Toyooka Domain


The Toyooka Domain was a feudal domain of Japan during the Edo period. Its lands were in the vicinity of Kinosaki District, Tajima Province. The administrative headquarters were initially at Toyooka Castle, and later at Toyooka Jin'ya.
Toyooka was established in 1600 following the Battle of Sekigahara. At that battle, Sugihara Nagafusa fought on the Western side, but he was married to a daughter of Asano Nagamasa, who was in favor with the victor Tokugawa Ieyasu, and Nagafusa received the fief with an appraisal of 25,000 koku.
During the Edo period, the daimyō were identified as belonging either to one of the fudai or insider clans, which were hereditary vassals or allies of the Tokugawa, or to one of the tozama or outsider clans. Opportunities were sometimes provided for those who were not fudai; and the Sugihara held the fief until their line failed in 1653. The second lord died without a son, and his nephew became the head of the fief. However, he died at age 17 without heir, which ended the Sugihara dominion in Toyooka. Control passed to the Tokugawa shogunate.
In 1668, the shogunate awarded Toyooka to a cadet branch of the tozama Kyōgoku clan. Kyōgoku Takamori was transferred from the Tanabe Domain. In Toyooka, Takamori's headquarters were at a smaller jin'ya; and his descendants held Toyooka until the abolition of the han system in 1871.

People from Toyooka

Ōishi Riku, wife of Ōishi Kuranosuke, leader of the Forty-seven rōnin, was a daughter of Ishizuka Tsuneyoshi, principal house elder of Toyooka. She later returned to Toyooka, and lived with her father at the time of the revenge of the rōnin.
In 2009, Takaharu Kyōgoku became the chief priest of the Yasukuni Shrine. He is the 15th head of the Kyōgoku clan that held power in Toyooka until the Meiji Restoration.

Daimyō