Ichinomiya Domain


Ichinomiya Domain was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan, located in Kazusa Province, Japan. It was centered on Ichinomiya jin'ya in what is now the town of Ichinomiya, Chiba.

History

Ichinomiya Castle was a mountain-top fortification built by the Satomi clan, rulers of most of the Bōsō Peninsula during the Sengoku period as protection for their northern holdings in eastern Kazusa Province. Following the Battle of Odawara in 1590, the Kantō region was assigned to Tokugawa Ieyasu by the warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who also restricted the Satomi to Awa Province for their lukewarm support of his campaigns against the Later Hōjō clan. Tokugawa Ieyasu appointed Honda Tadakatsu, one of his hereditary retainers, to be daimyō of the new 100,000 koku Ōtaki Domain, and the old fortifications at Ichinomiya were abandoned.
Otaki Domain was subsequently reduced in size, with large portions becoming tenryō territory directly under the control of the Tokugawa shogunate or assigned as exclaves of other domains. Ichinomiya became an exclave of Hatsuta Domain of Kii Province, ruled by the Kanō clan.
In 1826, Kanō Hisatomo, the 5th daimyō of Hatsuta Domain, decided to relocate the seat of the clan from Kii Province to Ichinomiya in Kazusa Province, where his family continued to rule until the Meiji Restoration. The final daimyō of Ichinomiya Domain, Kanō Hisayoshi, was a strong supporter of rangaku, and imported western weapons to modernize his forces. However, he was stopped at Shimoda on his way to assist the Satchō Alliance forces at the Battle of Toba–Fushimi during the Boshin War and arrived too late for the battle. Under the new Meiji government he was appointed domain governor, until the abolition of the han system in July 1871 and subsequently became a viscount under the kazoku peerage. Ichinomiya Domain became "Ichinomiya Prefecture", which merged with the short lived "Kisarazu Prefecture" in November 1871, which later became part of Chiba Prefecture.
The domain had a population of 14,204 people in 2884 households per an 1869 census.

Holdings at the end of the Edo period

As with most domains in the han system, Ichinomiya Domain consisted of several discontinuous territories calculated to provide the assigned kokudaka, based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields.
#NameTenureCourtesy titleCourt Rankkokudaka
1Kanō Hisatomo1826–1842Tōtōmi-no-kami Lower 5th 10,000 koku
2Kanō Hisaakira1842–1864Suruga-no-kami Lower 5th 10,000 koku
3Kanō Hisatsune1864–1867Yamato-no-kami Lower 5th 10,000 koku
4Kanō Hisayoshi1867–1871Tōtōmi-no-kami Lower 5th 13,000 koku