Zeze Domain

The Zeze Domain (膳所藩, Zeze-han) was a feudal domain in Japan during the Edo period.[1] It was established by Tokugawa Ieyasu as a reward to Toda Kazuaki, whom he transferred from a 5,000 koku territory in Musashi Province to this 30,000 koku domain in Ōmi Province. The domain government had its headquarters at Zeze Castle in what is now the city of Ōtsu, Shiga Prefecture. At its peak, it had a rating of 70,000 koku. It continued throughout the Edo period until the 1871 abolition of the han system.[1]

Gate at Zeze Castle

List of Daimyō

  1. Kazuaki
  2. Ujikane
  1. Yasutoshi
  2. Toshitsugu
  1. Sadayoshi
  1. Tadafusa
  2. Noriyuki
  1. Toshitsugu
  2. Yasumasa (本多康将)
  3. Yasuyoshi
  4. Yasunobu
  5. Yasutoshi
  6. Yasutake
  7. Yasumasa (本多康政)
  8. Yasutomo
  9. Yasumasa (本多康匡)
  10. Yasusada
  11. Yasutada
  12. Yasuaki
  13. Yasushige

Sources

This article incorporates material from the article ja:膳所藩 (Zeze-han) in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved on November 13, 2007.

gollark: You aren't boiling because you are not a liquid.
gollark: No, it's as hot as the rest of the CPU, roughly.
gollark: > The ES runs asynchronously on a self-timed circuit and uses thermal noise within the silicon to output a random stream of bits at the rate of 3 GHz. The ES needs no dedicated external power supply to run, instead using the same power supply as other core logic. The ES is designed to function properly over a wide range of operating conditions, exceeding the normal operating range of the processor.It isn't very specific.
gollark: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/guide/intel-digital-random-number-generator-drng-software-implementation-guide.html
gollark: I vaguely remember reading that they or some similar system use thermal noise measured with a ring oscillator.

References

  1. "酒". Nihon Daihyakka Zensho (Nipponika) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2012. OCLC 153301537. Archived from the original on August 25, 2007. Retrieved 2012-11-18.


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