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Tōtōmi Province

Tōtōmi Province (遠江国, Tōtōmi-no kuni) was a province of Japan in the area of Japan that is today western Shizuoka Prefecture.[1] Tōtōmi bordered on Mikawa, Suruga and Shinano Provinces. Its abbreviated form name was Enshū (遠州). The origin of its name is the old name of Lake Hamana.

Map of Japanese provinces (1868) with Totomi Province highlighted
Hiroshige ukiyo-e " Tōtōmi " in "The Famous Scenes of the Sixty States" (六十余州名所図会), depicting Lake Hamana and Kanzan-ji

History

Tōtōmi was one of the original provinces of Japan established in the Nara period under the Taihō Code. The original capital of the province was located in what is now Iwata, and was named Mitsuke – a name which survived into modern times as Mitsuke-juku, a post station on the Tōkaidō. Under the Engishiki classification system, Tōtōmi was ranked as a "superior country" (上国) in terms of importance, and one of the 16 "middle countries" (中国) in terms of distance from the capital.

During the early Muromachi period, Tōtōmi was ruled nominally by the Imagawa clan before coming under control of the Shiba clan. However, by the Sengoku period, the Imagawa recovered Tōtōmi and effectively annexed it to Suruga Province. After the defeat of the Imagawa at the Battle of Okehazama, Tōtōmi was divided between the powerful warlords Takeda Shingen of Kai and Tokugawa Ieyasu of Mikawa. To consolidate his new holdings, Tokugawa Ieyasu constructed Hamamatsu Castle, which effectively became the capital of the province, although parts of Tōtōmi continued to be contested between the Tokugawa and Takeda until Shingen's death.

After the Battle of Odawara and the rise to power of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Tokugawa Ieyasu was forced to trade his domains in the Tōkai region for the Kantō region instead. Hamamatsu was relinquished to the Horii clan and subsidiary Kakegawa Castle to Yamauchi Kazutoyo. After the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate, the Tokugawa recovered their lost territories, and reassigned Tōtōmi to various fudai daimyōs.

During the Edo period, the Tōkaidō road from Edo to Kyoto passed through Tōtōmi, with post stations at several locations. For defensive purposes, the Tokugawa shogunate forbid the construction of bridges on the major rivers (such as at the Tenryū River), which further led to town development on the major river crossings.

At the end of the Tokugawa shogunate, Tōtōmi Province was divided among several feudal domains, which were assigned to close fudai retainers. Following the defeat of the Tokugawa shogunate during the Boshin War of the Meiji Restoration, the last Tokugawa shōgun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu returned to Suruga in 1868 to rule the short-lived Shizuoka Domain, and the existing daimyōs in Tōtōmi were reassigned to other territories, mostly in Kazusa Province

After the abolition of the han system in 1871 by the new Meiji government, during the first wave of prefectural mergers (第1次府県統合 daiichiji fu/ken tōgō), the new prefectures in Tōtōmi were merged into Hamamatsu Prefecture, with enclaves of other prefectures/exclaves in other provinces being removed, so that Hamamatsu and Tōtōmi became basically contiguous. On August 21, 1876, Hamamatsu was merged into Shizuoka Prefecture, which by that time comprised all of Suruga and Izu provinces, to form an enlarged Shizuoka Prefecture; it reached practically its present-day extent in 1878 when a part of Izu Province, namely the Izu Islands, were transferred from Shizuoka to Tokyo.

Many former samurai of the feudal domains in Tōtōmi, now unemployed due to the sudden end to feudalism, were settled in the Makinohara region, where they developed the green tea industry. With the coming of the Tōkaidō Main Line railway, Hamamatsu developed rapidly into a major commercial and industrial center, especially in connection with the cotton and silk-spinning industries.

Districts under the Ritsuryō system

 
Tenpō 9 (Gregorian 1838–39) provincial map (Tenpō kuniezu) of Tōtōmi from the National Archives Digital Archives,[2] oriented towards the East at the top
coloured ovaloids: Villages [and a few towns], given with their nominal rice income (kokudaka)
coloured rectangles: towns = mostly castle towns or waystations on major roads, -machi/-chō/-eki/-shuku/-juku etc.
village/town colours & black borders: the districts of Tōtōmi, with their total nominal income given in the annotation
white rectangles: castles/domain seats, given with their lords
red lines: major roads with distance markers (black dots), the thicker line is the Tōkaidō
Major mountains/rivers/islands are visually self-explanatory
  • In modern times part of: Hamamatsu, Horie (a fiefdom established only in the restoration) and many other feudal domains/shogunate/crown lands/prefectures 1868 → completely Hamamatsu Prefecture 1871/72 → Shizuoka Prefecture since 1876
    • Aratama District (麁玉郡) – merged into Inasa District on April 1, 1896
    • Fuchi District (敷知郡) – merged into Hamana District (along with Nakagami District) on April 1, 1896
    • Haibara District (榛原郡)
    • Hamana District (浜名郡) – absorbed Fuchi and Nakagami Districts on April 1, 1896; now dissolved
    • Inasa District (引佐郡) – absorbed Aratama District on April 1, 1896; now dissolved
    • Iwata District (磐田郡) – absorbed Toyoda and Yamana Districts on April 1, 1896; now dissolved
    • Kitō District (城東郡) – merged with Saya District to become Ogasa District (小笠郡) on April 1, 1896
    • Nagakami District (長上郡) – merged into Hamana District (along with Fuchi District) on April 1, 1896
    • Saya District (佐野郡) – merged with Kitō District to become Ogasa District on April 1, 1896
    • Shūchi District (周智郡)
    • Toyoda District (豊田郡) – merged into Iwata District (along with Yamana District) on April 1, 1896
    • Yamana District (山名郡) – merged into Iwata District (along with Toyoda District) on April 1, 1896

Bakumatsu-period feudal division

Generally, the kokudaka nominal income did not correspond to the actual income from a given village/district/province, and in addition there were some, especially non-agricultural, sources of taxable or direct income that were not always accurately represented in the baku/han kokudaka system of the Edo period.

Note: The kokudaka given in the table is the total from within & without the province, not restricted to the parts of the domain actually located in Tōtōmi.

Bakumatsu-period major holdings in Tōtōmi Province
Name type daimyō kokudaka notes
Shogunate territories & Hatamoto estates (→1868 Imperial territories)
in all twelve districts of Tōtōmi; ignoring spiritual (shrine/temple) holdings, tiny Hamana & Iwata are entirely shogunate domain
Domains seated in Tōtōmi Province
Hamamatsu Domain fudai Inoue 60,000 koku
Kakegawa Domain fudai Ōta 50,000 koku
Sagara Domain fudai Tanuma 10,000 koku
Yokosuka Domain fudai Nishio 10,000 koku
Domains seated elsewhere with holdings in Tōtōmi
Koromo Domain holdings in (=income from) Haibara and Shūchi districts
Nishio Domain holdings in Haibara and Kitō
Nagashima Domain holdings in Haibara
Sasayama Domain holdings in Haibara and Kitō
Mikawa-Yoshida Domain holdings in Kitō and Fuchi
Shirakawa Domain holdings in Yamana, Toyoda, Aratama, Inasa

Note: The following figures are taken from the Japanese Wikipedia article, the database and publication series used as the original source are given in the external links.

Bakumatsu nominal income of Tōtōmi
District Villages approximate kokudaka
Haibara 155 50,198
Kitō 149 68,905
Saya 106 29,406
Shūchi 94 25,086
Iwata 1 1,041
Yamana 116 39,958
Toyoda 277 55,992
Nagakami 129 30,569
Fuchi 153 49,827
Aratama 6 2,233
Inasa 54 17,927
Hamana 2 1,240
Tōtōmi total 1,242 372,388

Highways

Notes

  1. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Tōtōmi" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 990, p. 990, at Google Books.
  2. ^ Collection of all Tenpō kuniezu at the National Archives Digital Archive (English page), retrieved August 25, 2021.

References

  • Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5; OCLC 58053128
  • Papinot, Edmond. (1910). Historical and Geographic Dictionary of Japan. Tokyo: Librarie Sansaisha. OCLC 77691250
  • (in Japanese) Tōtōmi on "Edo 300 HTML"

External links

  Media related to Totomi Province at Wikimedia Commons

  • Murdoch's map of provinces, 1903
  • National Museum of Japanese History: 旧高旧領取調帳データベース (Database of feudal territories and their yields) at the end of the Edo period (or shortly after, see notes)/in the Meiji restoration; digitization of: Kimura, Motoi (1969–79): 旧高旧領取調帳, 6 Volumes, Kondō Shuppansha. Search mask by province, district, village [or town/station], domain/shogunate administration or other feudal territory, early-Meiji prefecture, income, 20th century LPE code (all non-numerical entries are given as full names incl. suffixes, e.g. 遠江国 for Tōtōmi Province, 佐野郡 for Saya District, 金谷宿 for Kanaya Station, 相良町 for Sagara Town, 浜松県 for Hamamatsu Prefecture, etc.; some villages/settlements were split between several lords/territories and therefore have several database entries with fractional incomes)

tōtōmi, province, 遠江国, tōtōmi, kuni, province, japan, area, japan, that, today, western, shizuoka, prefecture, tōtōmi, bordered, mikawa, suruga, shinano, provinces, abbreviated, form, name, enshū, 遠州, origin, name, name, lake, hamana, japanese, provinces, 1868. Tōtōmi Province 遠江国 Tōtōmi no kuni was a province of Japan in the area of Japan that is today western Shizuoka Prefecture 1 Tōtōmi bordered on Mikawa Suruga and Shinano Provinces Its abbreviated form name was Enshu 遠州 The origin of its name is the old name of Lake Hamana Map of Japanese provinces 1868 with Totomi Province highlighted Hiroshige ukiyo e Tōtōmi in The Famous Scenes of the Sixty States 六十余州名所図会 depicting Lake Hamana and Kanzan ji Hokusai Contents 1 History 2 Districts under the Ritsuryō system 3 Bakumatsu period feudal division 4 Highways 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditTōtōmi was one of the original provinces of Japan established in the Nara period under the Taihō Code The original capital of the province was located in what is now Iwata and was named Mitsuke a name which survived into modern times as Mitsuke juku a post station on the Tōkaidō Under the Engishiki classification system Tōtōmi was ranked as a superior country 上国 in terms of importance and one of the 16 middle countries 中国 in terms of distance from the capital During the early Muromachi period Tōtōmi was ruled nominally by the Imagawa clan before coming under control of the Shiba clan However by the Sengoku period the Imagawa recovered Tōtōmi and effectively annexed it to Suruga Province After the defeat of the Imagawa at the Battle of Okehazama Tōtōmi was divided between the powerful warlords Takeda Shingen of Kai and Tokugawa Ieyasu of Mikawa To consolidate his new holdings Tokugawa Ieyasu constructed Hamamatsu Castle which effectively became the capital of the province although parts of Tōtōmi continued to be contested between the Tokugawa and Takeda until Shingen s death After the Battle of Odawara and the rise to power of Toyotomi Hideyoshi Tokugawa Ieyasu was forced to trade his domains in the Tōkai region for the Kantō region instead Hamamatsu was relinquished to the Horii clan and subsidiary Kakegawa Castle to Yamauchi Kazutoyo After the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate the Tokugawa recovered their lost territories and reassigned Tōtōmi to various fudai daimyōs During the Edo period the Tōkaidō road from Edo to Kyoto passed through Tōtōmi with post stations at several locations For defensive purposes the Tokugawa shogunate forbid the construction of bridges on the major rivers such as at the Tenryu River which further led to town development on the major river crossings At the end of the Tokugawa shogunate Tōtōmi Province was divided among several feudal domains which were assigned to close fudai retainers Following the defeat of the Tokugawa shogunate during the Boshin War of the Meiji Restoration the last Tokugawa shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu returned to Suruga in 1868 to rule the short lived Shizuoka Domain and the existing daimyōs in Tōtōmi were reassigned to other territories mostly in Kazusa ProvinceAfter the abolition of the han system in 1871 by the new Meiji government during the first wave of prefectural mergers 第1次府県統合 daiichiji fu ken tōgō the new prefectures in Tōtōmi were merged into Hamamatsu Prefecture with enclaves of other prefectures exclaves in other provinces being removed so that Hamamatsu and Tōtōmi became basically contiguous On August 21 1876 Hamamatsu was merged into Shizuoka Prefecture which by that time comprised all of Suruga and Izu provinces to form an enlarged Shizuoka Prefecture it reached practically its present day extent in 1878 when a part of Izu Province namely the Izu Islands were transferred from Shizuoka to Tokyo Many former samurai of the feudal domains in Tōtōmi now unemployed due to the sudden end to feudalism were settled in the Makinohara region where they developed the green tea industry With the coming of the Tōkaidō Main Line railway Hamamatsu developed rapidly into a major commercial and industrial center especially in connection with the cotton and silk spinning industries Districts under the Ritsuryō system Edit Tenpō 9 Gregorian 1838 39 provincial map Tenpō kuniezu of Tōtōmi from the National Archives Digital Archives 2 oriented towards the East at the topcoloured ovaloids Villages and a few towns given with their nominal rice income kokudaka coloured rectangles towns mostly castle towns or waystations on major roads machi chō eki shuku juku etc village town colours amp black borders the districts of Tōtōmi with their total nominal income given in the annotationwhite rectangles castles domain seats given with their lordsred lines major roads with distance markers black dots the thicker line is the TōkaidōMajor mountains rivers islands are visually self explanatory In modern times part of Hamamatsu Horie a fiefdom established only in the restoration and many other feudal domains shogunate crown lands prefectures 1868 completely Hamamatsu Prefecture 1871 72 Shizuoka Prefecture since 1876 Aratama District 麁玉郡 merged into Inasa District on April 1 1896 Fuchi District 敷知郡 merged into Hamana District along with Nakagami District on April 1 1896 Haibara District 榛原郡 Hamana District 浜名郡 absorbed Fuchi and Nakagami Districts on April 1 1896 now dissolved Inasa District 引佐郡 absorbed Aratama District on April 1 1896 now dissolved Iwata District 磐田郡 absorbed Toyoda and Yamana Districts on April 1 1896 now dissolved Kitō District 城東郡 merged with Saya District to become Ogasa District 小笠郡 on April 1 1896 Nagakami District 長上郡 merged into Hamana District along with Fuchi District on April 1 1896 Saya District 佐野郡 merged with Kitō District to become Ogasa District on April 1 1896 Shuchi District 周智郡 Toyoda District 豊田郡 merged into Iwata District along with Yamana District on April 1 1896 Yamana District 山名郡 merged into Iwata District along with Toyoda District on April 1 1896Bakumatsu period feudal division EditGenerally the kokudaka nominal income did not correspond to the actual income from a given village district province and in addition there were some especially non agricultural sources of taxable or direct income that were not always accurately represented in the baku han kokudaka system of the Edo period Note The kokudaka given in the table is the total from within amp without the province not restricted to the parts of the domain actually located in Tōtōmi Bakumatsu period major holdings in Tōtōmi Province Name type daimyō kokudaka notesShogunate territories amp Hatamoto estates 1868 Imperial territories in all twelve districts of Tōtōmi ignoring spiritual shrine temple holdings tiny Hamana amp Iwata are entirely shogunate domainDomains seated in Tōtōmi ProvinceHamamatsu Domain fudai Inoue 60 000 kokuKakegawa Domain fudai Ōta 50 000 kokuSagara Domain fudai Tanuma 10 000 kokuYokosuka Domain fudai Nishio 10 000 kokuDomains seated elsewhere with holdings in TōtōmiKoromo Domain holdings in income from Haibara and Shuchi districtsNishio Domain holdings in Haibara and KitōNagashima Domain holdings in HaibaraSasayama Domain holdings in Haibara and KitōMikawa Yoshida Domain holdings in Kitō and FuchiShirakawa Domain holdings in Yamana Toyoda Aratama InasaNote The following figures are taken from the Japanese Wikipedia article the database and publication series used as the original source are given in the external links Bakumatsu nominal income of Tōtōmi District Villages approximate kokudakaHaibara 155 50 198Kitō 149 68 905Saya 106 29 406Shuchi 94 25 086Iwata 1 1 041Yamana 116 39 958Toyoda 277 55 992Nagakami 129 30 569Fuchi 153 49 827Aratama 6 2 233Inasa 54 17 927Hamana 2 1 240Tōtōmi total 1 242 372 388Highways EditTōkaidō connecting Edo with KyotoNotes Edit Nussbaum Louis Frederic 2005 Tōtōmi in Japan Encyclopedia p 990 p 990 at Google Books Collection of all Tenpō kuniezu at the National Archives Digital Archive English page retrieved August 25 2021 References EditNussbaum Louis Frederic and Kathe Roth 2005 Japan encyclopedia Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01753 5 OCLC 58053128 Papinot Edmond 1910 Historical and Geographic Dictionary of Japan Tokyo Librarie Sansaisha OCLC 77691250 in Japanese Tōtōmi on Edo 300 HTML External links Edit Media related to Totomi Province at Wikimedia Commons Murdoch s map of provinces 1903 National Museum of Japanese History 旧高旧領取調帳データベース Database of feudal territories and their yields at the end of the Edo period or shortly after see notes in the Meiji restoration digitization of Kimura Motoi 1969 79 旧高旧領取調帳 6 Volumes Kondō Shuppansha Search mask by province district village or town station domain shogunate administration or other feudal territory early Meiji prefecture income 20th century LPE code all non numerical entries are given as full names incl suffixes e g 遠江国 for Tōtōmi Province 佐野郡 for Saya District 金谷宿 for Kanaya Station 相良町 for Sagara Town 浜松県 for Hamamatsu Prefecture etc some villages settlements were split between several lords territories and therefore have several database entries with fractional incomes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tōtōmi Province amp oldid 1144170935, 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