Concurrently, Toshinaga oversaw the development of subsidiary strongholds, such as Takaoka Castle in 1609, to integrate peripheral territories more firmly into the domain's administrative network, enhancing defensive cohesion without challenging central authority.[17] In the early 17th century, domain officials under Toshinaga conducted comprehensive land surveys (kenchi) to standardize tenure rights and tax obligations, shifting from variable annual reapportionments—prone to disputes and inefficiencies in neighboring regions—to fixed assessments (sōkō nengu) calibrated to empirical measurements of actual yields rather than nominal quotas.[18] This reform, implemented amid broader Tokugawa efforts to enforce fiscal predictability, mitigated risks of peasant unrest by providing cultivators with tenure security and predictable burdens, contrasting with volatile systems elsewhere that exacerbated revolts through arbitrary hikes tied to short-term harvests.[18][19] By prioritizing verifiable field data over theoretical allocations, these measures fostered administrative efficiency and long-term revenue stability, enabling the domain to weather early bakufu-mandated audits without significant upheaval.[18]Daimyō Succession
List of Daimyō
The Maeda clan's rule over Kaga Domain featured a stable succession of 14 daimyō from 1583 to 1871, marked by the absence of shogunal depositions and reliance on primogeniture or adoptions within the family, which preserved continuity amid occasional early deaths and internal disturbances.[20][21] The domain's kokudaka peaked at 1.2 million koku in the early 17th century before stabilizing at around 1.025 million koku after territorial divisions created the Toyama (100,000 koku) and Daishōji (70,000 koku) branch domains under the second daimyō.[21] Leadership eras varied in focus, with notable cultural patronage under the third daimyō Maeda Toshitsune (r. 1605–1658), who advanced administrative reforms and arts support, and fiscal strategies under the fourth daimyō Maeda Tsunanori (r. 1645–1723), emphasizing crafts, scholarship, and prudent governance to sustain the domain's wealth.[20]| Generation | Name | Tenure | Kokudaka |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Maeda Toshinaga | 1599–1605 | 1,200,000 koku |
| 2 | Maeda Toshitsune | 1605–1639 | 1,200,000 koku |
| 3 | Maeda Mitsutaka | 1639–1645 | 1,030,000 koku |
| 4 | Maeda Tsunanori | 1645–1723 | 1,030,000 koku |
| 5 | Maeda Yoshinori | 1723–1745 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 6 | Maeda Munetoki | 1745–1746 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 7 | Maeda Shigehiro | 1746–1753 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 8 | Maeda Shigeharu | 1753 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 9 | Maeda Shigehisa | 1753–1771 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 10 | Maeda Harunaga | 1771–1802 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 11 | Maeda Naruhiro | 1802–1822 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 12 | Maeda Naritaka | 1822–1866 | 1,025,000 koku |
| 13 | Maeda Yoshinori | 1866–1871 | 1,025,000 koku |
Genealogical Lineage
The Maeda clan's genealogical lineage for the Kaga Domain emphasized primogeniture, ensuring direct patrilineal descent from founder Maeda Toshiie (1538–1599) through fourteen successive daimyō until the domain's abolition in 1871 under Maeda Nariyasu (1813–1874).[4] This continuity preserved the family's tozama status and administrative authority over the vast territory, with the main line headquartered at Kanazawa Castle.[5] To avert potential succession crises arising from childless heirs or premature deaths, adoptions from within the extended Maeda kin were implemented, as seen in the early transition where Maeda Toshitsune (1593–1658), a younger son of Toshiie, was positioned as successor to his elder brother Toshinaga.[22] Such practices increased over time, with adoptee successions rising in the Kaga Maeda domain while eldest-son inheritance remained stable around 50-57 percent. Shogunal ratification was required for these changes, typically granted to candidates exhibiting competence in domain governance to maintain stability.[23] Collateral branches fortified dynastic resilience: Maeda Toshitsune, upon retirement, detached sub-domains for his younger sons, creating the Toyama branch (100,000 koku) under second son Maeda Toshitsugu and the Daishōji branch (70,000 koku) under his third son, thereby distributing holdings while retaining Maeda oversight across former Kaga territories.[23] These cadet lines operated semi-autonomously but reinforced the parent clan's influence until the Meiji era.[5]Governance and Administration
Internal Domain Structure
The governance of Kaga Domain relied on a hierarchical bureaucracy centered in Kanazawa, where the daimyō was advised by karō, senior retainers responsible for executive functions. These karō, typically numbering four to six at any time, were divided into specialized bugyō roles covering financial administration (kanjō bugyō), military command (gunji bugyō), and judicial proceedings, with duties often rotating to prevent factionalism and ensure accountability.[24] This system, refined under Maeda Tsunanori (daimyō 1705–1724), incorporated input from the Kaga Hachike—eight elite retainer houses with stipends over 10,000 koku each—who served as toshiyaku (elders) and held precedence over karō in policy councils, drawing on their control of ninji gumi (retainer cohorts) for broad administrative oversight.[24] [25] Local control extended through district and village levels, where kimoiri (village heads) managed day-to-day affairs under higher group heads (kumigashira) and regional supervisors, forming a layered chain from Kanazawa to rural hamlets.[26] To enforce order and secure revenue, officials conducted periodic empirical audits using cadastral surveys and inspection tours, exposing malfeasance such as tax evasion or embezzlement—practices more systematic in Kaga than in smaller domains due to its vast scale and detailed record-keeping, as evidenced by surviving han documents.[27] These mechanisms prioritized verifiable assessments over self-reporting, reducing opportunities for local corruption through cross-verification by rotating inspectors. Sub-regions like Noto Province featured semi-autonomous magistrate offices (bugyō-sho), staffed by Kanazawa-appointed officials familiar with coastal and mountainous terrains, which integrated local intelligence into central directives while upholding uniform tax collection and dispute resolution.[28] This decentralization mitigated the challenges of administering over 1 million koku across disparate geographies, fostering administrative resilience without diluting daimyō authority.Relations with the Tokugawa Shogunate
The Maeda lords of Kaga Domain, despite their tozama classification as outer lords who submitted to Tokugawa authority after the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, cultivated enduring loyalty through marital alliances and active support for shogunal initiatives. Maeda Toshitsune, the third daimyō, married a daughter of the second shōgun Tokugawa Hidetada in 1613, forging kin ties that bolstered the clan's standing.[29] The domain contributed forces to the shōgunate's sieges of Osaka Castle in 1614–1615, affirming allegiance during a pivotal consolidation of Tokugawa power.[29] Such deference, combined with restraint from overt power plays, allowed the Maeda to retain their vast holdings—assessed at 1,022,700 koku, second only to the shōgunate itself—without redistribution or reduction, preserving semi-autonomy within the bakuhan framework.[30] Adherence to the sankin-kōtai system exemplified this pragmatic compliance, requiring alternate attendance in Edo every other year alongside permanent residence of the daimyō's family as hostages. Despite the domain's remote position in north-central Honshū, necessitating arduous overland travel, early daimyō like Toshinaga dispatched kin such as his mother Matsu to Edo in 1600 as a gesture of submission, while Toshitsune undertook repeated journeys, including in 1631.[29] The immense koku rating funded lavish processions, Edo mansion upkeep, and retinue expenses—strains that even afflicted the wealthiest domains—through streamlined taxation and rice surpluses, averting peasant revolts that plagued less efficient han.[30][18] The Maeda aligned with shogunal enforcement of domestic controls, participating in katanagari sword hunts from 1638 onward to curb peasant armaments and complying with the suppression of Christianity after the 1614 expulsion edict and Shimabara Rebellion of 1637–1638.[31] Initial local tolerance of Christian missions in Kanazawa under Maeda protection yielded to rigorous bans, mirroring national policy to eliminate foreign influences deemed subversive.[31] This avoidance of resistance, unlike rebellious tozama domains facing attainer, shielded Kaga from confiscation; instead, the clan channeled economic surplus into non-military cultural endeavors, subtly asserting independence while signaling harmless intent to vigilant shogunal overseers wary of their resource potential.[4]Economic Foundations
Agricultural Production and Taxation
The agricultural economy of Kaga Domain centered on wet-rice cultivation across extensive paddy fields in the fertile alluvial plains of central Kaga (modern southern Ishikawa Prefecture), which sustained its nominal kokudaka rating of 1,023,000 koku established after land surveys (kenchi) in the early 17th century under Maeda Toshinaga.[32] This rating, measured in hypothetical annual rice yields, positioned Kaga as the Tokugawa shogunate's largest domain and reflected investments in irrigation from rivers like the Tedori and Jintsu, enabling double-cropping in favorable years.[33] Actual production often surpassed the assessed figure due to soil fertility and technological adaptations, such as improved seed strains and water control, though environmental factors like flooding periodically reduced outputs to 70-80% of potential in affected villages.[18] Taxation adhered to the kokudaka system, where peasants (hyakushō) delivered a fixed proportion—typically 40-50% of the assessed yield—as nengu rice tax to domain granaries, with the remainder allocated for household subsistence and seed stock.[12] By the mid-17th century, Kaga transitioned to permanent fixed assessments (sadamegata kokudaka), halting annual re-evaluations that had sparked disputes in earlier decades; this reform, implemented around 1630-1650, stabilized revenues at roughly 500,000-600,000 koku annually after samurai stipends and administrative costs, but it risked underestimating yields inflated by unreported improvements, thereby limiting domain fiscal adjustments.[18] Dry-field crops like millet, barley, and soybeans supplemented rice in upland areas, comprising about 20% of arable land, while coastal fisheries in Noto Peninsula villages contributed auxiliary taxes in kind, equivalent to 50,000-100,000 koku when converted, diversifying output amid rice monoculture vulnerabilities.[34] In response to famines, such as the Tenmei crisis (1782-1788), Kaga authorities maintained domain-wide relief granaries (shōhō or gofuku) stocked via mandatory village contributions of 5-10% of tax rice, enabling controlled distributions that mitigated starvation without sole dependence on shogunal aid, unlike smaller domains.[35] These measures, formalized in edicts from the 1720s onward, prioritized empirical yield monitoring over ad-hoc exemptions, preserving long-term productivity; for instance, post-Tenmei reforms expanded granary networks to 200+ sites, holding reserves for up to two years' shortfall in deficit years.[36] This self-reliant approach contrasted with shogunate-reliant han, underscoring Kaga's administrative capacity derived from its scale.[19]Crafts, Trade, and Financial Strategies
The Maeda lords sponsored workshops in Kanazawa and surrounding areas to produce gold leaf, lacquerware, and silk-dyed textiles, aiming to buffer against rice yield fluctuations through non-agricultural exports. Gold leaf manufacturing, begun late in the 16th century under Maeda Toshiie, expanded into a major Edo-period industry, with domain-commissioned artisans supplying gilded items to elite consumers in Edo and Osaka markets.[37][38] Similarly, lacquerware production in Wajima and Yamanaka received Maeda patronage from the early 17th century onward, under lords like Toshinaga Maeda, yielding durable, intricately decorated wares traded via merchant networks to urban centers despite shogunal trade controls.[39][40] Silk-related crafts, including Kaga yūzen dyeing refined in the mid-Edo period from Kyoto methods, utilized high-grade raw silk from Gokayama and produced vibrant kimono fabrics as domain specialties, generating revenues through sales to Edo and regional demand areas.[41][32] The domain enforced production oversight akin to monopolies on these outputs, pragmatically circumventing bakufu restrictions on private commerce by integrating them into official tribute and licensed merchant channels, which sustained export flows without direct confrontation.[42] Financial prudence underpinned these efforts, with Kaga achieving persistent budget surpluses—uncommon among peers—via restrained court expenditures in Edo, tax rate stabilization post-reclamation drives, and reinvestment in industrial expansion that elevated the domain's assessed yield to over 1 million koku by the mid-Edo period.[2][18] Land reclamation initiatives, coupled with craft revenues, offset occasional deficits from sankin-kōtai obligations, fostering a diversified economy that ranked Kaga as Japan's wealthiest domain throughout much of the era.[2][43]Social and Cultural Dimensions
Class Hierarchy and Samurai Role
The social hierarchy of Kaga Domain adhered to the Tokugawa-era shi-nō-kō-shō system, placing samurai at the pinnacle as the ruling warrior class, followed by peasants (primarily farmers), artisans, and merchants at the base, with legal prohibitions on inter-class marriage and occupation changes to preserve order.[44] This structure mirrored Confucian ideals of status differentiation, enforced through domain regulations that tied privileges like residence and attire to rank, ensuring samurai dominance over economic production controlled by commoners.[44] Samurai constituted approximately 6-7% of the domain's population on average across Tokugawa domains, though estimates for large holdings like Kaga's—spanning over 1 million koku—suggest a similar proportion amid a total populace exceeding 800,000, concentrated in administrative centers such as Kanazawa.[45] Their stipends, disbursed in rice or equivalent value from domain revenues, were hierarchically scaled by hereditary rank within the retainer bands (karō at the top receiving thousands of koku, lower gokenin far less), which dictated not only income but also duties in bureaucratic oversight of taxation and infrastructure.[44] While nominally governed by bushidō codes stressing loyalty (chūgi) and martial discipline, the absence of major conflicts post-1600 redirected samurai obligations toward civilian administration, with Maeda lords prioritizing retainers' productivity in governance to sustain the domain's fiscal stability over idle warrior ethos.[44] This merit-influenced allocation of roles and stipends reinforced hierarchical loyalty but perpetuated tensions, as mid-tier samurai faced stagnant advancement amid fixed quotas.[46] Peasants, forming the bulk of the population outside urban cores, bore primary obligations via annual rice levies fixed at around 40% of yields and corvée labor for castle maintenance, roads, and flood control, with village headmen (shōya) enforcing quotas through collective responsibility and domain audits.[47] Compliance stemmed from systemic coercion, including fines, land confiscation, and occasional uprisings quelled by samurai intervention, rather than ideological consent, as evidenced by recurrent peasant petitions for levy reductions during famines in the 18th and 19th centuries.[48] Artisans and merchants, though legally subordinate, contributed through specialized taxes and guild oversight, their roles confined to supporting samurai consumption without challenging the class order.[47]Patronage of Arts and Cultural Developments
The Maeda lords systematically sponsored Noh theater, a dramatic art favored by samurai elites, establishing Kanazawa as one of Japan's rare centers where performances extended to commoners under their patronage during the Edo period. This support preserved and disseminated Noh traditions, with the clan's connoisseurship ensuring troupes and stages were maintained, thereby reinforcing cultural continuity amid feudal constraints.[5][49] Tea ceremony practices thrived as a core samurai accomplishment under Maeda oversight, symbolizing refined power and hospitality; lords like Toshitsune allocated significant resources to masters and utensils, integrating chanoyu into domain rituals for guest entertainment and prestige display. Concurrently, the development of Kenrokuen Garden over two centuries from the 17th century onward exemplified landscape artistry, evolving from a private Maeda retreat into a meticulously engineered space blending ponds, trees, and pavilions to embody aesthetic ideals of harmony.[50][51][1][52] Such investments, drawing from the domain's vast wealth exceeding 1 million koku, yielded strategic benefits including elevated national prestige through attracted artisans and enduring artifacts like preserved Noh masks and tea ware, which bolstered retainer morale and shogunate relations by projecting cultured authority rather than mere military might. While precise budgetary allocations remain sparsely documented, the third lord Toshitsune's documented emphasis on arts over expansion correlates with the persistence of these traditions into modern Ishikawa Prefecture, outlasting many contemporaneous domains' cultural outputs.[4][2][1]Military and Defensive Posture
Castles and Fortifications
Kanazawa Castle served as the central fortress of the Kaga Domain, with initial construction ordered by Maeda Toshiie in 1583 following his establishment of control over the region.[53] After the Maeda clan's allegiance to the victorious Tokugawa side at the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, subsequent fortifications emphasized stability, incorporating wide moats dug as early as 1580 and extensive stone walls designed for defense.[54] The castle's main keep, originally a six-story structure, burned down in 1602 and was not rebuilt, reflecting a shift toward palace-like administrative functions amid the era's prolonged peace.[55] Multiple fires throughout the Edo period necessitated repeated reconstructions, particularly of stone walls from the mid-17th to early 19th centuries, employing techniques such as uchikomi-hagi (hammered-in masonry) for durability against earthquakes and weathering.[56] These walls, featuring loopholes for archers and varied stacking methods, represented advanced engineering adapted to local terrain, including flood-prone riverside locations, though their primary role evolved into symbolic displays of daimyō authority rather than frontline defense.[56][54] Secondary fortifications bolstered domain control, including Komatsu Castle, located downstream along the Tedori River for strategic oversight of western approaches, redesigned in the early 17th century as a "floating" complex of twelve interconnected islands enhanced by moats and earthen ramparts.[57] This site, utilized as a retirement residence by Maeda lords such as Toshitsune, incorporated national artisan expertise for its elaborate water-based defenses, yet saw limited military use during the pacified Edo era.[57] Earlier sites like the Oyama fortification, precursor to Kanazawa Castle established in the late 16th century, were integrated into the primary stronghold, prioritizing centralized power over dispersed outposts.[58] Overall, maintenance focused on resilience to natural disasters over offensive capabilities, underscoring the fortifications' role in administrative prestige amid minimal external threats.[55]