Ogasawara Tadanobu Explained

Ogasawara Tadanobu
Nationality:Japanese
Order:10th Daimyō of Kokura
Term Start:1865
Term End:1871
Successor:none
Birth Date:March 8, 1862

Count was a Japanese samurai daimyō of the late Edo period. He was the head of Kokura Domain.[1] [2]  

Ogasawara clan genealogy

Tadanobu was part of the senior branch of the Ogasawara clan.[3]

Tadanobu's branch of the clan were daimyō at Kokura Domain (150,000 koku)[4] in Buzen Province.

He was a in the kazoku nobility system. This was because the head of this clan line and his heirs were ennobled in 1884.[5]

Events of Tadanobu's life

During Tadanobu's tenure as clan head, the Kokura domain took part in the shogunate's Chōshū Expeditions, and also destroyed Kokura Castle in 1866 during its retreat to Kawara. He was assisted in day-to-day affairs by his two karō, and . Komiya was the one who took charge of the burning of Kokura Castle and, as the castle was built by the clan's ancestor Ogasawara Tadazane, he committed seppuku in atonement.

For his deployment of troops on the Imperial side during the Boshin War of 1868, Tadanobu received a personal stipend of 5,000 koku from the court.[6]

In the Meiji era, Tadanobu spent a few years studying in Britain, returning in 1878. He held junior 3rd court rank .

Ancestry

[7]

Further reading

See also

Notes and References

  1. [Edmond Papinot]
  2. Edmond Papinot (2003). "Terazawa" in Nobiliare du Japon. pp. 44–45.
  3. [Georges Appert|Appert, Georges]
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20061004012003/http://www.city.kitakyushu.jp/file/29090200/Bridges/20.pdf "Kokura Castle," Kitakyushu Bridges, p. 2
  5. http://www.unterstein.net/or/docs/JapanPeers.pdf "Nobility, Peerage and Ranks in Ancient and Meiji-Japan"
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20090617090720/http://www006.upp.so-net.ne.jp/e_meijiishin/jinbutsu/ogasawaratadanobu/ogasawaratadanobu.htm Ogasawara Tadanobu, notes (in Japanese).
  7. Web site: Ogasawara-Kokura genealogy. Reichsarchiv. 16 January 2018. ja.