Mimasaka Province
Mimasaka Province or Sakushu was a province of Japan in the part of Honshū that is today northeastern Okayama Prefecture. Mimasaka bordered Bitchū, Bizen, Harima, Hōki, and Inaba Provinces.
Mimasaka was landlocked, and was often ruled by the daimyō in Bizen. The ancient capital and castle town was Tsuyama. During the Edo period the province was controlled by the Tsuyama Domain.
Mimasaka is the home of the samurai Miyamoto Musashi, the author of The Book of Five Rings.In the 3rd month of the 6th year of the Wadō era, the land of Mimasaka no kuni was administratively separated from Bizen Province. In that same year, Empress Genmei's Daijō-kan continued to organize other cadastral changes in the provincial map of the Nara period.
In Wadō 6, Tanba Province was sundered from Tango Province; and Hyūga Province was divided from Ōsumi Province. In Wadō 5, Mutsu Province had been severed from Dewa Province.Shrines and temples
was the chief Shinto shrine of Mimasaka.Historical districts
- Okayama Prefecture
- * Aida District – absorbed Yoshino District on April 1, 1900
- * Kumehokujō District – merged with Kumenanjō District to become Kume District on April 1, 1890
- * Kumenanjō District – merged with Kumehokujō District to become Kume District on April 1, 1890
- * Mashima District – merged with Ōba District to become Maniwa District on April 1, 1890
- * Ōba District – merged with Mashima District to become Maniwa District on April 1, 1890
- * Saihokujō District – merged with Saisaijō, Tōhokujō and Tōnanjō Districts to become Tomata District on April 1, 1890
- * Saisaijō District – merged with Saihokujō, Tōhokujō and Tōnanjō Districts to become Tomata District on April 1, 1890
- * Shōboku District – merged with Shōnan District to become Katsuta District on April 1, 1890
- * Shōnan District – merged with Shōboku District to become Katsuta District on April 1, 1890
- * Tōhokujō District – merged with Saihokujō, Saisaijō and Tōnanjō Districts to become Tomata District on April 1, 1890
- * Tōnanjō District – merged with Saihokujō, Saisaijō and Tōhokujō Districts to become Tomata District on April 1, 1890
- * Yoshino District – merged into Aida District on April 1, 1900