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  2. Jōkamachi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jōkamachi

    These cities tended to exist around river terraces in eastern Japan and deltas facing the ocean in western Japan, while cities like Hikone, Zeze, and Suwa are adjacent to a lake as part of the "lake type" jōkamachi. Within a jōkamachi, smaller districts like Samurai-machi, Ashigaru-machi, Chōnin, and Tera-machi surrounded the castle. A ...

  3. Yoshiwara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshiwara

    Yoshiwara (吉原) was a famous yūkaku (red-light district) in Edo, present-day Tokyo, Japan. Established in 1617, Yoshiwara was one of three licensed and well-known red-light districts created during the early 17th century by the Tokugawa shogunate, alongside Shimabara in Kyoto in 1640 [1] and Shinmachi in Osaka. [1]

  4. Districts of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Districts_of_Japan

    Former district government office of Higashiyamanashi, Yamanashi (reconstruction at Meiji-mura museum) District assembly of Kawabe, Akita in 1923. All assemblies would be abolished by 1926. In Japan, a district (郡, gun) is composed of one or more rural municipalities (towns or villages) within a prefecture. Districts have no governing ...

  5. Obi, Nichinan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obi,_Nichinan

    Obi (飫肥) is a district located in Nichinan, in the southern part of Miyazaki Prefecture, in the Kyushu region of Japan.During the Edo period, it was the Jōkamachi (castle town) of Obi Castle, which was the seat of the Obi Domain, which was ruled by the Ito clan.

  6. Nanbu clan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanbu_clan

    Nanbu Nobunao, Nanbu clan head in the Azuchi–Momoyama period. Although the Nanbu clan by the time of the 24th hereditary chieftain Nanbu Harumasa controlled seven districts of northern Mutsu province (Nukanobu, Hei, Kazuno, Kuji, Iwate, Shiwa and Tōno), the clan was more of a loose collection of competing branches without strong central authority.

  7. Demographic history of Japan before the Meiji Restoration

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_history_of...

    Estimated populations of castle towns contain considerable errors compared to those of the business towns (Ōsaka, Sakai, Hyōgo, Niigata, Nagasaki, Hakodate and Fushimi) with fewer samurai-class inhabitants, because demographics of samurai classes and their servants (or dwellers of samurai districts) were recorded separately or kept secret ...

  8. Samurai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samurai

    A samurai in his armour in the 1860s. Hand-colored photograph by Felice Beato. Samurai or bushi (武士, [bɯ.ɕi]) were members of the warrior class in Japan.They were most prominent as aristocratic warriors during the country's feudal period from the 12th century to early 17th century, and thereafter as a top class in the social hierarchy of the Edo period until their abolishment in the ...

  9. Jizamurai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jizamurai

    The jizamurai (地侍) (samurai of the land) [1] were lower-ranking provincial samurai that emerged in 15th-century Japan Muromachi period. [2] The definition was rather broad and the term jizamurai included landholding noblemen as well as independent peasant farmers.