Niwa Nagakuni
Niwa Nagakuni | |
---|---|
Niwa Nagakuni | |
Lord of Nihonmatsu | |
In office 1858–1868 | |
Preceded by | Niwa Nagatomi |
Succeeded by | Niwa Nagahiro |
Personal details | |
Born |
Nihonmatsu, Japan | May 22, 1834
Died | January 15, 1904 69), aged 69 | (aged
Nationality | Japanese |
Viscount Niwa Nagakuni (丹羽長国 Niwa Nagakuni); (May 22, 1834 – January 15, 1904) was a Japanese daimyo of the late Edo period who ruled Nihonmatsu han and is famous for his leadership of the domain during the Boshin War.
Biography
Nagakuni, known in his childhood as HÅzÅ (ä¿è”µ) was born in Nihonmatsu on May 22, 1834, the 6th son of Niwa Nagatomi. On November 15, 1858[1] he succeeded to the family headship upon his father's retirement. He continued the joint coastal defense mission at Tomitsu (together with Aizu han) begun by his father.[2] In 1860, he sent forces for security duty in Kyoto. This, as well as a fire in his castle town, seriously drained his resources. These expenses were compounded by the economic difficulties the domain faced following the Tenpo famines, as well as bureaucratic corruption. As a result, Nihonmatsu was utterly economically paralyzed by the end of the Edo period. Despite this, it joined the Northern Confederation of Allied Domains in 1868, and fought against the forces of the Meiji Government. However, Nihonmatsu was defeated, and forced to give up 50,000 koku of its holdings. Also, as per the government's conditions, Nagakuni retired, and his adopted son Niwa Nagahiro (brother of the Yonezawa han daimyo Uesugi Mochinori) succeeded him.
Nagakuni held the title of SakyÅ-dayÅ« (左京大夫) and the junior 4th court rank, lower grade (jÅ« shi-i no ge 従四ä½ä¸‹).[2]
During the Meiji era, Nagakuni lived to see the Niwa clan recover some of its fortunes in society, and received the title of viscount (å爵 shishaku). He died in 1904.
Notes
- ↑ 11 October by the lunar calendar.
- 1 2 æ´å²ã®å‹‰å¼·ãƒ»ä¸¹ç¾½æ°
Preceded by Niwa Nagatomi |
DaimyÅ of Nihonmatsu 1858-1868 |
Succeeded by Niwa Nagahiro |
Further reading
- Nihonmatsu-han shi 二本æ¾è—©å². Tokyo: Nihonmatsu-hanshi kankÅkai 二本æ¾è—©å²åˆŠè¡Œä¼š, 1926 (republished by Rekishi Toshosha æ´å²å›³æ›¸ç¤¾, 1973)
- Onodera EikÅ å°é‡Žå¯ºæ°¸å¹¸. Boshin Nanboku SensÅ to TÅhoku Seiken 戊辰å—åŒ—æˆ¦äº‰ã¨æ±åŒ—政権. Sendai: Kita no Sha åŒ—ã®æœ, 2004.
- Sugeno Shigeru è…野与. ÅŒshÅ« Nihonmatsu-han nenpyŠ奥州二本æ¾è—©å¹´è¡¨. Aizu-Wakamatsu shi 会津若æ¾å¸‚: Rekishi ShunjÅ«sha æ´å²æ˜¥ç§‹ç¤¾, 2004.
External links
- Genealogical Information (in Japanese)
- Biography (in Japanese)