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Inaba Masamichi : ウィキペディア英語版
Inaba Masamichi

was a daimyō of Odawara Domain in Sagami Province (modern-day Kanagawa Prefecture) in early-Edo period Japan. He was later transferred to Takada Domain in Echigo Province, and then to Sakura Domain in Shimōsa Province.〔Meyer, Eva-Maria. ("Gouverneure von Kyôto in der Edo-Zeit." ) Universität Tübingen (in German).〕 His courtesy title was ''Mino no Kami.''
Masamichi's domain was Odawara until 1686, when the shogunate severed his relationship with this location in order to transfer the Inaba to another land holding.〔Ketcherside, Robert and Maki Noguchi. (1996). ("A Pre-modern History of Odawara" ).〕
==Biography==
Inaba Masamichi was the eldest son of the previous daimyō of Odawara, Inaba Masanori. Due to the influence of the ''Tairō'' Sakai Tadakiyo, he rose rapidly through the hierarchy of the Tokugawa shogunate. He was appointed concurrently as a ''Sōshaban'' (Master of Ceremonies) and ''Jisha-bugyō'' on April 9, 1681, and received another concurrent appointment as ''Kyoto Shoshidai'' on December 24 of the same year.〔
On the retirement of his father in 1683, he became head of the Inaba clan, and inherited his father’s position as daimyō of Odawara (102,000 ''koku'').
His cousin, Inaba Masayasu, served as a ''wakadoshiyori'' in Edo. Masayasu visited Kyoto as part of a formal inspection in 1683.〔Tucker, John. (1998). ( ''Itō Jinsai's "Gomō Jigi" and the Philosophical Definition of Early Modern Japan,'' p. 4 n3. )〕
However, in 1685, Masamichi was ordered to resign his position as ''Kyoto Shoshidai'' and to transfer from Odawara to Takada Domain in Echigo Province (103,000 ''koku'').
On January 11, 1701 Masamichi became a ''Rōjū'' under Shogun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, and in June of that year was transferred to Sakura Domain in Shimōsa province (103,000 ''koku'').
On August 7, 1707, he retired from public life, turning his domain over to his son Inaba Masatomo. He died in 1716, and his grave is at the temple of Yōgen-ji in Bunkyō, Tokyo.

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