is a district located in Chiba, Japan. As of 2010, the district has an estimated population of 18,593 and a density of 120 persons per km<sup>2</sup>. The total area was . The district formerly included all of the city of Katsuura, most of the city of Isumi and a portion of the town of Mutsuzawa. It has been reduced in size through mergers and consolidation to two towns. The district is located in the outer zone of Metropolitan Tokyo, roughly from the center of the capital.
Isumi District was one of the ancient districts of Kazusa Province. The district was named after the Isumi River, which runs from the mountainous areas of Katsuura to the south of Kujà «kuri Beach on the Pacific Ocean. The district is mentioned in Nara-period chronicles under various names, usually as . The Nihon Shoki records the area as , and the Kojiki as . In the ancient period the district bordered Mà Âda and Unakami districts to the west, and Habu and Nagara districts to the north. In the Heian period (794âÂÂ1185) the district was divided into two shà Âen estates; one to the north, and one to the south. Minamoto no Yoritomo (1147âÂÂ1199) drew soldiers from both shà Âen estates with the assistance of the local warlord Kazusa Hirotsune (?âÂÂ1184). Yoritomo went on to found the Kamakura Shogunate. Manki Castle and à Âtaki Castle were built in this period. Kuniyoshi, once a village and now part of Isumi City, became a noted market town in this period, and a rokusai-ichi, or market held six days of the month, is held to this day. By the end of the Sengoku period (1467âÂÂ1573) the district had been variously controlled by the Toki, Hà Âjà Â, and Satomi clans. The Satomi ceded the area to Oda Nobunaga (1534âÂÂ1582) in 1590.
The name of Isumi District was standardized to its present kanji and pronunciation by the Edo period. Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543âÂÂ1616), as part of the wider unification of Japan, entered the Kantà  region in 1590 and awarded the Isumi District to a trusted general Honda Tadakatsu (1548âÂÂ1610). Under the Tokugawa shogunate, the minor feudal domain of à Âtaki Domain, controlled by Honda Tadakatsu from à Âtaki Castle, controlled 18 villages within the district, with another 57 villages under the control of other domains (including one village belonging to Nitta Domain in Tosa Province). The remaining 108 villages were tenryà  under direct control of the central government and administered by various hatamoto, or samurai in the direct service of the Tokugawa shogunate. The Edo period was marked by the extensive development of rice paddy land in the district.
In the post Meiji Restoration cadastral reform, the area came under the control of Chiba Prefecture and on April 1, 1889, was divided into two towns (à Âtaki and Asahi) and 21 villages. Katsuura was elevated to town status on March 12, 1890, Kuniyoshi (future Chà Âjamachi) on September 22, 1893, à Âhara on December 2, 1899, Onjuku on April 1, 1914, and Okitsu on January 1, 1921. The town of Isumi was created on April 29, 1954, through the merger of Chà Âjamachi with neighboring villages, and the town of Taità  was created in December of the same year. Katsuura was elevated to city status on October 1, 1958. Taità  and Chà Âjamachi merged to form the town of Misaki on August 1, 1961, leaving the district with five towns.
On December 5, 2005, the towns of Isumi, Misaki and à Âhara merged to form the city of Isumi, leave the district with only two remaining towns.