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Takatori Domain https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q48529421 Link to profile : https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Exam26 Well, here is my new area, for drafting my favorite pages, submitting and drafting articles. Still not gonna give out my name, but you fellas can call me exam.
XD, a chill pill
Kyōgoku Akiyuki | |
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![]() Photograph of Kyōgoku Akiyuki | |
7th daimyō of Marugame Domain | |
Reign | March 7, 1850 - July 14, 1871 |
Predecessor | Kyōgoku Takaakira |
Successor | Office abolished |
Imperial Governer of Marugame Domain | |
Reign | March 19, 1869 - July 14, 1871 |
Predecessor | -none- |
Successor | Domain abolished |
Born | September 17, 1828 Marugame Castle |
Died | May 11, 1882 Tokyo, Japan |
Kyōgoku Akiyuki (京極朗徹, September 17, 1828 - May 11, 1882), was the 7th (and final) daimyō of the Marugame Domain in Sanuki Province. He belonged to the Kyōgoku clan, which had been the ruling clan of the Marugame Domain for nine generations. .[1] [2] [3]
Biography
Born on September 17, 1828 in Marugame Castle as the fifth son of Kyogoku Takachika's brother, Kyogoku Takachika. On February 23, 1844, he became the adopted son of the 6th lord, Kyogoku Takateru, and on February 25, he was welcomed as a son-in-law. On December 16, 1849, he was appointed to the position of Sado-no-suke and awarded the title of Jugo-i-shimo. Following the retirement of Takateru on March 7, 1850, he succeeded to the head of the clan. In order to rebuild the finances, measures such as issuing frugality orders to restrain extravagance, promoting industry, restricting imports, intensifying penalties for misconduct, urging the payment of tribute rice, and partially suspending the issuance of paper money have been implemented. During the turmoil of the late Edo period, actions were taken as supporters of the Imperial loyalists, frequently deploying troops to guard the Imperial Palace. In the Battle of Toba-Fushimi in 1868, when the neighboring domain of Takamatsu was designated as an enemy of the new government, the domain of Marugame, along with the domain of Tosa, were ordered by the new government to pursue Takamatsu. However, the lord of Takamatsu, Matsudaira Yoritsugu, requested mediation to the new government for his pardon, and the new government intervened to grant Yoritsugu a pardon. In February 1869, he requested the return of the family register ahead of other clans and was appointed as the governor of Marugame Domain on March 19. Afterwards, he implemented reforms such as reducing the stipends of samurai. In March 1871, he requested the abolition of feudal domains ahead of other clans, and on April 10, the Marugame Domain was abolished and became Marugame Prefecture, with Akiyuki appointed as the governor. However, he resigned as governor on August 15, just four months later, and moved to Tokyo. He died on May 11, 1882, at the age of 55. His nephew and adopted son, Kōtoku (Kyūjirō), succeeded him. In October 1868, the former Edo magistrate, Torii Yōzō, who had been under the care of the previous governor, Takahiro, was pardoned. Despite not receiving a pardon document from the Tokugawa clan, he refused to move, causing trouble for the new government and Marugame Clan. He eventually relocated to Tokyo and died in 1873.
Ancestry
Ancestry of Kyōgoku Akiyuki | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Kyōgoku Takanori
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/59/Takanori_Kyogoku.jpg/270px-Takanori_Kyogoku.jpg)
Kyōgoku Takanori (京極高徳, November 5, 1858 - May 21, 1928), was a nobleman from the late Meiji period to the early Shōwa era in Japan. He held the title of Viscount and was ranked as Junior Fifth Rank. born as a child of Takamine Kyozen, he became the adopted son of his uncle, the Lord of Marugame Domain, Kyōgoku Akiyuki. His childhood names were Kukinosuke and Kujuro. He was married to Kumiko, the daughter of Yamauchi Yukihiro. They had several children :
- Hisako (wife of Ikeda Masatoki )
- Haruko Shunjiro (wife of Ikeda Hidemasa)
- Takako (wife of Honda Tadahisa ),
- Shigeko Takamasa (wife of Kawaguchi Yoshihisa ),
- Masako (wife of Okazaki Masao),
- Takafumi
- Tomiko
- Sadame,
- Misaki Atsushi (adopted son of Misaki Kamenosuke) *Matsudaira Jo (adopted son of Matsudaira Toshiko) *Toyoko (wife of Irie Itsutsune ). He studied at a prestigious school for the nobility, then served as a chamberlain at the Aoyama Imperial Palace, and later inherited the family estate when his adoptive father died in 1882. On July 8, 1884, he was ennobled as a viscount. On July 10, 1890, he assumed the position of a member of the House of Peers and held the position until his death. In 1897, he established a farm in the Wakkatasappu district of Kutchan village (now Kyogoku-cho, Abuta-gun, Hokkaido), which later became the origin of the town's name. He died at the age of 71 in 1928. The family estate was then inherited by his son, Takashi.[4][5][6]
See Also
References
- ^ Nakamura, Michio (1993). 雑兵物語・おあむ物語 付・おきく物語』湯沢幸吉郎 校訂 Bunko Series. ISBN 400-3024516 (In Japanese).
- ^ Nagahama Castle, History Museum (2005). 秀吉を支えた武将田中吉政 近畿・東海と九州をつなぐ戦国史. Sunrise Publishing. ISBN 488-3252841. (In Japanese).
- ^ Michio, Nakamura. (1993) 雑兵物語・おあむ物語 付・おきく物語. Iwanami Bunko. ISBN 400-3024516 (In Japanese).
- ^ Nakayama, Yoshiaki (2015). 江戸三百藩大全 全藩藩主変遷表付. Kosaido Publishing. ISBN 978-4331802946.(in Japanese)
- ^ Nigi, Kenichi (2004). 藩と城下町の事典―国別. Tokyodo Printing. ISBN 978-4490106510.
- ^ Papinot, E (1910). Historical and Geographic Dictionary of Japan. Tuttle (reprint) 1972.