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・ Honiton by-election, 1967
・ Honiton Community College
・ Honiton lace
・ Honiton pottery
・ Honiton railway station
・ Honius
・ Honjaram
・ Honji suijaku
・ Honjin
・ Honjin Station
・ Honjitsu wa Seiten Nari
・ Honjitsu wa Taian Nari
・ Honjo
・ Honjo-azumabashi Station
・ Honjō Athletic Stadium
Honjō Castle
・ Honjō Domain
・ Honjō Shigenaga
・ Honjō Shrine
・ Honjō Station
・ Honjō Station (Fukui)
・ Honjō Station (Fukuoka)
・ Honjō Station (Saitama)
・ Honjō, Akita
・ Honjō, Nagano
・ Honjō, Saitama
・ Honjō, Ōita
・ Honjō-shuku
・ Honjō-Waseda Station
・ Honk


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Honjō Castle : ウィキペディア英語版
Honjō Castle

is a Japanese castle located in Yurihonjō, southern Akita Prefecture, Japan. At the end of the Edo period, Honjō Castle was home to the Rokugō clan, ''daimyō'' of Honjō Domain. The castle was also known as or .
== History ==
Tateoka Mitsushige, a vassal of Mogami Yoshiaki during the Sengoku Period, erected Honjō Castle in 1610 on a hill in the center of the Yuri region of central Dewa Province as the administrative center of his 45,000 ''koku'' domain. However, the Mogami were dispossessed by the Tokugawa shogunate in 1622, with the majority of their holdings going to the Satake clan, who were transferred from Hitachi Province to their new (and much smaller) holdings at Kubota Domain. At that time, Rokugō Masanori, a minor ''daimyo'' with many scattered holdings, was also transferred to Dewa Province, and his holdings were concentrated into the compact 20,000 ''koku'' Honjō Domain, which his descendants ruled for 11 generations to the Meiji restoration.
During the Boshin War, Honjō Domain sided with the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei, and Honjō Castle was attacked and destroyed by forces of the led by the pro-imperial forces of Shōnai Domain in August 1868.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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