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Ji-samurai : ウィキペディア英語版
Jizamurai

The were lords of smaller rural domains in feudal Japan.〔Harold Britho, 'The Han', in John Whitney Hall, ed., ''The Cambridge History of Japan, volume 4: Early Modern Period'' (Cambridge UP, 1988), 183-234, 〕 They often used their relatively small plots of land for intensive and diversified forms of agriculture.
One of the primary causes for the rise in the number of smaller land holders was a decline in the custom of primogeniture. Towards the end of the Kamakura period, inheritance began to be split among a lord's sons, making each heir's holdings, and thus their power, smaller.
Over time, many of these smaller fiefs came to be dominated by the ''Shugo'', Constables who were administrators appointed by the shogunate to oversee the provinces. Resentful and mistrustful of the interference of government officials, they banded together into leagues called ''ikki''. The uprisings that resulted, particularly when the ''Shugo'' tried to seize control of entire provinces, were also called ''ikki''; some of the largest and most famous took place in Wakasa province in the 1350s.
==Notes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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