Imai Jin'ya: Difference between revisions
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|History=The area used to be owned by Takatō-han but in 1691 it became part of a tenryō (Shogunal demesne) in the area with the reducation in territory of Takatō-han, and Imai-jin'ya was built at that time. Takatō-han was then made up of several tobichi (discontiguous territory). Imai-jin'ya was located in the tenryō which shares a border with Takatō-han (via Seba Village), Matsumoto-han, Owari-han and Takashima-han, so it was quite crowded in. Imai-jin'ya was basically a sort of minor ward office serving under Iijimaa-jin'ya (which may still stand so I'm looking into it). In 1713 the land was granted to the Mizuno Clan and Imai-jin'ya was abandoned.  | |History=The area used to be owned by Takatō-han but in 1691 it became part of a tenryō (Shogunal demesne) in the area with the reducation in territory of Takatō-han, and Imai-jin'ya was built at that time. Takatō-han was then made up of several tobichi (discontiguous territory). Imai-jin'ya was located in the tenryō which shares a border with Takatō-han (via Seba Village), Matsumoto-han, Owari-han and Takashima-han, so it was quite crowded in. Imai-jin'ya was basically a sort of minor ward office serving under Iijimaa-jin'ya (which may still stand so I'm looking into it). In 1713 the land was granted to the Mizuno Clan and Imai-jin'ya was abandoned.  | ||
|Year Visited=Viewer Contributed  | |Year Visited=Viewer Contributed  | ||
|AddedJcastle=2019  | |||
|GPSLocation=36.14638, 137.9046  | |GPSLocation=36.14638, 137.9046  | ||
|Contributor=ART  | |Contributor=ART  | ||
}}  | }}  | ||
Revision as of 12:02, 5 July 2019
The road adjacent to the temple is still referred to as "Jin'ya Road". I wouldn't probably have looked into Imai-jin'ya further except that I did find proof of its former existence in the form of a small, very new looking signpost marking its location.
History
The area used to be owned by Takatō-han but in 1691 it became part of a tenryō (Shogunal demesne) in the area with the reducation in territory of Takatō-han, and Imai-jin'ya was built at that time. Takatō-han was then made up of several tobichi (discontiguous territory). Imai-jin'ya was located in the tenryō which shares a border with Takatō-han (via Seba Village), Matsumoto-han, Owari-han and Takashima-han, so it was quite crowded in. Imai-jin'ya was basically a sort of minor ward office serving under Iijimaa-jin'ya (which may still stand so I'm looking into it). In 1713 the land was granted to the Mizuno Clan and Imai-jin'ya was abandoned.
Field Notes
The road adjacent to the temple is still referred to as "Jin'ya Road". I wouldn't probably have looked into Imai-jin'ya further except that I did find proof of its former existence in the form of a small, very new looking signpost marking its location.
| Castle Profile | |
|---|---|
| English Name | Imai Jin'ya | 
| Japanese Name | 今井陣屋 | 
| Founder | Tokugawa Shogunate | 
| Year Founded | 1691 | 
| Castle Type | Flatland | 
| Castle Condition | Ruins only | 
| Historical Period | Edo Period | 
| Features | |
| Visitor Information | |
| Access | |
| Hours | 24/7 free | 
| Time Required | 5 minutes | 
| Location | Matsumoto, Nagano Prefecture | 
| Coordinates | 36.14638, 137.9046 | 
| 
 | 
|
| Admin | |
| Added to Jcastle | 2019 | 
| Contributor | ART | 
| Admin Year Visited | Viewer Contributed | 


