Shimotsuke Province

Map of Japanese provinces (1868) with Shimotsuke Province highlighted

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The ancient capital city of the province was near Tochigi.

Tokugawa Ieyasu's tomb and shrine is at Nikkō, in Shimotsuke.[2]

History

 
Waterfall in Shimotsuke Province, woodblock print by Hiroshige, 1853

In the Nara period, Shimotsuke was part of Keno Province. This was changed in the reforms of the Taihō Code in 701.[3]

Parts of Shimotsuke were held by a several daimyo during the Sengoku period.

Timeline

In the Meiji period, the provinces of Japan were converted into prefectures. Maps of Japan and Shimotsuke Province were reformed in the 1870s.[8]

Shrines and Temples

Futarasan jinja was the chief Shinto shrine (ichinomiya) of Shimotsuke. [9]

Related pages

References

  1. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Shimotsuke" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 862.
  2. Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du japon, p. 410.
  3. Tsunoda, Ryūsaku. (1951). Japan in the Chinese Dynastic Histories: Later Han through Ming dynasties, p. 18 n25.
  4. Titsingh, p. 187.
  5. Papinot, Edmund. (2003). "Inaba", Nobiliare du Japon, p. 15; Papinot, Jacques. (1906). Dictionnaire d’histoire et de géographie du Japon.
  6. Papinot, "Itakura", pp. 16-17.
  7. Papinot, "Ōkubo", p. 46.
  8. Nussbaum, "Provinces and prefectures" at p. 780.
  9. "Nationwide List of Ichinomiya," p. 2; retrieved 2012-1-17.

Other websites

  Media related to Shimotsuke Province at Wikimedia Commons