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   » » Wiki: Mandokoro
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政所 was the chief governing body of an important family or monastic complex in ancient .

(1915). 9781465513045, Library of Alexandria. .
This name was borrowed for the administrative department of the in feudal and medieval times.


History
The earliest usage of the term was found in the , referring to a governing body consisting of royalty and high-ranked (higher than ju-sammi). Subsequently, during the and , the primary executive branch of the (office of the Shogunate) was called by this name.

During the Kamakura Shogunate, the Mandokoro governed administration and finance. It was formerly called Kumonjo (公文所, ), and the date when it was renamed is argued. There are two major proposed dates, 1191 or 1185.

The first chief of the Mandokoro was Ōe no Hiromoto. Later, or occupied this position. The position of executive director, serving also as the treasurer, was held by the Nikaidō clan.

During the Muromachi Shogunate, the Mandokoro was the office of finance and process on fiefs. Except in its earliest days, the position of chief of the Mandokoro was held by members of the , starting in 1379.


Kita no Mandokoro
As 北政所 (), Mandokoro was also used as an honorific title referring to the wife of the sesshō (regent) or the ; these women had great political power and influence in their own right. For example, Kōdai-in, the wife of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who held the rank of Kampaku in 1586, was styled Kita no Mandokoro (), and his mother was styled Ōmandokoro ().

During the Heian period, the wives of the kuge were often called Kita-no-kata (北の方, ), since their residence was normally placed in the northern complex of the palace.


See also

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