was a fudai feudal domain of Edo period Japan. It was located in northern Mino Province and southern Echizen Province, in central Honshà «. The domain was centered at Gujà  Hachiman Castle, located in what is now the city of Gujà  in Gifu Prefecture. For this reason, it was also called .
During the Sengoku period, the area around Gujà  was controlled by the Endà  clan, who pledged fealty to Oda Nobunaga, followed by Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Under Hideyoshi, they were reduced to serve under the Inaba clan; however, following the Battle of Sekigahara, the Inaba were transferred to Usuki Domain in Bungo Province, and the Endà  clan was restored to their former territories, becoming daimyà  of the 27,000 koku Gujà  Domain from 1600 to 1693. The 3rd Endà  daimyà Â, Endà  Tsunetomo reduced the domain to 24,000 koku by giving 2,000 koku and 1,000 koku holdings to two of his younger brothers, but was successful in elevating his official status to that of a âÂÂcastellanâÂÂ. His successor, Endà  Tsuneharu faced problems with peasant revolts, and his successor, Endà  Tsunehisa was a minor, and died of poisoning soon after taking office. However, the Endà  clan escaped attainder, and were transferred to the 10,000 koku Mikami Domain in Shimotsuke Province, where they resided to the Meiji restoration.
The Endà  were replaced by a cadet branch of the Inoue clan from Kasama Domain in Hitachi Province from 1692 to 1697, with a kokudaka of 50,000 koku.
The Inoue were transferred to Kameyama Domain in Tanba Province in 1697 and were replaced by the Kanemori clan from Kamiyama Domain in Mutsu Province from 1697 to 1758 with a kokudaka set at 38,000 koku. The Kanemori faced a 4-year peasant revolt from 1754 which they were unable to suppress, and they were removed from office by the Tokugawa shogunate.
In 1758, the shogunate entrusted Gujà  to the Aoyama clan, formerly of Miyazu Domain in Tango Province, with a kokudaka of 48,000 koku. The Aoyama ruled until the Meiji restoration. During the Boshin War, the domain contributed its military forces to the Satchà  Alliance, although many of its samurai defected to the Tokugawa side.
In 1871, with the abolition of the han system, the domain became part of Gifu Prefecture.
As with most domains in the han system, Gujà  Domain consisted of a discontinuous territories calculated to provide the assigned kokudaka, based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields.