Yodo Domain
The Yodo Domain (淀藩, Yodo-han) was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, and the only domain located in Yamashiro Province. Its castle was located within modern-day Fushimi, Kyoto.
The strategic location of the castle figured in the 1582 Battle of Yamazaki.[1]
During the 1868 Battle of Toba–Fushimi, the master of Yodo changed his allegiance from the Shogunate to Imperial forces, going as far as closing his gate and refusing protection to the retreating army of the shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu.
List of lords
- Matsudaira (Hisamatsu) clan (Shinpan; 35,000 koku)
- Sadatsuna
- Naomasa
- Naoyuki
- Ishikawa clan (Fudai; 60,000 koku)
- Noriyuki
- Yoshitaka
- Fusayoshi
- Matsudaira (Toda) clan (Fudai; 60,000 koku)
- Mitsuhiro
- Mitsuchika
- Matsudaira (Ogyū) clan (Fudai; 60,00 koku)
- Norisato
- Inaba clan (Fudai; 102,000 koku)
- Masatomo
- Masatō
- Masatsune
- Masachika
- Masayoshi
- Masahiro
- Masanobu
- Masanari
- Masaharu
- Masamori
- Masayoshi
- Masakuni
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gollark: What do you mean "whatever the i, j and k are"?
gollark: The best part is that we can basically never run out of Unicode characters to use as there are about 10000 allocated ones.
gollark: `Æ` and `⛁` are the only really hard ones.
gollark: Why? It's easy.
References
- Turnbull, Stephen (2010). Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 9781846039607.
- (in Japanese) Yodo on "Edo 300 HTML" (30 September 2007)
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