Inaba Masatake

Inaba Masatake (稲葉 正武, June 2, 1769 August 3, 1840) was daimyō of Tateyama Domain during late-Edo period Japan.

Inaba Masatake
稲葉正武
Born(1769-06-02)June 2, 1769
DiedMarch 3, 1840(1840-03-03) (aged 70)
NationalityJapanese
Other namesHarima-no-kami
OccupationDaimyō

Biography

Inaba Masatake was the fourth son of the previous daimyō of Tateyama Domain, Inaba Masaaki. On the death of his elder brother, Inaba Masanori in 1788, he was appointed heir. He succeeded to the head of the Tateyama Inaba clan and the position of daimyō of Tateyama on the forced retirement of his father the following year. He is noting for having completed the Tateyama Jin'ya, a fortified residence next to the site of Tateyama Castle, which become the seat of the Tateyama Inaba clan until the Meiji Restoration.

Inaba Masatake was married to a daughter of Tanuma Okitomo, daimyō of Sagara Domain in Suruga Province. He retired from public life in 1812, turning Tateyama Domain over to his son, Inaba Masamori.

gollark: Or possibly to receive and decode them, I forgot.
gollark: And because the government is bad it is in fact illegal to receive those.
gollark: Less with receive only, of course. But I found out that unencrypted very strong pager messages are transmitted here not massively far off regular FM radio.
gollark: There are probably some annoying legal things related to this.
gollark: There's no theoretical reason they couldn't contain an entire SDR nowadays.

References

Preceded by
Inaba Masaaki
Daimyō of Tateyama
1789-1812
Succeeded by
Inaba Masamori


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