Asada Domain ( 麻田藩 , Asada-han ) was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan, in what is now northern Osaka Prefecture . It was located in Teshima and Kawabe Districts of Settsu Province and was centered around Asada jin'ya in what is now part of the city of Toyonaka, Osaka . It was ruled in its entire history by a branch of the Aoki clan . Asada Domain was dissolved in the abolition of the han system in 1871 and is now part of Okayama Prefecture.
12-559: Asada Domain was founded by Aoki Kazushige , whose father Aoki Shigenao had served as a vassal of Toki Yorinari , the shugo of Mino Province in the Sengoku period . Aoki Kazushige later went into the service of the Imagawa clan , and after the Battle of Okehazama , entered the service of Tokugawa Ieyasu . After this younger brother died at the Battle of Shizugatake , he ran away from
24-504: A kokudaka of 14,000 koku and made a daimyō . The domain remained under the rule of the Aoki clan until the Meiji era ; however, it was reduced to 12,000 koku in 1617 when Aoki Kazushige established his younger brother Aoki Kanao as a 2000 koku hatamoto and head of a cadet branch of the clan. In 1619, he adopted Kanao's son Shigekane as his successor. In 1926, the territories of
36-588: A daimyō is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Toki clan The Toki clan ( 土岐氏 , Toki-shi ) is a Japanese kin group. The Toki claim descent from Minamoto no Yorimitsu and the Seiwa Genji . As governors of Mino Province during the Muromachi period , Toki was the seat of the Toki clan. The Toki founded Zen Buddhist temples, including Shōhō-ji and Sōfuku-ji in
48-574: A Japanese samurai warrior of in the Sengoku period . Yoshiyori was a son of Toki Masafusa . After the death of his father, Yoshiyori became head of the Toki clan in Mino Province . He had Ōkuwa Castle built. Yorinari was the father of Toki Jirō who was killed by Saitō. , Yoshiyori was the father of Toki Yoshitatsu (1527–1561), who went into exile in 1542. Yorinari was forced out of Mino by Saitō Dōsan . This biography of
60-493: The han system , Asada Domain consisted of several discontinuous territories calculated to provide the assigned kokudaka , based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields, g. Toki Yorinari Toki Yorinari ( 土岐 頼芸 , 1502–1582 ) , also known as Toki Yoriaki , was a Japanese samurai warrior of in the Sengoku period . He was shugo of Mino Province . He may be equivalent to Toki Yoshiyori ( 土岐 頼芸 , 1502–1583 ) , also described as
72-730: The Tokugawa clan and became a vassal of Nawa Nagahide instead. He entered the service of Toyotomi Hideyoshi on Nawa Nagahide's death. During the Siege of Osaka in 1614, he was sent by Toyotomi Hideyori as a messenger to Sunpu for peace negotiations, but was detained in Kyoto and made a prisoner of war. However, after the success of Tokugawa forces over the Toyotomi clan , he was awarded with territories in Settsu, Bitchū and Iyo Province with
84-531: The city of Gifu . Minamoto no Mitsunobu , a fourth generation descendant of Yorimitsu, was installed in Toki; and he took the name Toki Yorisada , whose maternal grandfather was Hōjō Sadatoki , shikken of the Kamakura shogunate , fought against the Southern Dynasty with Ashikaga Takauji . From the Muromachi period to the Sengoku period , the Toki clan ruled Mino Province. Toki Yasuyuki
96-459: The construction of the Ōbaku School temple of Bussunichi-ji Temple during the Kanbun era. Measures encouraging the production of sake and oil as clan monopolies, and issuing han bills were ineffective. Following the Meiji restoration , Asada Domain became "Asada Prefecture" with the abolition of the han system in 1871, and was subsequently incorporated into Osaka Prefecture. The Aoki clan
108-568: The domain Iyo were traded for territories in Settsu to consolidated the domain's holdings. Shigekane had only a daughter, so he adopted a son of the Sakai clan as his heir. Aoki Shigemasa was close confidant of Shogun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi , and before his death in 1693, the Shogun despatched his person physician as a mark of favor. In the mid-Edo period, but the clan's finances were in difficulties due to
120-566: Was shugo (governor) of Mino, Owari and Ise . When shōgun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu had tried to take Owari from him, Yasuyuki refused and fought for two years (1389–1391). Toki Shigeyori sided with the Yamana clan during the Ōnin War and, in 1487, invaded the southern part of Ōmi Province . The principal line of the Toki lost their possessions in 1542 during the civil wars that decimated Mino Province. Toki Yorinari (then governor of Mino)
132-501: Was awarded the rank of viscount ( shishaku ) in the kazoku peerage in 1884. The site of the jin'ya was the former Hotarugaike Public Hall on the west side of Hankyu Takarazuka Main Line Hotarugaike Station . It is designated as a Toyonaka city historic site, but there is no remnant of the former structure, and stone monument has been erected in one corner of the site public hall. As with most domains in
SECTION 10
#1732790098595144-930: Was defeated by Saitō Dōsan . Toki Sadamasa (1551–1597) earned distinction fighting in the forces of Tokugawa Ieyasu 's army. In 1590, he was named head of Sōma Domain (10,000 koku ) in Shimōsa Province ). Sadamasa's son Toki Sadayoshi (1579–1618) was moved in 1617 to Takatsuki Domain (30,000 koku ) in Settsu Province . In 1619, his descendants were transferred to Soma; in 1627 to Kaminoyama Domain in Dewa Province ; in 1712 to Tanaka Domain in Suruga Province ; and finally, from 1742 to 1868 in Numata Domain (35,000 koku ) in ( Kōzuke Province ). Several clans claim descent from
#594405