How many stones were there before Tokugawa Ieyasu moved to Edo, and how many stones were there after

Updated on history 2024-02-28
11 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Before the Kanto Movement, Tokugawa Ieyasu had successively incorporated Mikawa, Enoe, Suruga, Kai, and the southern regions of Shinano into his sphere of influence, with a total stone height of about 1.5 million koku.

    After the transfer of the Kanto region, Ieyasu possessed a total of Sagami, Izu, Musashi, Ueno Major, Shimono Kobe, Shimoso, Kamiso, etc., and by the time of the Battle of Sekigahara, it was about 2,557,000 koku (including the 100,000 koku fief of his son Hideyasu).

    In this way, it seems that Tokugawa Ieyasu's fortune has increased significantly, but in fact, in this great transfer, Ieyasu lost control of his hometown Mikawa Province, and the Kanto region still failed to get out of the aftermath of the war, so the Tokugawa family's environment at that time was actually quite difficult.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The correspondence between the rank of Lu and the number of physical distributions is (there are changes before and after the bet on some official positions and Lu, not one by one, only more than a thousand stones: Taizhong doctor, etc., 80 Hu in the Moon Valley, 960 stones a year; 8) Eight hundred stones: when Emperor Cheng of the Han Dynasty was divided, it was.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The history of Japan's Warring States period is very interesting, and I remember that Nobuyasu committed suicide because of Oda Nobunaga.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Before the Meiji Restoration, there were a total of 276 feudal domains in Japan, and I don't know the exact feudal lords. In terms of the number of stones, taking Tokugawa Ieyasu as an example, Tokugawa received 5 states before the transfer of the eight states, and the harvest was much greater than after the transfer. However, Tokugawa saw the potential for the development of Kanpachishu, avoided the hustle and bustle, and worked hard in the barren Odawara, and the actual income far exceeded the 2.6 million koku at the time of the division of the city.

    The Tokyo area is what it is today.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The county order is 5 buckets of rice a year, but a year of Qing Governor's Mansion is 100,000 snowflakes of silver. It's hard to say.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Eh: It depends on the dynasty Five buckets of rice is Jin.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Tokugawa Ieyasu's first fierce general.

    - It should be Tadashi Honda.

    He had two sons, the eldest.

    Honda is lodant. Heihachiro Milk Name.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Tadakatsu Honda, Sushimasa Ishikawa, Yasumasa Kamihara, Tadaji Sakai, Naomasa Iii.

    There is also the ninja Hattori Hanzo.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The Four Heavenly Kings of Tokugawa.

    Tadashi Honda, Naomasa Ii, Yasumasa Kamihara, Tadaji Sakai.

    There is also an Ishikawa Shumasa.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Actually, I don't think there are necessarily many powerful people.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Sekigahara. At the time of Hideyoshi's death, the world was divided into the Eastern Army (headed by Tokugawa Ieyasu and Date Masamune) and the Western Army (led by Ishida San). Sekihara Sancheng hangs up, and no one can compete with Ieyasu.

    The two subsequent battles in Osaka (Osaka Winter Battle and Osaka Summer Battle) were just to clear the remnants of the Fengchen Army.

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