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Tsugaru Nobuyuki : ウィキペディア英語版
Tsugaru Nobuyuki

was the 10th ''daimyō'' of Hirosaki Domain in northern Mutsu Province, Honshū, Japan (modern-day Aomori Prefecture). His courtesy title was ''Dewa-no-kami.''
==Biography==
Tsugaru Nobuyuki was the younger son of Tsugaru Yasuchika, the 9th ''daimyō'' of Hirosaki Domain. His elder brother inherited Kuroishi Domain, which was elevated from a 4000 ''koku'' ''hatamoto'' holding into a full ''han'' during the administration of his father Yasuchika.
Yasuchika initially attempted to continue implementation many of the reforms initiated by Tsugaru Nobuakira to restore prosperity to the disaster-prone domain, but faced stubborn opposition due top vested interests and extensive corruption issues with his retainers. However, Yasuchika enjoyed good relations with the Tokugawa shogunate and was successful in arranging an extremely favorable marriage for Nobuyuki to a daughter from the Konoe clan, of the Kyoto court nobility. He also arranged two daughters of Tokugawa Narimasa, head of the Tayasu-branch of the Tokugawa clan as his son’s concubines. These marital arrangements resulted in his promotion to the courtesy title of chamberlain. However, the financial outlay to the Court and to the Shogunate in exchange for these marriages was tremendous, and the domain’s finances were again plunged into bankruptcy. Increasing taxation and peasant uprisings cumulated in an attempted assassination in 1821 by retainers of the Tsugaru clan's arch-rivals, the Nambu clan of Morioka Domain, and in 1825 Yasuchika retired, nominally turned the reign over to Nobuyuki.
However, with his father Yasuchika continuing to rule behind-the-scenes from the clan's Edo residence, and lacking a personal power base or the respect of his senior retainers, Nobuyuki was reduced to an ineffectual figurehead, and was derided as the of Tsugaru. Rumors were spread of his lack of mental acuity, drunkenness, inappropriate behavior and lasciviousness during ''sankin kotai'' journeys to Edo, and he was forced into retirement in 1839.
The domain was turned over to an outsider, the 7th son of Matsudaira Nobuakira, lord of Yoshida Domain in Mikawa Province and a ''Rōjū'', who was adopted into the Tsugaru clan as Tsugaru Yukitsugu.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tsugaru Nobuyuki」の詳細全文を読む



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