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The Niwa-shi was a of northern Honshū that claimed descent from via Prince Yoshimine no Yasuo (785-80) and (d.1069).. (1906). Dictionnaire d’histoire et de géographie du Japon; Papinot, (2003). "Niwa," Nobiliare du Japon, p. 43; retrieved 2013-5-5.


History
The Kodama clan was one of several samurai clans originally located in . A branch of the clan settled in , and a branch resided in the . It is uncertain when they adopted the "Niwa" surname, but during the , they were in service of the , who were the of Owari Province. The clan rose to prominence in the . became a senior retainer of and after Nobunaga was assassinated at the Honnō-ji Incident, helped Toyotomi Hideyoshi defeat the forces of at the Battle of Yamazaki. He also assisted Hideyoshi at the Battle of Shizugatake, and was rewarded with the provinces of and and two districts of , for a total of 1,230,000 , making him one of the most powerful Sengoku- daimyō.

However, after Niwa Nagahide died in 1585, the clan's fortunes under fell with equal rapidity. During the Siege of Toyama against the forces of , Hideyoshi accused the Niwa clan with collaboration, and seized most of their territories, leaving the clan with only Wakasa Province at 150,000 koku. During the subsequent Kyūshū Campaign in 1589, one of the Niwa clan retainers was again accused of collaboration with the enemy, and the clan was reduced further to a small 40,000 koku holding around Komatsu in Kaga Province. However, Toyotomi Hideyoshi was mercurial in his moods, and in response to Niwa Nagashige's efforts at the Siege of Odawara, his status was brought back to 120,000 koku.

In 1600, the Niwa clan sided with 's Western Army against the at the Battle of Sekigahara and was thus dispossessed. The victorious chose to be magnanimous, and with the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate, awarded Niwa Nagashige with a 10,000 koku domain in . Nagashige's forces fought well at the 1614 Siege of Osaka, and in 1619 his revenues were increased to 20,000 koku, and in 1622 he was transferred to the 50,000 koku in . In 1627, he was transferred once again to , at 100,700 koku.

In 1643, Nagashige's son, , as transferred to Nihonmatsu Domain (100,700 koku), where the clan remained until the Meiji restoration. During the , joined the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei in 1868; however, his forces were defeated by the Satchō Alliance and Nihonmatsu Castle was burned. The victorious reduced the domain to 50,700 koku under the final daimyō , who subsequently served as imperial governor until the abolition of the han system in 1871. In 1884, he became a viscount ( shishaku) under the peerage system.

Another clan, the Isshiki-Niwa, who were daimyō of (10,000 koku) in from 1746 to 1871, bears the same Niwa but is not directly related to the above.


People with surname Niwa


Further reading
  • Nihonmatsu-han shi 二本松藩史 (History of Nihonmatsu Domain). Tokyo: Nihonmatsu-hanshi kankōkai 二本松藩史刊行会, 1926 (republished by Rekishi Toshosha 歴史図書社, 1973)
  • Onodera Eikō 小野寺永幸. Boshin Nanboku Sensō to Tōhoku Seiken 戊辰南北戦争と東北政権 (The North-South Boshin War and the Northern Government). Sendai: Kita no Sha 北の杜, 2004.
  • Sugeno Shigeru 菅野与. Ōshū Nihonmatsu-han nenpyō 奥州二本松藩年表 (Chronology of the Nihonmatsu Domain of Oshu). Aizu-Wakamatsu shi 会津若松市: Rekishi Shunjūsha 歴史春秋社, 200


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