Katana VentraIP

Daimyo

Daimyo (大名, daimyō, Japanese pronunciation: [daimʲoː] ) were powerful Japanese magnates,[1] feudal lords[2] who, from the 10th century to the early Meiji period in the middle 19th century, ruled most of Japan from their vast, hereditary land holdings. They were subordinate to the shogun and nominally to the emperor and the kuge. In the term, dai () means 'large', and myō stands for myōden (名田), meaning 'private land'.[3]

"Daimio" redirects here. For the skipper butterfly genus, see Daimio (butterfly).

From the shugo of the Muromachi period through the Sengoku to the daimyo of the Edo period, the rank had a long and varied history. The backgrounds of daimyo also varied considerably; while some daimyo clans, notably the Mōri, Shimazu and Hosokawa, were cadet branches of the Imperial family or were descended from the kuge, other daimyo were promoted from the ranks of the samurai, notably during the Edo period.


Daimyō often hired samurai to guard their land, and they paid the samurai in land or food as relatively few could afford to pay samurai in money. The daimyo era ended soon after the Meiji Restoration with the adoption of the prefecture system in 1871.

Japanese clans

History of Japan

Daimyo Clock Museum

Lords of the Samurai: Legacy of a Daimyo Family

World History: Patterns of Interaction

Samurai, Chōnin and the Bakufu: Between Cultures of Frivolity and Frugality.