Kyōgoku clan


The Kyōgoku clan were a Japanese daimyō clan which rose to prominence during the Sengoku and Edo periods. The clan descend from the Uda Genji through the Sasaki clan. The name derives from the Kyōgoku quarter of Kyoto during the Heian period.
The Kyōgoku acted as shugo of Ōmi, Hida, Izumo and Oki Provinces in the period before the Ōnin War.
A period of decline in clan fortunes was mitigated with the rise of the Tokugawa clan. Members of the clan were daimyōs of territories on the islands of Kyūshū and Shikoku during the Edo period. Under the Tokugawa shogunate, the Kyōgoku were identified as tozama or outsiders, in contrast with the fudai or insider daimyō clans which were hereditary vassals or allies of the Tokugawa.
At the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate, the Kyōgoku had been enfeoffed at Marugame and Tadotsu in Sanuki, Toyooka in Tajima, and Mineyama Domain in Tango Province. A branch of the Kyōgoku was ranked among the kōke.

Genealogy

The tozama Kyōgoku are descended directly from Emperor Uda through his grandson Minamoto no Masanobu. They represent a branch of the Sasaki clan who were adopted by the Seiwa Genji.
The branches of the tozama Kyōgoku clan include the following:

The fall of the Tokugawa shogunate created ripple of unanticipated consequences amongst the daimyo closely associated with the bafuku. One results of these economic changes was that the residence in Edo belonging to the Kyōgoku daimyo of Tadotsu was sold. The clan's house and garden fell into the hands of Inoue Kaoru, the first foreign minister in the Meiji government. The home became a venue for entertaining foreign dignitaries and introducing them to the esthetics of Japanese gardens.
After World War II, the former Kyōgoku property was acquired by the International House of Japan. A new residence hall and cultural center was built on the site, but the garden was preserved as the unanticipated yet enduring legacy of the Kyōgoku clan. The garden survives and the clan continues, albeit with less public visibly.

Head Family

Ancestor

  1. Emperor Uda
  2. Imperial Prince Atsumi
  3. Minamoto no Masanobu
  4. Minamoto no Sukenori
  5. Sasaki Nariyori
  6. Sasaki no Yoshitsune
  7. Sasaki no Tsunekata
  8. Sasaki Tametoshi
  9. Sasaki Hideyoshi
  10. Sasaki Sadatsuna
  11. Sasaki Nobutsuna

    Head Family

  12. Sasaki Ujinobu
  13. Sasaki Munetsuna
  14. Sasaki Sadamune
  15. Sasaki Takauji
  16. Sasaki Takahide
  17. Kyōgoku Takanori
  18. Kyōgoku Takamitsu
  19. Kyōgoku Mochitaka
  20. Kyōgoku Mochikiyo
  21. Kyōgoku Masatsune
  22. Kyōgoku Takakiyo
  23. Kyōgoku Takanobu
  24. Kyōgoku Takayoshi
  25. Kyōgoku Takatsugu
  26. Kyōgoku Tadataka
  27. Kyōgoku Takakazu
  28. Kyōgoku Takatoyo
  29. Kyōgoku Takamochi
  30. Kyōgoku Takanori
  31. Kyōgoku Takanaka
  32. Kyōgoku Takaakira
  33. Kyōgoku Akiyuki
  34. Kyōgoku Takanori
  35. Kyōgoku Takaosa
  36. Takaharu Kyōgoku

    Notable clan members

Ōishi Riku, wife of Ōishi Kuranosuke, leader of the Forty-seven rōnin, was a daughter of Ishizuka Tsuneyoshi, principal house elder of Toyooka domain. She later returned to Toyooka, and lived with her father at the time of the revenge of the ronin.
In 1925, the first election of the members of the House of Peers representing the Meiji-created nobility was held. As a result, Viscount Takanori Kyōgoku of Sanuki was amongst those who were seated in the upper house of the Imperial Diet.
In 2009, Takaharu Kyōgoku became the chief priest of the Yasukuni Shrine. He is the 15th head of the Kyogoku family that held power in Toyooka until the Meiji Restoration.

Clan heads