The was a Japanese samurai clan that descended from the Minamoto clan, and the Emperor Seiwa (850-881), the 56th Emperor of Japan. The Main Lineage (sÃ
Âke, å®Âå®¶) were Lords (daimyÃ
Â) of the Hiroshima Domain in Aki Province and another famous branch family were Lords of the AkÃ
 Domain in Harima Province associated with the story of the Forty-seven rÃ
Ânin. Their inherited character is "é·". The family came to prominence when the sister of Asano Nagamasa married Toyotomi Hideyoshi.
After the Meiji Restoration and the abolition of the han system, the Asano clan became part of the new nobility.
Origins
The Asano clan are a branch the Toki clan (Ã¥ÂÂå²Âæ°Â) who descend from Minamoto no Yorimitsu (æºÂé ¼åÂ
Â) of the Seiwa Genji (æ¸Â
Ã¥ÂÂæºÂæ°Â). The Toki clan's main residence was in the Toki District (Ã¥ÂÂå²Âé¡) of Mino Province from which they took their name.
Minamoto no Mitsuhira (æºÂÃ¥Â
Âè¡¡) was the third son of Minamoto no Mitsunaga (æºÂÃ¥Â
Âé·) who was killed in battle during the Genpei War. His uncle Minamoto no Mitsumoto (æºÂÃ¥Â
Âåº) adopted him and he founded the Toki clan becoming Toki Mitsuhira (Ã¥ÂÂå²ÂÃ¥Â
Âè¡¡). His first son Toki Mitsuyuki (Ã¥ÂÂå²ÂÃ¥Â
Âè¡Â) continued the clan but his second son Toki Mitsutoki (Ã¥ÂÂå²ÂÃ¥Â
ÂæÂÂ) took the name Asano and became founder of the Asano clan. He resided at Asano, Toki district (Mino province) and took the name of the place.
Seiwa-tennÃ
 (æ¸Â
Ã¥ÂÂ天çÂÂ, 850âÂÂ878) ãÂÂâ Sadazumi-shinnÃ
 (è²Âç´Â親çÂÂ, 873âÂÂ916) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Tsunemoto (æºÂç¶Âåº, 894âÂÂ961) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Mitsunaka (æºÂæºÂ仲, 912?âÂÂ997) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Yorimitsu (æºÂé ¼åÂ
Â, 948âÂÂ1021) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Yorikuni (æºÂé ¼å½, ?âÂÂ1058?) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Kunifusa (æºÂå½æÂ¿, ?âÂÂ1119) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Mitsukuni (æºÂÃ¥Â
Âå½, 1063âÂÂ1148) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Mitsunobu (æºÂÃ¥Â
Âä¿¡, 1093?âÂÂ1145) ãÂÂâ Minamoto no Mitsunaga (æºÂÃ¥Â
Âé·, ?âÂÂ1184) ãÂÂâ Toki Mitsuhira (Ã¥ÂÂå²ÂÃ¥Â
Âè¡¡, 1159âÂÂ1206) ãÂÂâ Asano Mitsutoki (æµÂ
éÂÂÃ¥Â
ÂæÂÂ, ?âÂÂ?)
Asano Nagamasa (1546-1611)
He was the son of Yasui Shigetsugu, Lord of Miyago castle (Owari province), a descendant of Hatakeyama Iekuni, Shugo (Governor) of Kawachi province, descending from Ashikaga Yoshikane (1154-1199) of the Seiwa-Genji. Yoshikane was the third son of Minamoto no Yoshiyasu, also called Ashikaga Yoshiyasu (1127-1157), founder of the Ashikaga clan, grandson of the Chinjufu-shÃ
Âgun (Commander-in-chief of the defense of the North) Minamoto no Yoshiie (1039-1106), and a descendant of the Emperor Seiwa (850-881), the 56th Emperor of Japan.
Nagamasa was adopted by his maternal uncle, Asano Nagakatsu, Lord of Asano castle, younger brother of his mother, and succeeded him as the fourteenth head of the Asano clan.
Until Nagakatsu, the Asano descended directly from Minamoto no Yorimitsu (948-1021) and the Toki clan, and after Nagamasa, the Asano are direct descendants of the Hatakeyama clan and the Ashikaga clan.
Branches
Makabe Domain (çÂÂå£Âè©), Hitachi (50,000 koku)
KishÃ
« Domain (ç´Âå·Âè©), Kii (376,000 koku)
Mooka Domain (çÂÂ岡è©), Shimotsuke (20,000 koku)
- Asano Nagashige (æµÂ
éÂÂé·éÂÂ, 1588âÂÂ1632) - 3rd son of Asano Nagamasa.
- Asano Nagashige (æµÂ
éÂÂé·éÂÂ, 1588âÂÂ1632) - 3rd son of Asano Nagamasa.
- Asano Naganao (æµÂ
éÂÂé·ç´, 1610âÂÂ1672) - eldest son of Nagashige, transferred to AkÃ
 Domain in 1645.
- Asano Nagaakira (æµÂ
éÂÂé·æÂÂ, 1586âÂÂ1632) - 2nd son of Asano Nagamasa.
- Asano Mitsuakira (æµÂ
éÂÂÃ¥Â
ÂæÂÂ, 1617âÂÂ1693)
- Asano Tsunaakira (æµÂ
éÂÂç¶±æÂÂ, 1637âÂÂ1673)
- Asano Tsunanaga (æµÂ
éÂÂç¶±é·, 1659âÂÂ1708)
- Asano Yoshinaga (æµÂ
éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂé·, 1681âÂÂ1752)
- Asano Munetsune (æµÂ
éÂÂå®ÂæÂÂ, 1717âÂÂ1788)
- Asano Shigeakira (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂÂæÂÂ, 1743âÂÂ1814)
- Asano Narikata (æµÂ
éÂÂæÂÂè³¢, 1773âÂÂ1831)
- Asano Naritaka (æµÂ
éÂÂæÂÂç²Â, 1817âÂÂ1868)
- Asano Yoshiteru (æµÂ
éÂÂæÂ
¶ç¾, 1836âÂÂ1858)
- Asano Nagamichi (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂᏬÂ, 1812âÂÂ1872)
- Asano Nagakoto (æµÂ
éÂÂé·å², 1842âÂÂ1937)
Hiroshima-Shinden Domain, Aki (30,000 koku)
- Asano Nagakata (æµÂ
éÂÂé·賢, 1693âÂÂ1744) - 3rd son of Asano Tsunanaga of the Hiroshima Domain.
- Asano Nagataka (æµÂ
éÂÂé·å¬, 1732âÂÂ1770)
- Asano Nagakazu (æµÂ
éÂÂé·å¡, 1745âÂÂ1808)
- Asano Nagakane (æµÂ
éÂÂé·容, 1770âÂÂ1824)
- Asano Nagamichi (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂᏬÂ, 1812âÂÂ1872) - later Lord of the Hiroshima Domain.
- Asano Nagaoki (æµÂ
éÂÂé·èÂÂ, 1842âÂÂ1937) - later Lord of the Hiroshima Domain as Asano Nagakoto (æµÂ
éÂÂé·å²).
- Asano Nagaatsu (æµÂ
éÂÂé·åÂÂ, 1843âÂÂ1873)
Mihara Domain (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂè©), Bingo (30,000 koku)
- Asano Tadayoshi (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ åÂÂ, 1546âÂÂ1621) - son of Asano Nagatada (æµÂ
éÂÂé·忠), making him 1st cousin of Asano Nagamasa.
- Asano Tadanaga (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ é·, 1592âÂÂ1660)
- Asano Tadazane (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ çÂÂ, 1618âÂÂ1694)
- Asano Tadayoshi (æµÂ
éÂÂ忠義, 1667âÂÂ1701)
- Asano Tadamasa (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ ç¶Â, ?âÂÂ?)
- Asano Tadachika (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ æÂ¨, ?âÂÂ?)
- Asano Tadamasa (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ æÂ£, ?âÂÂ?)
- Asano Tadayoshi (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ æÂÂ, ?âÂÂ?)
- Asano Tadasuke (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ é Â, 1790âÂÂ1824)
- Asano Tadahide (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ æÂ¬, 1802âÂÂ1860)
- Asano Tetsu (æµÂ
éÂÂå¿ , 1819âÂÂ1892)
Miyoshi Domain (ä¸Â次è©), Bingo (50,000 koku)
- Asano Nagaharu (æµÂ
éÂÂé·治, 1614âÂÂ1675)
- Asano Nagateru (æµÂ
éÂÂé·çÂ
§, 1652âÂÂ1705)
- Asano Nagazumi (æµÂ
éÂÂé·æ¾Â, 1671âÂÂ1718)
- Asano Nagatsune (æµÂ
éÂÂé·çµÂ, 1709âÂÂ1719)
- Asano Nagazane (æµÂ
éÂÂé·å¯Â, 1713âÂÂ1720)
TÃ
ÂjÃ
 Domain (æÂ±åÂÂè©), Bingo (10,000 koku)
- Asano Takakatsu (æµÂ
éÂÂé«ÂÃ¥ÂÂ, 1538âÂÂ1613) - adopted by Asano clan, formerly Horita Takakatsu (å Âç°é«ÂÃ¥ÂÂ)
- Asano Takakana (æµÂ
éÂÂé«Âè±)
- Asano Takatsugu (æµÂ
éÂÂé«Â次)
- Asano Takanao (æµÂ
éÂÂé«Âå°Â)
- Asano Takakata (æµÂ
éÂÂé«ÂæÂ¹)
- Asano Shunso (æµÂ
éÂÂä¿Âå³°)
- Asano Takaaki (æµÂ
éÂÂé«ÂæÂÂ)
- Asano Michiyasu (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂÂ寧)
- Asano Takakage (æµÂ
éÂÂé«ÂæÂ¯)
- Asano Takamichi (æµÂ
éÂÂé«ÂéÂÂ)
- Asano Takahira (æµÂ
éÂÂé«Âå¹³)
- Asano Michihiro (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ)
- Asano Michioki (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂÂèÂÂ)
- Asano Michitoshi (æµÂ
éÂÂéÂÂæÂÂ)
- Asano Morio (æµÂ
éÂÂå®Â夫, 1856âÂÂ1938) - 6th son of Asano Nagaatsu of the Hiroshima-Shoden Domain.
Significant Members
In popular culture
The Asano clan of the Sengoku period led by SÃ
Âju Asano, and his daughter Sara from the anime of Inuyasha.
See also
References
External links
- Hiroshima Castle Visitors Guide (flier received at the castle)