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  • 宮地 輝和
    宮崎県総合博物館研究紀要
    2023年 43 巻 86-96
    発行日: 2023/03/31
    公開日: 2023/12/27
    研究報告書・技術報告書 オープンアクセス
  • 『日向記』卜翁本所収「分国中城主揃事(通称 伊東四十八城)」の基礎的考察
    宮地 輝和
    宮崎県総合博物館研究紀要
    2024年 44 巻 94-118
    発行日: 2024/03/31
    公開日: 2024/03/31
    研究報告書・技術報告書 オープンアクセス
  • イェルサレムの場合
    辻田 右左男
    人文地理
    1952年 3 巻 5-6 号 225-230,A21
    発行日: 1952/01/15
    公開日: 2009/04/30
    ジャーナル フリー
    Histories of the walled-cities may be traced most exactly by reviewing the sites, removal and rebilding of their walls. There seems many such interesting examples the walled-cities in China. But the present writer only intends to trace the transformation of town-landscape in Jerusalem, by inspecting the related books and maps. Modernization is occuring on the oldest and most peculiar city in the world, but there stood dirty, ill-paved and crooked streets in comparison with macadamazised motor roads in Jewish Colony. The wall of it still separates, as defore, the modern human groups from the old, traditional communities. Both landscape, in-and out of the wall exemplify this fact clearly.
  • ―新納武蔵守忠元の場合―
    重松 裕巳
    連歌俳諧研究
    1962年 1962 巻 23 号 10-15
    発行日: 1962/07/20
    公開日: 2010/08/25
    ジャーナル フリー
  • 山本 博文
    史学雑誌
    1983年 92 巻 6 号 955-1001,1106-
    発行日: 1983/06/20
    公開日: 2017/11/29
    ジャーナル フリー

    It is well known that, in the process of Toyotomi Hideyoshi's (秀吉) invasion of Korea, various feudal lords (daimyo 大名) were subjected to a consolidated military service levy based on the annual output in terms of rice (kokudaka 石高) of their domains. In this essay, the author will take up the process of how daimyo, who had not yet dismantled the castles and forts, built within their domains by warlords, during the previous Sengoku period (1467-1568), were able to muster the great amount of men and provisions for the Korean expedition. For this purpose, the Shimazu Family (島津氏) of Kyushu (九州), who played a leading role in the invasion, will be taken as a case in point. Actually, the Shimazu Family was not able to provide a military force for the initial maneuvers involved in the first expedition to Korea (1592-1595), and was, therefore, called upon to carry "Japan's greatest follow-up campaign." For this purpose, a land survey was carried out by a Toyotomi functionary, Ishida Mitsunari (石田三成), with an aim to significantly increase the directly held domains of the Shimazu Family. However, such a plan was nipped in the bud due to the resistance, forthcome from various classes of Shimazu subjects in response to the re-apportionment of fiefs effected by the Ishida survey. As a result, 78,000 koku 石 of the Shimazu holdings, valued at a total 200,000 koku, went into fallow due to an insuffiicience of cultivators. What this all means is that the original intent of Hideyoshi's land surveys (Taiko Kenchi 太閤検地), that is, the creation of direct daimyo holdings capable of satisfying the need for military provisions, as well as the formation of an enfeoffed entourage capable to shoulder the burden of military service, were, in a word, thwarted. Being unable to answer the call to arms, and faced with possible relocation out of Kyushu or even fall from daimyo status, the Shimazu were driven to expediency. Therefore, with promises of fief appropriations, they demanded such groups as locally based samurais (jizamurai 地侍) within their domains and direct vassals desiring additions in their holdings, to stand as the Shimazu force for the invasion of Korea. This demand was answered by a self-provisioned army, composed of such people as the former vassals of families, who had previously opposed the Shimazu and had fallen, vassals who had lost a good portion of their fiefs as a result of the Shimazu's pledge of allegiance to the Toyotomi Family, and local samurais who had been amassing military power while pracficing agricultural management. While, on the surface, the military forces under the Toyotomi regime were to be supported by funds from the public coffers, in the case of the Shimazu Family, whose direct holdings were incapable of provisioning a standing army, it to muster all voluntary self-provisioned force was the only possible alternative. In this very fact lies the proof to negate the conventionally held opinion that the military forces mustered by the Shimazu Family and other families of daimyo status for the Korean expeditions, were standing armies of military men completely separated from agricultural activities (heino bunri 兵農分離). Despite being the object of a thorough cadastre carried out by the central regime, the Shimazu domains still widely maintained local samurai status holders unremoved from agrarian responsibilities ; and rather than daimyo power working to negate these soldier-farmers, it actually strove to garner their support in meeting the military service demanded by the Toyotomi regime. Later, between the years 1611 and 1614, the Shimazu were to carry out their own land surveys and promulgate (in 1611) a set of restrictions ordering the separation of soldier and peasant. However, despite this, some of samurai rank throughout the Tokugawa feudal (bakuhan 幕藩) system still, in rare cases, set up camp in agrarian villages, and took the lead in

    (View PDF for the rest of the abstract.)

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