Hatamoto

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Italic title

File:Takeaki Enomoto.gif
Enomoto Takeaki, a Template:Lang of the late Edo period

A Template:Nihongo was a high ranking samurai in the direct service of the Tokugawa shogunate of feudal Japan.<ref>Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric et al. (2005). Template:Lang in Template:Google books; n.b., Louis-Frédéric is pseudonym of Louis-Frédéric Nussbaum, see Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Authority File.</ref> While all three of the shogunates in Japanese history had official retainers, in the two preceding ones, they were referred to as Template:Lang. However, in the Edo period, Template:Lang were the upper vassals of the Tokugawa house,<ref>Ooms, p. 190.</ref> and the Template:Lang were the lower vassals. There was no precise difference between the two in terms of income level, but a Template:Lang had the right to an audience with the Template:Lang, whereas Template:Lang did not.<ref name="Ogawa, p. 43">Ogawa, p. 43.</ref> The word Template:Lang literally means "origin/base of the flag", with the sense of 'around the flag', it is described in Japanese as 'those who guard the flag' (on the battlefield) and is often translated into English as "bannerman". Another term for the Edo-era Template:Lang was Template:Nihongo, sometimes rendered as "direct shogunal Template:Lang", which serves to illustrate the difference between them and the preceding generation of Template:Lang who served various lords.

History

The term Template:Lang originated in the Sengoku period. The term was used for the direct retainers of a lord; as the name suggests, the men who were grouped "around of the flag". Many lords had Template:Lang; however, when the Tokugawa clan achieved ascendancy in 1600, its Template:Lang system was institutionalized, and it is that system which is chiefly referred to now when using the term.

In the eyes of the Tokugawa shogunate, Template:Lang were retainers who had served the family from its days in Mikawa onward.<ref name="Ogawa, p. 35">Ogawa, p. 35.</ref> However, the ranks of the Template:Lang also included people from outside the hereditary ranks of the Tokugawa house. Retainer families of defeated formerly grand families like the Takeda, Hōjō, or Imagawa were included, as were cadet branches of lord families.<ref>Ogawa, pp. 35–36.</ref> Also included were heirs to lords whose domains were confiscated, for example Asano Daigaku, the brother of Asano Naganori,<ref name="Ogawa, p. 35"/> local power figures in remote parts of the country who never became Template:Lang; and the families of Kamakura and Muromachi periods Template:Lang (Governors): some of these include the Akamatsu, Besshō (branch of the Akamatsu), Hōjō, Hatakeyama, Kanamori (branch of the Toki), Imagawa, Mogami (branch of the Ashikaga), Nagai, Oda, Ōtomo, Takeda, Toki, Takenaka (branch of the Toki), Takigawa, Tsutsui, and Yamana families.<ref>Ogawa, p. 35</ref> The act of becoming a Template:Lang was known as Template:Nihongo.

Many Template:Lang fought in the Boshin War of 1868, on both sides of the conflict.

The Template:Lang remained retainers of the main Tokugawa clan after the fall of the shogunate in 1868, and followed the Tokugawa to their new domain of Shizuoka. The Template:Lang lost their status along with all other samurai in Japan following the abolition of the domains in 1871.

Ranks and roles

File:Photo-Hijikata-Toshizo-c1869.png
Hijikata Toshizō of the Shinsengumi became a Template:Lang shortly before the end of the Edo period

The division between Template:Lang and Template:Lang, especially amongst Template:Lang of lower rank, was not rigid, and the title of Template:Lang had more to do with rank rather than income rating. In the context of an army, it could be compared to the position of an officer. Throughout the Edo period, Template:Lang held the distinction that if they possessed high enough rank, they had the right to personal audience with the Template:Lang (these Template:Lang were known as Template:Lang). All Template:Lang can be divided into two categories, the Template:Lang, who took their incomes straight from Tokugawa granaries, and the Template:Lang, who held land scattered throughout Japan.<ref>Ooms, p. 92.</ref> Another level of status distinction amongst the Template:Lang was the class of Template:Lang, men who were heads of Template:Lang families and held provincial fiefs, and had alternate attendance (Template:Lang) duties like the Template:Lang. However, as Template:Lang were men of very high income in terms of the spectrum of Template:Lang stipends, not all Template:Lang had the duty of alternate attendance. The dividing line between the upper Template:Lang and the Template:Lang'—the domain lords who were also vassals of the Tokugawa house—was 10,000 Template:Lang.<ref name="Ogawa, p. 43"/>

At the beginning of the 18th century, about 5,000 samurai held the rank of Template:Lang; over two thirds of these had an income of less than 400 koku and only about 100 earned 5,000 koku or more. A Template:Lang with 500 koku had seven permanent non-samurai servants, two swordsmen, a lancer, and an archer on standby.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Infrequently, some Template:Lang were granted an increase in income and thus promoted to the rank of Template:Lang. One example of such a promotion is the case of the Hayashi family of Kaibuchi (later known as Jōzai han), who began as Template:Lang but who became Template:Lang and went on to play a prominent role in the Boshin War, despite their domain's relatively small size of 10,000 Template:Lang.

The term for a Template:Lang with income of about 8,000 Template:Lang or greater was Template:Lang ("greater Template:Lang").

The Template:Lang who lived in Edo resided in their own private districts and oversaw their own police work and security. Men from Template:Lang ranks could serve in a variety of roles in the Tokugawa administration, including service in the police force as Template:Lang inspectors,<ref>Sasama, p. 45.</ref> city magistrates, magistrates or tax collectors of direct Tokugawa house land, members of the Template:Lang council, and many other positions.<ref>Bolitho, p. 118.</ref>

The expression Template:Nihongo was in popular use to denote their numbers, but a 1722 study put their numbers at about 5,000. Adding the Template:Lang brought the number up to about 17,000.

Famous Template:Lang include Jidayu Koizumi, Nakahama Manjirō, Ōoka Tadasuke, Tōyama Kagemoto, Katsu Kaishū, Enomoto Takeaki, Hijikata Toshizō, Nagai Naoyuki, and the two Westerners William Adams and Jan Joosten van Lodensteijn.

Template:Lang and the martial arts

Template:Lang patronized the development of the martial arts in the Edo period; many of them were involved in the running of Template:Lang in the Edo area and elsewhere. Two Template:Lang who were directly involved in the development of the martial arts were Yagyū Munenori and Yamaoka Tesshū. Munenori's family became hereditary sword instructors to the Template:Lang.

Template:Lang appeared as figures in popular culture even before the Edo era ended.Template:Citation needed Recent depictions of Template:Lang include in the TV series Template:Lang, the manga Template:Lang, and Osamu Tezuka's manga Template:Lang. The real-time strategy video game series Age of Empires features Template:Lang in its Age of Empires III: The Asian Dynasties expansion, again in Age of Empires IV as Samurai Bannermen, in both games they are especially powerful variants of the samurai.

In the novel Shōgun (subject of a 1980 television series, and a 2024 remake), the protagonist Pilot John Blackthorne, loosely based on William Adams, eventually rises in the service of Lord Toranaga to become samurai and hatamoto.

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

Template:Tokugawa Organization Chart Template:Tokugawa officials

Template:Authority control