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References
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Principle Japanese Domains to 1871 - World StatesmenThe tozama daimyō were usually the ones the shogunate called upon to carry out any difficult or expensive undertaking. They were not taxed as such, though.<|separator|>
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Fudai and tozama daimyo - (History of Japan) - FiveableDefinition. Fudai and tozama daimyo were two categories of feudal lords in Japan during the late Sengoku period and the early Edo period.
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Political economy in Tokugawa Japan: are tozama and fudai ...Dec 16, 2012 · The two largest categories of daimyo were fudai and tozama. Lords whose ancestors had proven their loyalty to the Tokugawa before 1600 were commonly known as ...
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Japan's Richest Domains in the Edo Period | Nippon.comJun 1, 2023 · The shinpan daimyō were relatives of the main Tokugawa family, and the fudai daimyō were long-standing vassals. The tozama daimyō were those ...
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Meaning of 外様 in Japanese | RomajiDesu Japanese dictionaryDefinition of 外様 · (n) outside daimyo; non-Tokugawa daimyo →Related words: 外様大名 · outsider; one not included in the favored (favoured) group ...
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Definition of 外様 - JapanDict - Japanese Dictionarynoun. outsider, one not included in the favored group · historical termabbreviationnoun. outside daimyo, non-Tokugawa daimyo. see also:外様大名.
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Definition of 外様大名 - JapanDict - Japanese DictionaryDefinition of 外様大名. Click for more info and examples: とざまだいみょう - tozamadaimyou - daimyo not sworn to support Tokugawa before the battle of ...
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Entry Details for 外様 [tozama] - Tanoshii JapaneseDefinition and Synonyms for 外様. 1. 外装, 何かの外側か表面. Exterior, the outer side or surface of something.
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History - Tozama daimyō (外様) - Japan ReferenceFeb 3, 2023 · Tozama daimyō (外様大名, "outside daimyō") was a class of powerful magnates or daimyō (大名) considered to be outsiders by the ruler of Japan.
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The Outcome of the Battle of Sekigahara - Nakasendo WayMany of the tozama daimyo were given increased lands, however, or at least held on to their original possessions. The fudai were given extra grants, but not as ...
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Daimyo - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesFeb 15, 2022 · Tozama daimyo were daimyo who had not been vassals of Ieyasu in 1600 and their descendants. Many of them, especially the greater ones, had close ...
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Tozama daimyo - Nakasendo WayTozama daimyo (outside or enemy daimyo) were feudal lords labeled enemies by the Tokugawa regime for being on the wrong side at the battle of Sekigahara in ...
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The Polity of the Tokugawa Era - Japan SocietyThe shogun had the power to make and unmake daimyo. He could move them from one part of the country to another. He could increase or reduce the size of their ...
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After Sekigahara: Reshaping Japan | Nippon.comDec 11, 2023 · One famous example was in the Sanada clan, whose leader Masayuki joined Ieyasu's planned punitive expedition to the Aizu domain (now Fukushima ...
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Mori clan (Aki) - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesOct 13, 2017 · In 1600 they sided, however relucatantly, with Ishida Mitsunari and afterwards saw their domain and influence considerably reduced. Though ...
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Uesugi Kagekatsu - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesMay 29, 2025 · After the Tokugawa victory at the Battle of Sekigahara, Ieyasu transferred the Uesugi from their 1.2 million koku fief to Yonezawa domain ...
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Date Masamune - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesSep 30, 2017 · Masamune assumed control of the Date in 1584 with the retirement of his father. Shortly afterwards, he suffered the defection of a Date retainer ...
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Lost the war yet ended up like a "winner" !? — the Shimazu Clan ...Mar 18, 2019 · However, the Shimazu Clan (島津) managed to hold his 730,000 koku domain intact without being punished by Ieyasu, instead of suffering tragedic ...
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The Intricacies of the Tokugawa Daimyo-Han System in ... - BA NotesNov 12, 2023 · Tozama daimyo: Literally “outside lords,” these were former enemies or those who submitted to Tokugawa authority only after Sekigahara. They ...
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Tokugawa Political ControlsBecause the tozama were least trusted of the daimyo ... The shogunate could punish daimyo for ... In practice, the domains voluntarily duplicated the shogunate's ...
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[PDF] EXCERPTS FROM LAWS OF MILITARY HOUSEHOLDS (BOne of the most important Tokugawa legal documents, the Laws of Military Households (Buke Shohatto), was issued in 1615, only one year before Tokugawa. Ieyasu's ...
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CONTROL OF VASSALS - AngelfireIn exacting these terms, Ieyasu had especially in mind the loyalty of those tozama daimyo who had been vassals of the Toyotomi. The oath was the first ...
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Sankin Kotai: Edo-Period System That Controlled Daimyo | ArtelinoAug 20, 2025 · Sankin Kotai was a formal system that required Japanese feudal lords, or daimyo, to maintain a permanent residence in Edo, the capital of ...
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Sankin Kotai, - Samurai History & Culture JapanMay 26, 2024 · Tozama, or "outer" daimyo were those who were not former allies, or had reason to be of concern. They were rarely, if ever, offered governmental ...Missing: criteria classifying<|control11|><|separator|>
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Japan's Alternate Attendance System - ThoughtCoMar 2, 2019 · The alternate attendance system required daimyo to split their time between their domain and Edo. The system helped maintain peace in Japan ...
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Japan - Feudalism, Shogunate, Edo Period | BritannicaThe system also forced the daimyo—especially the potentially dangerous tozama who lived farthest away—to spend large sums of money to support two separate ...Missing: barred | Show results with:barred
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History - Satsuma Domain - Japan ReferenceDec 22, 2011 · Satsuma (薩摩藩) was a feudal domain located in modern-day Kagoshima prefecture, in southwestern Kyushu. Satsuma was ruled by the Shimazu clan.
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History - Choshu Domain - Japan ReferenceDec 21, 2011 · After the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu slashed the land holdings of the Mōri clan to roughly a quarter of their former ...Missing: tozama | Show results with:tozama
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Choshu han - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesOct 1, 2014 · Lords: Môri clan. Chôshû han was among the more prominent tozama domains in Edo period Japan. The domain was ruled by the Môri clan, who ...Missing: Mōri | Show results with:Mōri<|separator|>
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Tosa han - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesJan 24, 2020 · Tosa was a prominent tozama and kunimochi domain located on the island of Shikoku. The 200,000 koku domain was ruled by the Yamauchi clan from ...
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The Top 20 Richest Edo Period Daimyo DomainsJul 30, 2023 · The fudai daimyo were longtime trusted allies of the Tokugawa, and included the Honda, Ii, Okubo, Torii, and Sakai clans amongst others. Shinpan ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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History - Uesugi Clan | Japan ReferenceFeb 24, 2025 · After Sekigahara, Kagekatsu submitted to the Tokugawa shogunate and was reduced to the Yonezawa domain (300,000 koku) in Dewa Province. Now ...<|separator|>
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Hachisuka clan - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesAug 7, 2014 · The Hachisuka remained tozama daimyô in Tokushima through the Edo period, with 258,000 koku. Holding all of Awa province, they were one of ...
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Maeda clan - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesOct 2, 2017 · The Maeda clan was a tozama clan, but it was considered close to the shogunate, and the head was entitled to use the name "Matsudaira," the name of Tokugawa ...
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Matsumae clan - SamuraiWiki - Samurai ArchivesMar 9, 2025 · The Matsumae were an offshoot of the Takeda, founded by Kakizaki Yoshihiro (1550-1618), and descended more distantly from the Andô clan.
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[PDF] A TRANS-PACIFIC CLASH? THE ROLE OF DIPLOMATIC ...opinions, including the tozama daimyo who had been traditionally antagonistic towards the Tokugawa family. Once these daimyo had a foot in the door, it ...
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[PDF] The Restoration Movement in ChoshuThe Restoration Movement in Choshu, also known as "sonno joi" (Honor the Emperor, Expel the Barbarian), was not a "lower samurai movement" and ended in 1865.
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[PDF] Chōshū, Shin Buddhism and the Restoration of the EmperorIn the 1860s, an alliance of the Satsuma and Chōshū domains succeeded in over- throwing the Tokugawa regime, leading to the Meiji Restoration in 1868.
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[PDF] The Opening of Japan - Reforms and Reinventions - NTNUbefore 1603 were 'outcasted', as tozama daimyo. This however did not stop many of them from becoming independently influential, as did the Shimazu daimyo ...
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The Motivation of Political Leadership in the Meiji Restoration - jstorCertainly one of the most significant and positive acts of the Restoration was the decision of Tokugawa Keiki not to resist the Satsuma and Choshua forces in ...
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[PDF] The Architects of the Meiji Restoration, 1860-1868May 25, 2009 · bring to the negotiating table the hostile tozama daimyo of Satsuma and Choshu, brokering an alliance between the two that was the anchor of ...
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The Bloodless Revolution that restored the Japanese EmperorJun 17, 2024 · Kido Takayoshi (also known as Kido Koin) – From the Choshu domain, Kido was key in forming the Satcho Alliance (an alliance between Satsuma and ...
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Saigo Takamori: Hero of the Meiji Restoration - Unseen JapanJan 8, 2020 · How the "last samurai" Saigo Takamori escaped exile and changed Japan forever - before he rebelled against the new state he helped create.
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“Ishin no Sanketsu” of the Meiji Restoration - KCP InternationalSep 5, 2014 · The three Japanese nobles, Ōkubo, Saigō, and Kido, are remembered for their legacy in forming a provisional government that paved the way for ...Missing: daimyo | Show results with:daimyo<|separator|>
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Boshin War - Samurai History & Culture JapanJan 2, 2024 · The Boshin War (1868 - 1869)was the largest civil war in Japan's modern history, fought between the new Imperial Government army consisting ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Saigo Takamori: Meiji Restoration Leader and Satsuma RebellionSep 24, 2025 · Saigo Takamori (1828–1877) is known alongside Okubo Toshimichi (1830–1878) and Kido Takayoshi (1833–1877) as one of the "Three Great Leaders of ...Missing: key daimyo
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Kagoshima | Our Regional Cuisines : MAFFLocals refer to sweet potatoes by the name “kara (Tang) imo” or “kaimo” in reference to their introduction from China via Ryukyu. After its initial introduction ...<|separator|>
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Satsumaimo: Sweet Potatoes Here, There, and EverywhereDec 24, 2024 · Roasted satsumaimo, called yakiimo, set off the first boom when street vendors began offering the treats in Edo (today Tokyo) in 1793. Following ...
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[PDF] Sweet Tales of Sweet Potatoes in Edo Japan - Arrow@TU DublinAround that time, Ryūkyū was conquered and vassalized by the Satsuma domain, the southernmost division of the island of Kyūshū, in 1611. This brought. Ryūkyū ...
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THE ECONOMY OF CHOSHU ON THE EVE OF ... - J-StageChoshu's economy had 800,000 koku agricultural and 450,000 koku non-agricultural output, with 40% of income flowing out of the domain.
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Case 5 Yataro Iwasaki and Yanosuke Iwasaki - SpringerLinkMar 19, 2023 · The Tsukumo Shokai became completely independent of Tosa Domain with the abolition of the feudal domain system in 1871 and changed its name to ...
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Wealthy Western Domains in the Edo Period | Nippon.comJul 18, 2023 · In the eighteenth century, it became richer through the development of new rice fields, construction of ports, and making loans to shipping ...
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[PDF] The Meiji Restoration: The Roots of Modern Japan - Lehigh UniversityMar 29, 1999 · In order to stabilize the new government, the former feudal lords (daimyo) were required to return their land to the emperor in 1870. The return ...<|separator|>
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[PDF] Chapter 1. Meiji Revolution: Start of Full-Scale Modernization - JICAThe third category embraced “tozama daimyo” who chose to be loyal and obedient to Tokugawa only after 1600. Many of the “tozama daimyo” lords controlled large ...
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Chōshū: Heart and Soul of the Meiji Restoration - J-Stage1 Chōshū is the colloquial name for Hagi domain, under the suzerainty of the. Mōri clan, and referred to the province of Nagato (the short form of which is.
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A Comparative Study of Tokugawa Japan and Ch'ing Chination.20 The tozama daimyos and fudai daimyos21 were subject to re- moval from office by shogunate action. By 1651, 24 tozama daimyos had been removed from ...<|separator|>
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[PDF] Tokugawa Japan: An Introductory EssayThe Tokugawa period (1603-1868) had a hierarchical system, with daimyō governing their domains, and the shogunate intervening only when requested.Missing: daimyo | Show results with:daimyo
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[PDF] The Last Days of the Tokugawa Shogunate - COREThe daimyo did have full administrative control over their territory. Loyalty was exacted from religious and traditional foundations, already greatly ...
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Regional Authority during the Tokugawa Period (Chapter 3)... tozamahatamotokōkebannermenshogunate ... The biggest outside domains could assert their autonomy openly enough for scholars to treat them as quasi-independent ...
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Fudai Daimyo and the Collapse of the Tokugawa Bakufu - jstorFirst, bakufu leaders knew that fudai han forces were not very effective and preferred to use the far larger and more modernized forces of great tozama han.