Itakura Katsukiyo Explained

Itakura Katsukiyo
Nationality:Japanese
Order:Daimyō of Bitchū-Matsuyama
Term Start:1849
Term End:1869
Predecessor:Itakura Katsutsune
Successor:Itakura Katsusuke
Birth Date:February 14, 1823
Birth Place:Edo, Japan
Death Place:Tokyo, Japan

was a Japanese daimyō of the late Edo period. Famed for his tenure as rōjū, Itakura later became a Shinto priest.

Biography

Itakura, born to the Hisamatsu-Matsudaira of the Kuwana Domain, was adopted by Itakura Katsutsune, the lord of the Matsuyama domain. As a student of Yamada Hōkoku, Itakura worked to reform his domain's administration and finances. His childhood name was Matsudaira Yatsuhachiro (松平寧八郎) later Mannoshin (万之進).

Itakura entered the ranks of the shogunate bureaucracy. He served as jisha-bugyō in 1857–1859 and again in 1861–1862. He became a rōjū in 1862.[1]

Itakura fought in the Boshin War, and served as a staff officer of the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei. He joined the Ezo Republic, and fought at Hakodate. After a short time in prison, he was released in the early 1870s, and later became priest of the Tōshōgu Shrine in Ueno.

Family

References

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Beasley, William G. (1955). Select Documents on Japanese Foreign Policy, 1853–1868, p. 333.