- one of
which ruled the
Okutono Domain.
Nagai Naoyuki was a
prominent Bakumatsu-era
descendant of the Ogyū-Matsudaira of
Okutono.
Other pre-Edo branches...
-
Okutono Domain (奥殿藩,
Okutono-han), also
known as Okudono, was a
feudal domain under the
Tokugawa shogunate of Edo
period ****an,
located in Kamo District...
- of
several shogunate demesne administrations with
parts of Matsumoto],
Okutono, Iwamurada, Komoro, Ueda, Matsushiro, Suzaka, Iiyama, Suwa/Takashima, Takatō...
- shōgun were shinpan; an
example of this is the
Matsudaira clan of the
Okutono Domain. Non-daimyō relatives, such as the Gosankyō, were also
known as...
- 1600–1868 23,000
fudai Nishi-Ōhira
Domain (西大平藩) Ōoka 1748–1871 10,000
fudai Okutono Domain (奥殿藩) Ogyū-Matsudaira clan 1664–1871 16,000
fudai Hatagamura Domain...
- (1590-1871)
Matsumoto (1615-1871)
Matsushiro (1616-1871) Ōhama (1765-1777)
Okutono (1684-1863)
Susaka (1615-1871) Suwa (1590-1871)
Takashima (1590-1871) Takatō...
-
large portions were
administered by the
feudal domains of
Okazaki Domain,
Okutono Domain and Nishi-Ohira Domain.
After the
Meiji Restoration, the area became...
-
Portrait photograph of Tsunoda,
before 1918. Born 1834
Nagadoro Village,
Okutono Domain,
Shinano Province, ****an Died 1918(1918-00-00) (aged 83–84) Nagoya...
-
December 18, 1839 –
January 26, 1910) was the 8th and
final daimyō of
Okutono in
Mikawa Province, and 1st (and final) daimyō of
Tanoguchi Domain in Shinano...
- known,
Matsudaira Iwanojō (松平 岩之丞), was born in the
Nukada district of the
Okutono Domain by a
concubine to daimyō
Matsudaira Noritada (松平 乗尹). Noritada,...