Saga Domain
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Saga Domain (佐賀藩, Saga-han) was a Japanese domain of the Edo period Tokugawa Shogunate. It encompassed most of what are now Saga and Nagasaki Prefectures and was ruled from Saga Castle in what is now the urban center of the city of Saga. It was ruled through its history by the tozama daimyō Nabeshima clan. The domain was also referred to as Hizen Domain (肥前藩) after its location in Hizen Province or Nabeshima Domain (鍋島藩) after its ruling clan. The domain played a significant role in the Meiji Restoration.[1][2][3]
Though the Dutch and Chinese trading posts in Nagasaki were overseen directly by officials of the Tokugawa shogunate, the domain was largely responsible for the military defense of the city and the port. [4][5][6]
History
[edit]The Nabeshima clan were originally vassals of the Ryūzōji clan who controlled northern Kyushu in the Muromachi period. However, Ryūzōji Takanobu was killed in the Battle of Okitanawate with the Shimazu and Arima clans in 1584, and Nabeshima Naoshige became the guardian of Takanobu's young heir, Ryūzōji Takafusa. Six years later, Toyotomi Hideyoshi granted approval for Nabeshima to overthrow Ryūzōji and seize the territory for his own lineage. Nabeshima supported Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea in the 1590s, and fought in the Western Army, against the Tokugawa clan in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. During this battle, however, he turned against and captured Western Army general Tachibana Muneshige, earning some degree of favor from Tokugawa Ieyasu and being allowed to keep his fief.
Edo period
[edit]The Nabeshima were allotted a kokudaka of 357,000 koku, which remained constant throughout the Tokugawa period. The Tokugawa shogunate granted the Nabeshima the ceremonial use of the "Matsudaira" surname and one kanji from the shogun's given name to all the successive daimyō, starting with Katsushige's eldest son, Nabeshima Tadanao. The domain's location close to Korea and far from Edo, the shogunal capital, along with its trade connections, brought significant foreign influence to the area. The area was a center for ceramic production and techniques as a result of its connections with Korea, becoming famous for its Imari porcelain which was a significant export good to Europe. However, although the nominal kokudaka of the domain was 357,000 koku, the actual kokudaka of the daimyō was only 60,000 koku, as the Nabeshima clan had established three sub-domains headed by cadet branches of the clan as insurance to ensure succession: Hasunoike Domain, Ogi Domain and Kashima Domain. In additional, large hatamoto stipends were granted to four branch families of Nabeshima (Shiraishi, Kawakubo, Murata, Kubota), and four branch families of the Ryūzōji (Taku, Takeo, Isahaya, Suko).
Remnants of the Ryūzōji continued to surface from time to time, however, and occasionally threatened the Nabeshima grip on power. Although members of the Ryūzōji clan ofter held high positions in domain affairs, efforts by the Ryūzōji to obtain a restoration of their status as an independent domain were denied the shogunate.
The area also bore a considerable Kirishitan population, which erupted in protest in the famous Shimabara Rebellion (1637–8).
Because the Saga Domain was close to Nagasaki, in 1631, the Shogunate ordered the domain to take turns providing troops to guard Nagasaki, exchanging on a yearly basis with Fukuoka Domain. In exchange, the domain was granted a reduction in its sankin kotai obligation, reducing the required attendance in Edo to about three months out of two years, instead of the usual two years. This was still a considerable expense, and at times the domain sought to lessen its losses by reducing the number of samurai it sent to defend the port. In 1808, during the Napoleonic Wars, the Phaeton incident occurred, in which a British frigate invaded Nagasaki and demanded the handover of the Dutch trading post. However, as Saga Domain had reduced its security personnel without permission (only 100 Saga samurai were present to deal with the situation, rather than the obligatory one thousand), the shogunate was forced to submit to the demands of the British ship, and scolded Saga harshly for its failure to fulfill its obligations. The situation surrounding the domain worsened with the death toll of the Siebold typhoon in 1828, which killed nearly 10,000 people, and the domain's finances on the brink of collapse.
Around the Open Bay and the end of Shogunate
[edit]The 10th daimyō, Nabeshima Naomasa (Kansō) to be informed about the Opium Wars in China, visited the Dutch warship Palembang and reaffirmed the need for Western military technology.[7] He decided to reform the domain's administration and to adopt Western technology. In particular, he carried out extensive restructuring, reducing the number of officials by two-fifths, and devoted himself to protecting and nurturing farmers, as well as to developing and trading in industries such as pottery, tea, and coal, which improved the domain's finances. He also established organizations for the research of Western technologies, including steel refining, steam engines and artillery, and turned the domain's efforts towards these pursuits, making it one of the most modern domains in this period. Saga thus began constructing operations for the first Japanese iron refinery in 1849, and made the first use of reverberatory furnaces three years later at Tafuse by the Saga Castle in 1852.[8] Then the domain set up Seirenkata (精煉方), the research institute for industrial technology on the site.
In 1853, Russian Admiral Yevfimy Putyatin arrived in Nagasaki harbor, and provided the first demonstration of a steam locomotive to the Japanese. Ishiguro Hirotsugu, Nakamura Kisuke, and Tanaka Hisashige were among the first Japanese engineers, who attempted to manufacture their own steam locomotives and steamships. They built up the second reverberatory furnace.
When the shogunate relaxed the restrictions on the construction of large ships, an order was placed with the Dutch. Saga saw the revitalization of Japan's shipbuilding industry, and the launching of the first Japanese steamship, the Ryōfūmaru. The Nagasaki Naval Training Center was established in 1855, its first students coming from Saga. Then it created the Mietsu Naval Dock in 1858 on the inlet of the north of the Ariake Sea. [a]
By 1866, the incorporation of British Armstrong Whitworth cannon made the ships at Nagasaki into the first Japanese Western-style ("modern") navy. The defense batteries at Shinagawa were also supplied by cannon from Saga. The domain also exhibited at the Exposition Universelle (1867) in Paris. Largely responsible for Japan's technological and military advancement, and holding much of the fruits of those labors, Saga attracted the attention of the shogunate, which kept a close eye on the domain. Saga refused to take a clear stance on the political situation and prohibited its samurai from interacting with samurai from other domains. However, in late 1867, it chose to side with Tosa, Satsuma, and Chōshū against the shogunate.


In the Boshin War, Saga was assigned the vanguard of the forces advancing northward on the Hokuriku highway, and samurai from the domain fought the shogunate at the Battle of Ueno and in other clashes. As a result, the new Meiji government which emerged afterwards featured a number of figures from Saga, including Etō Shinpei, Ōkuma Shigenobu, Ōki Takatō, and Sano Tsunetami.
The feudal domains were abolished in 1871, and the Nabeshima clan given the title "marquis" (kōshaku) under the new kazoku peerage system. The territory of the domain was split between Saga and Nagasaki Prefectures.
Disgruntled former samurai of the domain, disillusioned with the Meiji government over the disputes over invading Korea and their loss of status and stipends, launched the Saga Rebellion in 1874, which was quickly suppressed.
Holdings at the end of the Edo period
[edit]As with most domains in the han system, Saga Domain consisted of several discontinuous territories calculated to provide the assigned kokudaka, based on periodic cadastral surveys and projected agricultural yields.[9][10]
- Hizen Province
- 11 villages in Mine District
- 92 villages in Saga District
- 39 villages in Kanzaki District
- 10 villages in Yabu District
- 22 villages in Ogi District
- 50 villages in Kishima District
- 18 villages in Fujitsu District
- 36 villages in Matsura District
- 6 villages in Sonogi District
- 39 villages in Takaki District
List of daimyō
[edit]Name Tenure Courtesy title Court Rank Kokudaka
Ryūzōji clan, 1590 - 1607 (Tozama daimyo)
1 Ryūzōji Takafusa (龍造寺高房) 1590 - 1607 Suruga no kami (駿河守) Junior 5th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku
Nabeshima clan, 1609 - 1871 (Tozama daimyo)
1 Nabeshima Katsushige (鍋島 勝茂) 1607 - 1657 Shinano no kami (信濃守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 2 Nabeshima Mitsushige (鍋島 光茂) 1657 - 1695 Tango no kami (丹後守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 3 Nabeshima Tsunashige (鍋島 綱茂) 1695 - 1706 Shinano no kami (信濃守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 4 Nabeshima Yoshishige (鍋島 吉茂) 1707 - 1730 Tango no kami (丹後守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 5 Nabeshima Muneshige (鍋島 宗茂) 1730 - 1738 Shinano no kami, Hida no kami (信濃守、飛騨守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 6 Nabeshima Munenori (鍋島 宗教) 1730 - 1760 Tango no kami (丹後守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 7 Nabeshima Shigemochi (鍋島 重茂) 1760 - 1770 Shinano no kami (信濃守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 8 Nabeshima Harushige (鍋島 治茂) 1770 – 1805 Hizen no kami, Sakone no no shosho (肥前守 左近衛少将) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 9 Nabeshima Narinao (鍋島 斉直) 1805 – 1830 Hizen no kami (肥前守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 10 Nabeshima Naomasa (鍋島 直正) 1830 – 1861 Hizen no kami (肥前守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku 11 Nabeshima Naohiro (鍋島 直大), 1861 – 1871 Shinano no kami, Hizen no kami (信濃守、肥前守) Junior 4th Rank Lower Grade (従五位下) 357,000 koku
Genealogy (simplified)
[edit]
I. Nabeshima Katsushige, 1st Lord of Saga (cr. 1607) (1580–1657; r. 1607–1657)
- Tadanao (1613–1635)
II. Mitsushige, 2nd Lord of Saga (1632–1700; r. 1657–1695)
III. Tsunashige, 3rd Lord of Saga (1652–1707; r. 1695–1706)
IV. Yoshishige, 4th Lord of Saga (1664–1730; r. 1707–1730)
V. Muneshige, 5th Lord of Saga (1687–1755; r. 1730–1738)
VI. Munenori, 6th Lord of Saga (1718–1780; r. 1738–1760)
VII. Shigemochi, 7th Lord of Saga (1733–1770; r. 1760–1770)
VIII. Harushige, 5th Lord of Kashima, 8th Lord of Saga (1745–1805; r. 1770–1805)
IX. Narinao, 9th Lord of Saga (1780–1839; r. 1805–1830)
X. Naomasa, 10th Lord of Saga (1815–1871; r. 1830–1861)
XI. Naohiro, 11th Lord of Saga, 17th family head, 1st Marquess(1846–1921; 11th Lord of Saga: 1861–1869, Governor of Saga: 1869–1871, 1st Marquess: 1884)
- Naomitsu, 18th family head, 2nd Marquess (1872–1943; 18th family head and 2nd Marquess: 1921–1943)
- Naoyasu, 19th family head and 3rd Marquess (1907–1981; 19th family head and 3rd Marquess: 1943–1947, 13th family head: 1947–1981)
- Naomoto, 20th family head (1935–2008; 20th family head: 1981–2008)
- Naoaki, 21st family head (b. 1959; 21st family head: 2008–present)
- Naoyori (b. 1991)
- Naoaki, 21st family head (b. 1959; 21st family head: 2008–present)
- Naomoto, 20th family head (1935–2008; 20th family head: 1981–2008)
- Naoyasu, 19th family head and 3rd Marquess (1907–1981; 19th family head and 3rd Marquess: 1943–1947, 13th family head: 1947–1981)
- Naomitsu, 18th family head, 2nd Marquess (1872–1943; 18th family head and 2nd Marquess: 1921–1943)
- Tadanao (1613–1635)
Relatives
[edit]- Yasutoshi Yanagisawa (柳沢保恵) - the founder of the Dai-ichi Life (1902 - present)
- Yasutsugu Yanagisawa (柳沢保承) - One of the founder of the Taiheiyō Kaijo Kasai Hoken (Pasicfic Marine and Fire Insurance, 1919 - 1944)
Other notable Saga natives
[edit]- Tanaka Hisashige (田中 久重)
- Renya Mutaguchi (牟田口廉也)
- Ōkuma Shigenobu (大隈 重信)
- Nabeshima Shigeyoshi (鍋島 茂義)
- Etō Shinpei (江藤 新平)
- Ōki Takatō (大木 喬任)
- Sano Tsunetami (佐野 常民)
- Shima Yoshitake (島 義勇)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Notes
- ^ Later in 2015 Mietsu Naval Dock was registered as a World Heritage Site.
- Source
- ^ Nakayama, Yoshiaki (2015). 江戸三百藩大全 全藩藩主変遷表付. Kosaido Publishing. ISBN 978-4331802946.(in Japanese)
- ^ Nigi, Kenichi (2004). 藩と城下町の事典―国別. Tokyodo Printing. ISBN 978-4490106510.
- ^ Papinot, E (1910). Historical and Geographic Dictionary of Japan. Tuttle (reprint) 1972.
- ^ Tsunetomo, Yamamoto (2014-05-27). Hagakure: The Secret Wisdom of the Samurai. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4629-1425-8.
- ^ Gow, I.; Hirama, Y.; Chapman, J. (2003-02-04). The Military Dimension: Volume III: The Military Dimension. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-37887-2.
- ^ Lewis, James B. (2014-12-05). The East Asian War, 1592-1598: International Relations, Violence and Memory. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-66274-7.
- ^ "Tsuji Reverberatory Furnace Site". Saga City.
- ^ Picture of Saga Domain Seirenkata. Saga Musium.
- ^ Mass, Jeffrey P. and William B. Hauser. (1987). The Bakufu in Japanese History, p. 150.
- ^ Elison, George and Bardwell L. Smith (1987). Warlords, Artists, & Commoners: Japan in the Sixteenth Century, p. 18.
- ^ Genealogy
External links
[edit]
Media related to Saga Domain at Wikimedia Commons
Saga Domain
View on GrokipediaGeography and Territory
Location and Boundaries
Saga Domain occupied a central position in Hizen Province on the northwestern coast of Kyushu island, encompassing territory that largely corresponds to modern Saga Prefecture. This area measures approximately 2,441 square kilometers and features a mix of coastal plains, mountains, and inland valleys.[5] The domain's core holdings centered on Saga Castle in present-day Saga City, with administrative control extending over districts vital for agriculture and maritime activities.[6] The northern boundary adjoined Chikuzen and Chikugo provinces (now Fukuoka Prefecture), while to the east lay the Ariake Sea, forming a natural barrier and supporting rice production through tidal flats. To the north, the Genkai Sea provided access to fishing grounds and trade routes toward Korea. Southern limits reached into portions of what became Nagasaki Prefecture, bordering smaller domains like Hirado and Karatsu, though Saga held dominance in Hizen's northern expanse.[7][5] These boundaries, fixed during the Edo period, reflected the Nabeshima clan's consolidation of power from the late 16th century, excluding offshore islands like Tsushima and Iki.[8]Administrative Divisions and Holdings
The Saga Domain, centered on Saga Castle in Hizen Province, comprised the full territories of six districts: Mine, Kanzaki, Saga, Ogi, Kijima, and Fujitsu, as well as portions of the Yabu, Matsuura, Taka, and Sonoki districts.[9][10] These holdings formed a largely contiguous expanse in what is now Saga Prefecture, though some areas such as parts of Taka District were exclaves.[10] The domain's total assessed rice yield stood at 357,000 koku throughout much of the Edo period, positioning it among Japan's larger feudal entities.[2] However, the main Nabeshima line exercised direct administrative control over only approximately 80,000 koku, with the balance distributed among three branch domains—Hasuike, Ogi, and Kashima—governed by cadet branches of the clan.[2] These sub-domains, while formally recognized as independent by the Tokugawa shogunate, operated as vassal entities under the oversight of the Saga daimyo, contributing to the clan's unified influence in Hizen Province.[2] Internally, the main domain's territories were managed through a hierarchical structure of magistrates and village headmen, with administrative focus on revenue collection, land surveys, and defense obligations centered at Saga Castle.[9] Branch domains maintained their own castles—such as Ogi Castle and Kashima Castle—and parallel governance, yet coordinated military and economic policies with the parent domain, reflecting the Nabeshima clan's strategy to consolidate power while adhering to shogunal limits on direct holdings.[2]Historical Development
Origins and Nabeshima Clan Establishment
The Nabeshima clan originated as a cadet branch of the Shōni clan, descending from Fujiwara lineage through Shōni Tsunefusa, with Shōni Shigenao formally establishing the Nabeshima name in the late 15th century by basing the family at Nabeshima in Hizen Province. Initially serving as retainers to the Ryūzōji clan, which controlled much of Hizen including the Saga area during the mid-16th century, the Nabeshima gained prominence under Nabeshima Naoshige (1537–1619). Naoshige acted as chief retainer to Ryūzōji Takanobu, navigating the clan's expansion and conflicts in Kyushu.[11][12] The Ryūzōji clan's decline accelerated after Takanobu's death on May 3, 1584, in the Battle of Okitanawate against allied Shimazu and Arima forces, leaving his young successor Masaie vulnerable to internal strife and external threats. Naoshige, demonstrating political acumen, stabilized the domain by allying with Toyotomi Hideyoshi during the 1587 Kyushu campaign, securing enfeoffment of lands in the Saga region as reward for his support. This maneuver positioned the Nabeshima to assume de facto control amid Ryūzōji weakening, particularly as Masaie proved ineffective in governance.[12][11] Following Hideyoshi's death in 1598, Naoshige strategically backed Tokugawa Ieyasu prior to the 1600 Battle of Sekigahara, ensuring the clan's loyalty to the emerging shogunate. The formal transition occurred in 1607, when Ryūzōji Masaie died under suspicious circumstances, allowing Naoshige's son, Nabeshima Katsushige (1580–1657), to be confirmed as the first daimyō of Saga Domain with holdings assessed at 357,000 koku, classifying it as a major tozama domain. Naoshige continued advising until his death in 1619, solidifying Nabeshima authority over the territory that became known as Saga han through the Edo period.[11][12]Edo Period Governance and Expansion
Following the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, Nabeshima Katsushige, son of Naoshige, was confirmed as daimyo of Saga Domain by Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1607, with an assessed yield of 357,000 koku, establishing the clan's direct authority over most of Hizen Province under the Tokugawa shogunate's feudal order.[2] The domain's governance centered on Saga Castle, completed in 1611, which served as the administrative hub where the daimyo coordinated policy, taxation, and military obligations, including the sankin-kotai alternate attendance system requiring periodic residence in Edo.[1] As tozama daimyo, the Nabeshima maintained autonomy in internal affairs but adhered to shogunal directives, such as the 1642 assignment to guard Nagasaki Harbor, entailing oversight of foreign trade with the Dutch and Chinese while enforcing sakoku isolation policies.[1] Administrative structure relied on a hierarchy of hereditary retainers, including karo (chief elders) who advised the daimyo on fiscal management, land surveys, and dispute resolution, with the domain divided into districts under local magistrates for rice collection and corvee labor.[1] The Nabeshima clan expanded influence through subsidiary branches, such as Hasunoke, Ogi, Kashima, and Takeo, created for junior family members; these fiefs, totaling part of the 357,000 koku, functioned semi-independently but paid tribute—e.g., Takeo remitted 30% of its yield to Saga after the early 17th century, integrating their territories into the main domain's economic orbit without altering official boundaries.[2] This network strengthened clan cohesion and resource pooling, ranking Saga eighth in domain scale among approximately 250 han, excluding Tokugawa holdings.[1] Governance emphasized fiscal stability amid periodic famines and samurai stipends, with early daimyo like Katsushige focusing on castle fortifications and land reclamation to bolster assessed yields, though no major territorial annexations occurred due to shogunal prohibitions.[1] By the mid-19th century, the 10th daimyo, Nabeshima Naomasa (r. 1830–1861), implemented reforms reducing official numbers and streamlining bureaucracy to address deficits, while promoting Western learning through interpreters in Nagasaki, laying groundwork for technological adoption without disrupting traditional hierarchies.[13] These measures reflected adaptive governance amid external pressures, maintaining domain viability until the Meiji Restoration.[1]Late Edo Period Reforms and Decline
Nabeshima Naomasa, who assumed leadership of Saga Domain as the 10th daimyo in 1830 at the age of 15, initiated financial and administrative reforms to address the domain's precarious fiscal situation, which had been exacerbated by creditor pressures and broader economic strains in the late Edo period.[14][15] These efforts included reducing the number of government officials to streamline administration and adopting advisory recommendations to stabilize revenues, drawing on economic thought that emphasized frugality and efficient resource allocation.[13] Despite occasional resistance from conservative elements, such as his retired father, Naomasa's reforms aimed to avert bankruptcy and bolster the domain's economic resilience amid nationwide inflation and poor harvests.[14] In parallel, Naomasa promoted technological modernization by fostering Western learning and industrial development, including the translation of Dutch technical texts on cannon manufacturing and the construction of Japan's first reverberatory furnace in Saga for metal production.[3] He also boosted coal mining operations and oversaw the building of a steamship, reflecting a strategic push toward self-sufficiency in energy and maritime capabilities.[13] These initiatives were supported by enhanced education systems, positioning Saga as a leader in adopting foreign innovations while leveraging its proximity to Nagasaki for access to Dutch knowledge.[3] Militarily, the domain advanced under Naomasa by producing cannons domestically and supplying them for the defense of Edo Bay following Commodore Perry's arrival in 1853, demonstrating Saga's capacity for rapid response to external threats.[3] Imports of advanced Armstrong guns from Britain further modernized the arsenal, enabling Saga's forces to equip for contemporary warfare.[13] Naomasa also introduced smallpox vaccination using cowpox from the Netherlands, extending public health reforms that inoculated domain residents and his own son, contributing to broader disease prevention efforts.[3] Although these reforms elevated Saga's status—ranking it among Japan's top ten wealthiest domains by the mid-19th century with an assessed yield of 357,000 koku—the domain faced inexorable external pressures from Japan's forced opening to Western powers, unequal treaties, and the weakening Tokugawa shogunate, culminating in the abolition of the han system in 1871 under the Meiji government.[13] Saga's progressive adaptations mitigated internal decline but could not preserve feudal autonomy amid national transformation, as the domain transitioned into Saga Prefecture and its daimyo lineage adapted to new roles.[13]Economy and Resources
Agricultural Production and Land Reclamation
Agriculture in Saga Domain centered on rice cultivation, which formed the backbone of its economy and supported an assessed yield of 357,000 koku, serving as the standard measure of the domain's wealth and obligations to the Tokugawa shogunate.[2] The domain's plains and riverine areas facilitated paddy farming, with the majority of its over 400,000 residents engaged in agriculture by the late Edo period.[16] Introduction of early-ripening Champa rice varieties enhanced productivity by enabling staggered harvests and improving drought resistance in the region's variable climate.[17] Land reclamation and water management were critical to expanding arable land and mitigating floods from rivers like the Kase and Chikugo. Civil engineer Shigeyasu Naritomi (1560–1634), serving the Nabeshima lords, spearheaded irrigation projects, including the Ishiibi canal constructed during the Genna era (1615–1624), which diverted water for fields while controlling flooding.[17][18] These efforts involved moat-based systems with treadmill-powered lift irrigation to distribute water efficiently across paddies, supplemented by annual winter maintenance where farmers deepened ditches and applied excavated mud as fertilizer.[17] Protective measures, such as the establishment of the Niji no Matsubara pine groves after 1615, shielded newly reclaimed coastal lands from salt intrusion and erosion.[17] Farming techniques emphasized sustainability, including horse-plowing in submerged fields with specialized tools to minimize water loss, reflecting adaptations to the domain's flat terrain prone to both scarcity and excess rainfall.[17] These initiatives increased cultivable area, though challenges like periodic droughts underscored reliance on rainfall, as captured in local sayings equating joy from rain to major festivals.[17] By sustaining high rice outputs, such developments bolstered the domain's fiscal stability amid Edo-period constraints.[2]Porcelain Industry and Trade
The porcelain industry emerged in Saga Domain during the early 17th century, centered in the Arita region where high-quality kaolin clay deposits at the Izumiyama mine enabled production using Korean techniques introduced by potters relocated after Toyotomi Hideyoshi's invasions.[19][20] Initial firing occurred around 1616, marking the start of Japan's domestic porcelain manufacturing under Nabeshima clan oversight.[21] The Nabeshima lords established direct control over key kilns, founding facilities like those in Iwatanigawachi in 1628 and later Okawachi for elite Nabeshima ware, which featured intricate overglaze enameling in vibrant colors for exclusive use, such as diplomatic gifts to the shogunate.[22][23] This management included protecting artisans as strategic assets, relocating over 800 potters from Arita and Imari districts in the mid-17th century to centralize and reorganize production under the Sarayama Daikansho administrative office.[24][25] Strict domain regulations prohibited replication of high-end designs on commercial pieces, preserving quality differentiation between export-oriented Arita ware and prestige Nabeshima variants.[26] Trade flourished through the nearby port of Imari, with exports commencing in 1647 via Nagasaki to the Dutch East India Company (VOC), which shipped vast quantities to Europe, generating substantial revenue that bolstered Saga Domain's finances amid Edo-period fiscal pressures.[27][24] By the late 17th century, Arita porcelain dominated outbound shipments, with the domain allocating resources for innovation, including new styles to curry shogunal favor, while restricting foreign access to techniques.[28][29] This industry not only diversified beyond agriculture but also positioned Saga as a pivotal exporter, with production peaking in the 18th century before facing competition from other regions in the 19th.[30][31]Early Industrial Experiments
In the 1840s, Saga Domain under Nabeshima Naomasa established the Randen Ishibiya Seizōjo, a gun foundry focused on producing modern firearms through experimental casting techniques adapted from Western designs.[32] This facility represented an early domain-led initiative to enhance military production capabilities amid growing foreign threats, incorporating trial-and-error methods to refine metalworking processes.[32] By the 1850s, domain reformers expanded into steam technology, with engineers like those at the Seirenkata research institute attempting to replicate steam engines based on smuggled Dutch models and Nagasaki rangaku studies.[33] These efforts culminated in the construction of the Mietsu Naval Dock in 1861, where Saga artisans built Japan's first practical steamship, the Ryōfū Maru, launched in 1865 after overcoming challenges in boiler fabrication and propulsion assembly.[34] The vessel's successful trials demonstrated domain ingenuity in integrating imported knowledge with local craftsmanship, though operational limitations persisted due to material constraints.[34] Parallel experiments targeted resource extraction, as Naomasa directed modernization of the Takashima coal mine in the late 1860s, introducing Western pumping and ventilation techniques to boost output for fueling nascent industries.[35] These initiatives, driven by fiscal pressures and defense needs, laid groundwork for post-Edo industrialization but faced resistance from conservative retainers and inconsistent funding.[35]Government and Leadership
Daimyo Succession and Clan Structure
The daimyo of Saga Domain succeeded primarily through primogeniture, with the eldest son assuming the title and responsibilities upon the predecessor's death or retirement, a practice consistent with Edo-period norms for maintaining clan continuity and shogunal approval. Nabeshima Katsushige, son of Nabeshima Naoshige, became the first daimyo in 1607 and ruled until 1657, establishing the main line's authority over the domain's core territories.[36] This direct patrilineal succession persisted across eleven generations, culminating with Nabeshima Naomasa as the tenth daimyo from 1830 and his son Nabeshima Naohiro as the eleventh from 1861 until the domain's abolition in 1871.[14][37][1] The Nabeshima clan's internal structure revolved around the main house, headed by the daimyo at Saga Castle, which directly governed central holdings assessed at roughly 80,000 koku of rice yield. To administer the domain's total 357,000 koku, including peripheral regions, the clan created collateral branch houses assigned to sons or close kin, forming semi-autonomous subsidiary domains such as Hasunoike, Kashima, Ogi, and Takeo.[2] These branches, often starting with allocations from the main house's grants, functioned as vassal entities required to remit tribute—such as 30% of yields in Takeo's case—ensuring fiscal subordination while allowing local management of lands and retainers.[2] This decentralized yet hierarchical organization, typical of larger tozama domains, balanced central oversight with regional efficiency, with branch lords holding daimyo status but ultimate loyalty to Saga's head.[1]Administrative Mechanisms
The administrative structure of Saga Domain followed the typical Edo-period feudal model, with the daimyo exercising ultimate authority over governance, advised by a council of senior retainers (karō) responsible for formulating policies on finance, military affairs, justice, and public works. These karō, drawn from prominent vassal families loyal to the Nabeshima clan, oversaw a network of magistrates (bugyō) who handled specialized functions such as tax assessment, dispute resolution, and infrastructure maintenance, ensuring centralized control from Saga Castle while delegating routine enforcement to local village headmen (shōya).[38][39] Saga Domain's unique mandate to guard Nagasaki Harbor from 1642 onward introduced specialized oversight mechanisms for foreign trade and coastal security, including dedicated officials to monitor Dutch and Chinese interactions, compile intelligence on Western developments, and regulate export commodities like porcelain and camphor, which informed broader domain policies on technology adoption.[1] In the mid-19th century, the 10th daimyo, Nabeshima Naomasa (r. 1830–1869), enacted reforms to modernize administration, reducing the number of officials to curb bureaucratic overhead and reallocate stipends toward industrial investments, such as coal mining and reverberatory furnace construction; these changes, initiated around 1830 with input from financial advisors like his brother-in-law Shigeyoshi, enhanced fiscal efficiency despite initial resistance from conservative elders.[13][40] The streamlined bureaucracy facilitated the domain's early integration of Western science, supporting institutions like the Kōdōkan academy, which trained administrators and produced Meiji-era statesmen including Etō Shimpei and Ōkuma Shigenobu.[13]Fiscal and Legal Systems
The fiscal system of Saga Domain adhered to the standard Edo-period kokudaka framework, assessing the domain's productive capacity at 357,000 koku of rice, which ranked it among Japan's larger han and provided the basis for taxation primarily in the form of annual rice levies (nengu) collected from peasant cultivators.[13] These levies, typically 40-50% of yields, were gathered village by village and stored in domain granaries, with portions commuted to cash for administrative and samurai stipends; subsidiary revenues derived from domain monopolies on porcelain production and trade through Nagasaki, though money taxes remained minor compared to rice income.[41] Administrative reforms under daimyo Nabeshima Naomasa (r. 1830-1871) addressed chronic fiscal strains from sankin-kōtai obligations and military expenditures, including reductions in bureaucratic personnel to streamline operations and enhance efficiency.[13] By the mid-19th century, Naomasa directed approximately 20% of rice tax revenues toward modernization efforts, funding imports of Western armaments such as battleships (acquired in 1858, 1864, 1866, and 1868) and artillery, supplemented by profits from exporting ceramics and raw materials via Nagasaki.[42] These measures temporarily bolstered finances amid broader economic pressures, though the domain's tozama status limited shogunate subsidies. The legal system operated under the daimyo's authority, granting Saga Domain substantial autonomy in resolving internal civil disputes, land tenure issues, and minor crimes through samurai magistrates and retainers, consistent with han-level administration across Tokugawa Japan.[43] Enforcement emphasized Confucian hierarchies, privileging samurai over commoners, with punishments calibrated by status—ranging from fines and corvée labor for peasants to seppuku for high-ranking offenders.[44] Capital offenses and inter-han conflicts required referral to Edo for shogunate approval, ensuring central oversight; no unique codifications specific to Saga are recorded, though the Nabeshima enforced clan house laws (kabushiki) on retainers' conduct and fiscal compliance.[44] This dual structure maintained order but constrained domain independence in severe cases.Military and Security Role
Guarding Nagasaki and Coastal Defense
In 1642, the Tokugawa shogunate assigned Saga Domain the responsibility of guarding Nagasaki Port, the sole point of official foreign contact with Dutch and Chinese traders, a duty shared with Fukuoka Domain and maintained until the Meiji Restoration in 1868.[3][1][34] This role positioned Saga samurai to monitor overseas developments closely, fostering early exposure to Western technologies amid Japan's sakoku isolation policy.[1] The Phaeton Incident of 1808, where a British frigate entered Nagasaki Harbor unopposed, exposed vulnerabilities in coastal defenses and led to temporary censure of Saga's daimyo Nabeshima Narinao, prompting refinements in the localized defense system involving Saga and Fukuoka domains under the Nagasaki magistrate.[45] By the mid-19th century, escalating threats from Western powers, including the Opium Wars and Commodore Perry's 1853 arrival, intensified Saga's defensive obligations; the domain supplied cannons for batteries fortifying Edo Bay against Perry's "Black Ships."[3] Under daimyo Nabeshima Naomasa (r. 1830–1861), Saga Domain advanced its coastal defenses through domestic cannon production, establishing Japan's first reverberatory furnace and casting Western-style iron cannons in 1852 to equip Nagasaki Harbor batteries, including artillery positions on Kaminoshima and Iōjima islands.[14][46] In 1848, Naomasa created the Domestic Production Office to integrate Nagasaki reinforcement with industrial output, reflecting fiscal strains from guard duties but yielding innovations like early steamship development for patrol capabilities.[46] These measures underscored Saga's proactive stance in maritime security, prioritizing empirical responses to foreign naval superiority over traditional fortifications.[3]Internal Conflicts and Rebellions
Saga Domain under the Nabeshima clan experienced minimal internal conflicts and no major peasant rebellions during the Edo period, a rarity among Japanese domains that often faced periodic hyakushō ikki (peasant uprisings) driven by taxation, famine, or administrative abuses. This stability stemmed from the clan's innovative rural governance, where samurai retainers were deliberately dispersed across villages rather than centralized in urban castle towns, promoting direct oversight and integration with agrarian communities.[47] Retainers actively farmed alongside peasants and participated in local mutual-aid systems like the go-gōmbi (five-household groups), which enforced collective responsibility for taxes and order, reducing class antagonisms and preempting organized dissent.[48] Administrative reforms by daimyo such as Nabeshima Naoshige (r. 1538–1618, founder of the domain's stability) and later rulers emphasized equitable land assessment and relief measures during crop failures, further mitigating grievances that fueled unrest elsewhere. Historical records indicate no verified instances of large-scale ikki or riots within core Saga territories, contrasting with neighboring domains like Karatsu or Shimabara, where such events erupted over similar pressures. Minor disturbances, if any, were resolved through village-level mediation without escalation to domain-wide rebellion, reflecting the effectiveness of this decentralized military-peasant symbiosis in maintaining security.[47] Clan-internal disputes were likewise subdued, with daimyo succession proceeding orderly across generations without recorded coups or factional warfare, bolstered by the Nabeshima's merit-based retainer promotions and fiscal prudence. This internal harmony allowed Saga's forces to focus outward, such as deploying over 8,000 troops to suppress the 1637–1638 Shimabara Rebellion, an external Christian-led uprising that threatened regional order but did not originate within Saga itself. Late-Edo economic strains from inflation and military expenditures tested this system, yet no rebellions materialized, underscoring the domain's resilient social structure until the Meiji transition.[48]Modernization of Armaments
During the mid-19th century, Saga Domain, under daimyo Nabeshima Naomasa, initiated significant efforts to modernize its armaments in response to Western threats exemplified by Commodore Perry's arrival in 1853. Naomasa established an artillery production facility and constructed reverbatory furnaces to enable the casting of iron cannons, achieving the manufacture of Western-style iron cannons in 1852—the first such production in Japan.[14][34] These developments were part of broader defensive preparations, including strengthening Nagasaki Harbor with large-bore cannons and contributing to Edo's defenses by installing Saga-produced artillery.[49] Vassals like Nabeshima Shigeyoshi, lord of Takeo within Saga Domain, advanced these initiatives by importing flintlock guns, studying Western artillery tactics in Nagasaki, and acquiring cannon-casting techniques from Dutch sources.[50] The domain's proximity to Nagasaki facilitated access to foreign military knowledge, leading to the adoption of rifled breech-loading artillery such as Armstrong guns, which Saga forces deployed effectively during the 1868 Battle of Ueno against Shogitai rebels. This modernization extended to infantry equipment, with Saga troops training in the use of modern rifles and tactics, positioning the domain as one of the more advanced han in military technology by the Bakumatsu period.[51] These reforms not only enhanced Saga's coastal defense role but also supported its alignment with imperial forces in subsequent conflicts, reflecting a pragmatic shift from traditional samurai weaponry to industrialized arms production driven by empirical assessments of Western superiority in firepower.[34]Technological and Cultural Advancements
Adoption of Western Science
Saga Domain's strategic role in guarding Nagasaki provided direct exposure to Dutch traders and imported Western texts, enabling early engagement with rangaku (Dutch learning), which encompassed scientific disciplines such as astronomy, medicine, and mechanics. This proximity facilitated the domain's systematic study of Western scientific principles from the late 18th century onward, distinguishing it from more isolationist regions.[34][52] Under daimyo Nabeshima Naomasa (r. 1839–1871), the domain prioritized the integration of Western science into practical applications, expanding the Kōdōkan academy in 1867 to incorporate rangaku curricula aimed at training samurai in fields like gunnery, metallurgy, and naval engineering. This institutional commitment produced scholars and technicians who translated Dutch technical manuals and experimented with empirical methods, laying groundwork for industrial advancements.[34][53] A pivotal achievement was the domain's pioneering use of reverberatory furnaces, with construction of Japan's first iron refinery beginning in 1849 and operational furnaces casting heavy artillery by 1852, marking the initial successful transfer of Western smelting techniques to Japan. These efforts extended to shipbuilding, exemplified by the establishment of the Mietsu Naval Dock in 1866, where Western-style vessels, including steam-powered warships like the Ryōfū Maru launched in 1866, were constructed using adopted hydrodynamic and propulsion principles.[54][55] The domain also manufactured advanced firearms, such as Armstrong breech-loading guns, by reverse-engineering imported models and applying Western ballistics knowledge, with production scaling up in the 1860s to equip domain forces. These initiatives reflected a pragmatic synthesis of empirical observation and causal experimentation, prioritizing verifiable outcomes over doctrinal adherence, though limited by feudal resource constraints and shogunal restrictions on technology diffusion.[56][52]Educational Institutions
The Kōdōkan, established in 1781 by the eighth daimyo Nabeshima Harushige, functioned as the Saga Domain's principal han school, primarily educating sons of samurai retainers in Confucian classics, calligraphy, poetry, and martial disciplines such as swordsmanship and archery.[57] The curriculum emphasized moral cultivation and loyalty to the domain, with instruction delivered by scholars including Koga Seiri, a prominent Confucianist appointed as headmaster.[57] Enrollment typically began around age 10, focusing on rote memorization of texts like the Four Books and Five Classics, alongside practical skills to foster administrative competence among future vassals.[16] During the tenure of the tenth daimyo, Nabeshima Naomasa, who acceded in 1831 at age 16, the Kōdōkan underwent reforms to integrate rangaku (Dutch learning) and Western technical knowledge, reflecting the domain's strategic emphasis on modernization amid threats from foreign incursions.[16] Naomasa, advised by retainers versed in Nagasaki's interpretive operations, expanded offerings to include mathematics, gunnery, chemistry, and metallurgy, dispatching students to study abroad-equivalent programs and hiring foreign-trained instructors.[57] These changes, initiated around 1840, aimed to cultivate polymath retainers capable of innovation, with the school producing figures instrumental in Saga's industrial experiments, such as porcelain refinement and cannon casting.[34] Complementing the Kōdōkan, Saga established specialized facilities for naval and applied sciences in the 1850s. The domain contributed founding students to the Nagasaki Naval Training Center in 1855, focusing on shipbuilding and navigation, while in 1858 Naomasa created the Ōfunate Keikōsho Naval Academy at Mietsu Bay for hands-on training in steam engines and ordnance.[34] By 1867, the Chienkan was founded in Nagasaki under domain auspices, emphasizing advanced Western medicine, engineering, and military tactics for elite samurai, with its graduates later influencing Meiji-era bureaucracy.[58] For commoner education, Saga maintained an extensive network of approximately 450 terakoya (temple schools) by the mid-Edo period, twice the density of many contemporaneous domains, providing basic literacy, arithmetic, and moral instruction to children of merchants, farmers, and artisans.[16] These private academies, often housed in Buddhist temples, achieved literacy rates exceeding 40% among males and 10% among females, supporting the domain's economic diversification into ceramics and agriculture through skilled labor.[16] Naomasa's reforms indirectly bolstered this system by promoting practical knowledge dissemination, though access remained stratified by class.[59]Key Innovations and Their Impact
Saga Domain pioneered the adoption of Western metallurgical techniques by constructing Japan's first reverberatory furnace in the early 1850s, utilizing blueprints obtained from Dutch traders at Dejima in Nagasaki.[60][61] This innovation allowed for the efficient melting of iron using indirect heat, bypassing traditional Japanese bloomery methods that limited large-scale production. The furnace facilitated the domain's domestic manufacturing of advanced artillery, including Armstrong breech-loading cannons, which were deployed effectively by Saga forces during the 1868 Battle of Ueno in the Boshin War. ![Ryofu Maru steamship built by Saga Domain][float-right] In parallel, Saga Domain advanced maritime technology by developing steam propulsion systems, culminating in the completion of the Ryōfū Maru in 1865 at the Mietsu Naval Dockyard—the first practical steamship constructed entirely within Japan.[34] Earlier experiments included scale models of steam engines and locomotives tested around 1853–1854, driven by domain-led research into Dutch technical texts.[56] These efforts, overseen by figures like Nabeshima Shigeyoshi, integrated imported knowledge with local engineering, enabling test runs and prototypes that demonstrated viable steam power for propulsion.[62] These innovations significantly bolstered Saga Domain's military autonomy and coastal defense capabilities, reducing reliance on foreign imports amid growing threats from Western powers.[63] The produced armaments and vessels contributed to Saga's support for imperial restoration forces, enhancing their firepower in key conflicts and accelerating Japan's broader technological shift during the Bakumatsu era.[64] Post-Meiji, the Mietsu site and associated technologies were recognized as precursors to industrial revolution sites, underscoring Saga's role in disseminating expertise that informed national shipbuilding and metallurgy programs.[65] ![Sagahan Armstrong gun][center] The domain's emphasis on empirical adaptation of Western science, through institutions like the Seirenkata research group, also fostered human capital; trainees later influenced Meiji-era advancements in naval engineering and heavy industry.[62] However, resource strains from these projects exacerbated fiscal pressures, contributing to internal discontent that erupted in the 1874 Saga Rebellion.[56]Transition to Meiji Era
Involvement in Bakumatsu Politics
During the Bakumatsu period (1853–1868), Saga Domain under daimyo Nabeshima Naomasa (r. 1831–1871) pursued a policy of cautious neutrality amid escalating tensions between the Tokugawa shogunate and imperial loyalists. Naomasa positioned himself as a mediator in the kōbu gattai (union of court and bakufu) movement, which sought reconciliation between the imperial court in Kyoto and the shogunal government in Edo to jointly confront foreign threats following the arrival of Commodore Matthew Perry in 1853. This approach aimed to preserve domain autonomy while advocating pragmatic reforms, reflecting Saga's strategic vulnerability due to its oversight of Nagasaki Harbor, Japan's primary conduit for Western contact since 1854.[14][66] Naomasa's political engagement emphasized moderation over the radical sonnō jōi (revere the emperor, expel the barbarians) ideology dominant in domains like Chōshū. He supported limited opening to Western technology and trade to bolster defenses, as evidenced by Saga's early adoption of modern artillery and shipbuilding initiatives tied to national security debates in the 1860s. To mitigate factional risks, the domain issued edicts prohibiting unauthorized interactions between Saga samurai and those from other han, thereby avoiding premature alignment with either shogunal loyalists or court partisans during events like the 1864 Kinmon incident. This restraint allowed Saga to maintain influence as one of the "reforming lords" in western Japan, alongside figures from Satsuma and Tosa, without immediate entanglement in civil strife.[66][3] By the mid-1860s, as kōbu gattai efforts faltered—particularly after the shogunate's failed second expedition against Chōshū in 1866—Saga gradually shifted toward pro-imperial positions, contributing personnel and resources to the emerging alliance against Tokugawa rule. Naomasa's foresight in fostering administrative reforms, including fiscal retrenchment and anti-landlord measures implemented around 1860, positioned the domain to transition smoothly into the Meiji era, though this evolution marked a departure from initial neutrality toward active support for restorationist forces by 1867–1868.[66]Support for Imperial Restoration
Saga Domain shifted to active support for the imperial restoration following the imperial victory at the Battle of Toba-Fushimi in January 1868, aligning with the Satsuma-Chōshū Alliance during the Boshin War.[67] Daimyo Nabeshima Naohiro, previously known as Mochizuru, commanded Saga's forces in backing Emperor Meiji against shogunate loyalists.[68] This commitment included deploying troops to key engagements, leveraging the domain's advanced military capabilities developed through Western technology adoption. The domain's contributions extended to supplying modern armaments to imperial armies, notably Armstrong guns manufactured or adapted by Saga artisans. These weapons proved decisive in the Battle of Ueno on July 4, 1868, where imperial forces equipped by Saga overwhelmed the Shōgitai defenders in Tokyo, accelerating the collapse of shogunate resistance.[64] Saga's early industrialization efforts, including cannon production starting in the 1850s, positioned it as a vital technological ally in the restoration coalition, distinct from the more conservative domains.[34] Retainers such as Etō Shimpei, a prominent Saga samurai, advocated sonnō policies emphasizing reverence for the emperor, influencing the domain's pivot from initial caution to full endorsement of overthrowing the Tokugawa shogunate. Etō's diplomatic maneuvers helped forge the broader alliance of progressive domains including Satsuma, Chōshū, Tosa, and Saga, which collectively drove the political transition. Post-restoration, Nabeshima Naohiro's participation in the Iwakura Mission to Europe in 1871-1873 underscored Saga's ongoing alignment with Meiji reforms, promoting modernization abroad.[68]Post-Restoration Saga Rebellion
The Post-Restoration Saga Rebellion erupted in February 1874 in the former territory of Saga Domain, then part of Saga Prefecture, as an uprising by disaffected former samurai against the centralizing policies of the Meiji government. Led primarily by Etō Shimpei, a Saga native and key participant in the 1868 Restoration who had served in early Meiji administrative roles before resigning in late 1873 over disagreements regarding foreign policy and domestic reforms, the rebellion reflected broader samurai grievances stemming from the 1871 abolition of feudal domains (hanseki hōkan), the commutation of stipends into government bonds, and the exclusion of lower-ranking retainers from influential positions in the new national bureaucracy.[69][70] Etō, who had advocated aggressively for Japan's invasion of Korea (Seikanron) as a means to restore samurai purpose and expand imperial influence, viewed the oligarch-dominated government's restraint as a betrayal of Restoration ideals, fueling his call for a return to domain-level autonomy and militaristic expansion.[71] On February 16, 1874, Etō and allies including Shima Yoshitake initiated the revolt by raiding a local bank for funds and seizing government offices within the grounds of the former Saga Castle, rallying several thousand discontented ex-samurai equipped with modern firearms acquired during the domain's pre-Restoration modernization efforts. The rebels proclaimed demands for the reinstatement of feudal privileges and criticism of the Meiji oligarchy's centralization, but lacked widespread support from the Nabeshima clan leadership, which had aligned with the imperial government, or from other domains. Government response was swift, with imperial forces mobilized under Ōkubo Toshimichi deploying regular army units armed with superior artillery and rifles to counter the insurgents.[72][73] The uprising collapsed within weeks due to the rebels' tactical disorganization, limited resources, and the effectiveness of conscript-based imperial troops over traditional samurai formations, resulting in minimal large-scale engagements but significant rebel desertions. Etō fled but was captured shortly after; he and approximately 13 other ringleaders, including Shima and Asakura, faced rapid trials and were executed by beheading on April 13, 1874, with Etō's head displayed publicly as a deterrent.[69][70] The rebellion's suppression underscored the Meiji state's growing military professionalism and commitment to central authority, serving as a precursor to larger samurai revolts like the 1877 Satsuma Rebellion, while highlighting Saga's internal fractures despite its prior contributions to modernization and Restoration politics.[74]Notable Figures
Prominent Daimyo
Nabeshima Naoshige (1537–1619) established the Nabeshima clan's control over Hizen Province, forming the basis of Saga Domain after the Ryūzōji clan's defeat in the late Sengoku period. As a key retainer to Ryūzōji Takanobu, Naoshige survived the 1584 Battle of Okitanawate and maneuvered politically to secure his family's position, receiving formal recognition from Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1607 for his son Katsushige as the first daimyō.[1][36]Nabeshima Naomasa (1815–1871), the tenth daimyō from 1830 to 1861, is noted for his leadership in domain reforms starting at age 17. He prioritized Western learning, overseeing test firings of modern cannons in 1840 and fostering advancements in gunnery and industry that positioned Saga as a progressive han.[3][63] Naomasa retired in 1861 but retained influence, contributing to Saga's support for imperial forces during the Boshin War.[75]
Nabeshima Naohiro (1841–1876), the eleventh and final daimyō from 1861 to 1871, navigated the end of the shogunate by aligning with the imperial restoration. As the last feudal lord of Saga, he managed the domain's transition amid rapid national changes, later serving in Meiji administrative roles before his death.[37]