Tanba Province
Template:Nihongo was a province of Japan in the area of central Kyoto and east-central Hyōgo Prefectures.<ref>Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Tanba" in Template:Google books.</ref> Tanba bordered on Harima, Ōmi, Settsu, Tajima. Tango, Wakasa, and Yamashiro provinces. Its abbreviated form name was Template:Nihongo. In terms of the Gokishichidō system, Tanba was one of the provinces of the San'indō circuit. Under the Engishiki classification system, Tanba was ranked as one of the "superior countries" (上国) in terms of importance, and one of the "near countries" (近国) in terms of distance from the capital. The provincial capital is believed to have been located in what is now the city of Kameoka, although the exact location remains uncertain. The ichinomiya of the province is the Izumo-daijingū also located in Kameoka. The province had an area of Template:Convert.
HistoryEdit
Before the establishment of the Ritsuryō system, the area was under control of the Tanba Kokuzō and included both the Tanba and Tango areas. The province of Tango was created in 713 during the reign of Empress Genmei by separating the northern five districts (Kasa District, Yoza District, Tamba District (later Naka District), Takeno District, and Kumano District) into "Tango", and the districts closer to the capital as "Tanba".<ref name="Titsingh64">Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Template:Google books</ref> The Tanba area is rugged, and can be roughly divided into several river basins separated by mountains. For this reason, historically the province has been difficult to govern as a whole. On the other hand, its proximity to the capital gave it a strategic importance. During the Muromachi period, the Hosokawa clan were the shugo of the province, but governed through their proxies, the Naito clan. During the late Sengoku period, the province was conquered by Akechi Mitsuhide, and after his defeat by Toyotomi Hideyoshi at the Battle of Yamasaki in the aftermath of the assassination of Oda Nobunaga, it was governed by a succession of relatives of the Toyotomi clan. In the Edo Period, Tanba was governed by a mosaic of mostly fudai daimyō domains, who were considered more reliable by the Tokugawa shogunate and who could be called upon when necessary for the defense of Kyoto and Osaka.
Name | Clan | Type | kokudaka |
---|---|---|---|
File:Mujisen.svg Sasayama | Aoyama clan | Fudai | 60,000 koku |
File:Maruni-Toshi no Monji.jpg Tanba-Kameyama | Katanobara-Matsudaira clan | Fudai | 50,000 koku |
File:Oda emblem.svg Kaibara | Oda clan | Tozama | 36,000 koku |
File:So clan mon2.svg Fukuyama | Kutsuki clan | Fudai | 32,000 koku |
File:Mon Gaku.jpg Sonobe | Koide clan | Fudai | 24,000 koku |
File:Shichiyoumon (No background and Black color drawing).svg Ayabe | Kuki clan | Tozama | 19,500 koku |
File:Ageha inverted.png Yamaga | Tani clan | Tozama | 10.000 koku |
Meiji periodEdit
Following the Meiji restoration, Tanba was divided into six districts.<ref>Nussbaum, "Provinces and prefectures" at p. 780.</ref> Per the early Meiji period Template:Nihongo, an official government assessment of the nation’s resources, the province had 970 villages with a total kokudaka of 331,954 koku.
District | kokudaka | Controlled by | at present | Currently |
---|---|---|---|---|
Template:Nihongo | 56,227 koku | 218 villages: Tenryō, Imperial family, Kuge, Tanba-Kameyama, Sonobe, Sasayama, Takatsuki | most of Kameoka, parts of Nantan, Kyoto, Takatsuki and Toyono | |
Template:Nihongo | 52,140 koku | 210 villages: Tenryō, Imperial Family, Sonobe, Tanba-Kameyama, Sasayama, Ayabe Tsurumaki | part of Nantan and Kameoka | |
Template:Nihongo | 49,525 koku | 136 villages: Tenryō, Ayabe, Yamake, Sonobe, Kaibara, Sasayama, Yunagaya, Okabe | dissolved | Fukuchiyama, small part of Ayabe |
Template:Nihongo | 52,059 koku | 119 villages: Tenryō, Fukuchiyama, Ayabe, Iino,Tsurumaki, Kaibara, Sasayama, Okabe | dissolved | Fukuchiyama |
Template:Nihongo | 68,546 koku | 172 villages: Tenryō , Kuge, Kaibara, Tanba-Kameyama, Yunagaya, Tsurumaki, Sanda, Yamakami | dissolved | Tanba |
Template:Nihongo | 53,453 koku | 115 villages: Sasayama | dissolved | Tamba-Sayayama, Hyogo |
GalleryEdit
- Izumo-daijingū haiden-2.JPG
Izumo-daijingū, ichinomiya of the province
- Tamba kokubunji.JPG
Ruins of Tanba Kokubun-ji
- Sasaymajyo12.jpg
Sasayama Castle
- Kameyamaj.jpg
Kameyama Castle
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Template:ISBN; OCLC 58053128
- Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du Japon (Nihon Ōdai Ichiran). Paris: Royal Asiatic Society, Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. OCLC 5850691.
External linksEdit
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