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Kanō Domain : ウィキペディア英語版
Kanō Domain

The was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. It is associated with Mino Province in modern-day Gifu Prefecture.〔( "Mino Province" at JapaneseCastleExplorer.com ); retrieved 2013-7-16.〕
In the han system, Kanō was a political and economic abstraction based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields.〔Mass, Jeffrey P. and William B. Hauser. (1987). (''The Bakufu in Japanese History,'' p. 150 ).〕 In other words, the domain was defined in terms of ''kokudaka'', not land area.〔Elison, George and Bardwell L. Smith (1987). (''Warlords, Artists, & Commoners: Japan in the Sixteenth Century,'' p. 18 ).〕 This was different from the feudalism of the West.
==History==
Before the battle of Sekigahara, the central Mino Province was ruled by Oda Hidenobu, Oda Nobunaga's grandson, its base was . However, as Hidenobu sided with Ishida Mitsunari at the battle of Sekigahara, his territory was confiscated by Tokugawa Ieyasu, and the Gifu Castle was dismantled.
In 1601, Ieyasu granted the area to his son-in-law Okudaira Nobumasa, Gifu was renamed to . Okudaira Nobumasa was allowed to build the Kanō Castle with the materials from the dismantled Gifu Castle. This was the birth of the Kanō domain.
Nobumasa's placement at Kanō was meant to act as a check against the potentially hostile lords of the west, who might have wanted to march eastward against Ieyasu. Nobumasa retired in 1602, handing over the position of daimyo to his son Okudaira Tadamasa; however, he retained 40,000 of the domain's 100,000 ''koku'' as a "retirement fund", and continued to hold actual power, establishing a system of flood control and better aiding in the setup of the castle town. Nobumasa and Tadamasa died in quick succession; the third Okudaira lord of Kanō, Tadataka, died heirless in 1632, and so the Okudaira rule in Kanō came to an end.
The last lords of Kanō, the Nagai, became viscounts in the Meiji period.

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