Uwajima Domain (宇和島藩, Uwajima-han) was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan, in what is now western Ehime Prefecture on the island of Shikoku. It was centered around Uwajima Castle, and was ruled throughout its history by the tozama daimyō Date clan. Uwajima Domain was dissolved in the abolition of the han system in 1871 and is now part of Ehime Prefecture.[1][2][3]
^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.
Show map of Ehime Prefecture UwajimaDomain (Japan) Show map of Japan UwajimaDomain (宇和島藩, Uwajima-han) was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate...
Uwajima Castle (宇和島城, Uwajima-jō) is a hirayama-jiro Japanese castle located in the city of Uwajima, Ehime, Japan. An alternate name for this castle is...
the Date was created in 1614; and this clan line was established at UwajimaDomain (100,000 koku) in Iyo Province. Date Muneki (1817–1882) was a prominent...
September 1, 1818 – December 20, 1892) was the eighth head of the UwajimaDomain during the Late Tokugawa shogunate and a politician of the early Meiji...
feudal domains effectively ended the daimyo era in Japan. This was effectively carried out through the financial collapse of the feudal-domain governments...
the 625,000 koku Sendai Domain in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. He was the half-brother of Date Hidemune of UwajimaDomain. Tadamune was born as...
1600–1636) Hisamune, 1st daimyō of Uwajima (1591–1658; daimyō of Uwajima: 1614–1657) Munetoshi, 2nd daimyō of Uwajima (1635–1709; r. 1657–1693) II. Tadamune...
took part in the Osaka Campaign: Hidemune received the 100,000 koku UwajimaDomain which Tokugawa Ieyasu granted to Masamune. Hidemune immediately entered...
forces during the Boshin War. In 1891, the head of the Date-Uwajima family (UwajimaDomain), a cadet branch of the clan which had remained loyal to the...
the UwajimaDomain Ryūshi Mizukami as Yamauchi Yōdō, 15th Head of the Tosa Domain Takuo Inari as Tokugawa Yoshikatsu, 14th Head of the Owari Domain Nakamura...
2nd son of Date Muneyoshi, daimyō of UwajimaDomain. In October, 1726 he was adopted as heir to Ichinoseki Domain by Tamura Nobuaki, and became daimyō...
譜代藩の研究 : 譜代内藤藩の藩政と藩領 [Research on the Fudai domain: the government and domain of the Fudai Naito domain] (in Japanese). Meiji University. p. 44. Retrieved...
daimyō of Tsu Domain, with an increase in kokudaka to 70,000 koku. He was transferred to UwajimaDomain in Iyo Province in 1608. The domain was then given...
or 15 to study medicine with one of them, Ninomiya Keisaku [ja], in UwajimaDomain, where he had been placed under house arrest for his involvement in...
the UwajimaDomain, and includes a Momoyama-period painting of Toyotomi Hideyoshi that has been designated an Important Cultural Property. Uwajima City...
relationship with Satsuma Domain is similar to that between Sendai Domain and UwajimaDomain, or Morioka Domain and Hachinohe Domain. While there is a view...
of the domain in whose name they wrestled, and wore the lords' symbols on large aprons called keshō-mawashi. As representatives of their domains, wrestlers...
location in Mutsu. They accompanied a cadet branch of the Date clan to UwajimaDomain in Shikoku, but eventually moved to Takamatsu where they supplemented...
Under the Tokugawa shogunate, the province was divided into several feudal domains. Per the early Meiji period Kyudaka kyuryo Torishirabe-chō (旧高旧領取調帳), an...
and rebuilt parts of the castle by the time they were transferred to UwajimaDomain in Iyo Province in 1608. Yuki no Kata is no longer mentioned in historical...
Bakumatsu period Japanese samurai, and the 15th and final daimyō of Morioka Domain in northern Japan. He was the 41st hereditary chieftain of the Nanbu clan...
year. He was married to a daughter of Date Muratoki of UwajimaDomain. During his tenure, the domain suffered from the effects of the Great Tenmei famine...
Japanese statesman and jurist of the Meiji period. Hozumi was born in UwajimaDomain, Iyo Province (present-day Ehime Prefecture) as the second son to a...