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fudai

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Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1975) 34 (3): 581–591.
Published: 01 May 1975
...Conrad Totman Abstract In Treasures among Men; the Fudai Daimyo in Tokugawa Japan (Yale, 1974), Harold Bolitho has discussed the role of the fudai daimyo in the functioning and collapse of the Tokugawa polity, arguing in fine that their conduct during the 1860's was dictated by their concern...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1983) 42 (4): 951–953.
Published: 01 August 1983
...) is the distinction between fudai (vassal daimyo) and tozama (allied lord). She notes that in his conquests Nobunaga destroyed tozama, replacing them with fudai, thereby driving tozama lords and others into alliances designed to thwart Oda or whomever else might threaten them by such a unification strategy. Hideyoshi...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1960) 19 (3): 255–272.
Published: 01 May 1960
... been seriously distorted by the occurrence of some special event like flood or typhoon. 4 In all tables—and generally throughout the article—the term fudai should be understood as including Tokugawa branch houses. 5 As a check on the reliability of the regional variations revealed...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1956) 16 (1): 31–50.
Published: 01 November 1956
..., and the smaller domains of the fudai or hereditary vassals of the shogun. The latter, because they were closely identified with the Tokugawa house, developed a deep vested interest in maintaining its political hegemony. As has already been pointed out, such terms as court, shogunate, and domain are usable only...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1964) 24 (1): 163.
Published: 01 November 1964
.... (Jim- butsu S5sho, No. 113.) Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kobunkan, 1963. 10, 452. Illus., Genealogy, Chronology, Bibliography. ¥450. In June, 1858, Ii Naosuke, richest of Japan's hereditary vassals (fudai daimyo), assumed the office of great councilor (tairo) in the central government, and, for almost two years...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1952) 11 (3): 297–304.
Published: 01 May 1952
.... They comprised either the ruling Daimyo, or a member of his immediate family, from the fiefs of Satsuma, Choshu, Tosa, Hizen, Echizen, Aki, Awa, Owari, Bizen, Kumamoto, Inaba, and Uwajima. All were from tozama fiefs except Matsudaira Shungaku of Echizen, whose defection from the fudai ranks had been...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2015) 74 (4): 1038–1040.
Published: 01 November 2015
... themselves as “vassals” (Jp. fudai , D. vassalen ) (pp. 99–100) of the Tokugawa. Their leader, the Holland Captain, became lord of the tiny domain of Deshima. As vassals, the Dutch participated in the alternate attendance system by annually traveling to Edo for an audience with the shogun; fulfilled...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1989) 48 (2): 399–400.
Published: 01 May 1989
...), the bakufu's use of ritual and symbol, and the attempt to replace imperially conferred court ranks (kan'i) with a system of military merit ranks (kun'i). The leitmotif in Nakai's analysis is Hakuseki's attempt to recast the shogun as a national monarch. This effort was resisted, on the one hand, by the fudai...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1964) 24 (1): 163–164.
Published: 01 November 1964
.... By YOSHIDA TSUNEKICHI. (Jim- butsu S5sho, No. 113.) Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kobunkan, 1963. 10, 452. Illus., Genealogy, Chronology, Bibliography. ¥450. In June, 1858, Ii Naosuke, richest of Japan's hereditary vassals (fudai daimyo), assumed the office of great councilor (tairo) in the central government...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1989) 48 (2): 397–399.
Published: 01 May 1989
... conferred court ranks (kan'i) with a system of military merit ranks (kun'i). The leitmotif in Nakai's analysis is Hakuseki's attempt to recast the shogun as a national monarch. This effort was resisted, on the one hand, by the fudai daimyo and their roju (senior councillor) representatives, who accurately...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1959) 19 (1): 84–86.
Published: 01 November 1959
... seventeenth century, the baseline of his study. In this society the basic pattern of farming (tezu\uri) was one in which putative kinship groups extended families consisting of a main house surrounded by its branch houses and hereditary servants (fudai) worked their land jointly within the cooperative...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1980) 40 (1): 143–146.
Published: 01 November 1980
... Among Men and in reviews of Totman's Politics in the Tokugawa Bakufu that fudai consciousness gave way to domain interests by the nineteenth century receive answer (as they did in part in Totman's 1975 response in this journal) showing how hard it was to set and hold a pro-bakufu line at a time when...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1993) 52 (3): 725–728.
Published: 01 August 1993
... the listing of denpata eitai baibai no kinshi ("prohibition on the sale of arable lands") with a good parenthetical definition. The entry "Daimyo {Daimyo)" provides no definition, and none are provided for "fudai" and "tozama" daimyo types. In a book that will be consulted by many nonspecialists...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1995) 54 (4): 997–1022.
Published: 01 November 1995
... of Japanese Studies 12 : 2 : 237 –71. Bolitho Harold . 1974 . Treasures Among Men: The Fudai Daimyo in Tokugawa Japan . New Haven : Yale University Press . Brown Philip C. 1993 . Central Authority and Local Autonomy in the Formation of Early Modern Japan: The Case of Kaga Domain...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1959) 19 (1): 81–84.
Published: 01 November 1959
... of farming (tezu\uri) was one in which putative kinship groups extended families consisting of a main house surrounded by its branch houses and hereditary servants (fudai) worked their land jointly within the cooperative structure (fyodotai) of the village. Politically, economically, socially...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1970) 30 (1): 155–160.
Published: 01 November 1970
... categories which are otherwise represented in this volume. JAPANESE HISTORY 157 Among the four titles of officers in the Nara administrative system, for instance, we are given the last (sa\an: clerk) and not the first (\ami: chief). There is an entry for "tozama daimyo" but not for fudai; for "Izumo Taisha...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1970) 29 (3): 617–632.
Published: 01 May 1970
... Mobility in the Meiji Restoration ( Tucson , 1964 ), p. 341 . 4 Levy , “Contrasting; Factors …,” p. 185 . 5 Fudai-kinsei, shimpan-kinsei, tozama-shokuhō and tozama-sengoku . This typology is discussed by Tasaburō Itō , Nihon hōkenseido shi [A History of Japanese...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1975) 34 (4): i–vii.
Published: 01 August 1975
...-Century Tokugawa Confucianism 931 ROYSTON, CLIFTON w. Utaawose Judgments as Poetry Criticism 99 SUGIMOTO, YOSHIO. Structural Sources of Popular Revolts and the Tobaku Movement at the Time of the Meiji Restoration 000 TOTMAN, CONRAD. Fudai Daimyo and the Collapse of the Tokugawa Bakufu 581 Korea KANO, H. w...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2001) 60 (2): 353–380.
Published: 01 May 2001
... Newsletter 9 ( 2–3 ): 1 – 9 . Bix Herbert P. 1986 . Peasant Protest in Japan, 1590–1884 . New Haven : Yale University Press . Bolitho Harold. 1976 . Treasures among Men: The Fudai Daimyo in Tokugawa Japan . New Haven : Yale University Press . Bolitho Harold. 1991 . “The Han...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1968) 27 (2): 447–469.
Published: 01 February 1968
...), "Fudai-dai- myo in Bakufu and Han"; Dixon Y. Miyauchi Chinese History: On Interactions. Hellmut (State University College, Plattsburg, New Wilheim (Washington), "The Music Bureau York), "The Administration of Kumamoto- in the Han Government: Its Interacting Func- han and Yokoi Shonan." tions"; Y. S. Yu...