Akō Domain

The Akō Domain (赤穂藩, Akō Han) was a domain in feudal Japan. It was located in Harima Province and coincided with the present-day cities of Akō and Aioi and the town of Kamigōri in Hyōgo Prefecture. The domain had its headquarters at Akō Castle.

Akō Domain
赤穂藩
Domain of Japan
1615–1871
CapitalAkō Castle
  TypeDaimyō
Historical eraEdo period
 Established
1615
 Disestablished
1871
Today part ofHyogo Prefecture
Akō Castle in the city of Akō

In 1615, the Tokugawa shogunate granted the Akō domain to Ikeda Masatsuna. He died without heir in 1631, and the domain passed to his brother Teruoki. However, Teruoki became deranged, and in 1645 he was dismissed; the domain was ruled by the main line of the Ikeda family until the appointment of Asano Naganao later that year. Under the Asano, the domain reached its highest rating of 53,000 koku.

Naganao's grandson Naganori was the daimyō of Akō at the time of his attempt to kill Kira Yoshinaka in Edo Castle in 1701. He was sentenced to commit suicide and his retainers became rōnin. A group of them became famous as the Forty-seven rōnin.

The domain passed to Nagai Naohiro, who was transferred elsewhere in 1706. Akō then passed to Mori Naganao. He and his heirs ruled the domain for twelve generations until the abolition of the han system in 1871. The rating of the domain was 20,000 koku.

Lords of Akō - daimyō

  1. Masatsuna
  2. Teruoki
  1. Naganao
  2. Nagatomo
  3. Naganori
  • Nagai clan (32,000 koku, 1701–1706)
  1. Naohiro
  1. Naganao
  2. Nagataka
  3. Naganari
  4. Masafusa
  5. Tadahiro (r. 1747–1769)
  6. Tadaoki
  7. Tadasuke
  8. Tadaakira
  9. Tadataka
  10. Tadanori
  11. Tadatsune
  12. Tadanori

References

This article is based on material in the article ja:赤穂藩 in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved August 1, 2007. The Japanese Wikipedia cites the following external links:

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.