地頭 were medieval territory stewards in Japan, especially in the Kamakura and Muromachi period shogunates. Appointed by the shōgun, jitō managed manorialism, including national holdings governed by the kokushi or provincial governor. There were also deputy jitōs called jitōdai.
Jitō were officially established when Minamoto no Yoritomo was appointed to oversee their ennoblement by the Imperial court following his successful usurpation of power.
After the Jōkyū War in 1221, the shogunate appointed many jitō in Western Japan to the land that the people of the losing side and imperial court had possessed. At that time, many prominent gokenin, including the Mori clan and the Ōtomo clan, moved from the east to the west.
The role of jitō was officially abolished in the late of 16th century by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, one of the "three great unifiers of Japan".
The elimination of the jitō caste removed Imperial recognition and support from dozens of small warlords and weakened the intense rivalries that had fueled centuries of civil conflict, thus enabling the more easily controlled and reliable daimyo to consolidate ownership of the land. This, in turn, laid the foundations for the last major feudal era of Japan, the Edo period.
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