kanjō bugyō
{{Short description|Officials of the Tokugawa shogunate in Edo period Japan}}
{{Italic title}}
{{nihongo|Kanjō-bugyō|勘定奉行|}} were officials of the Tokugawa shogunate in Edo period Japan. Appointments to this prominent office were usually fudai daimyōs.{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 324}} Conventional interpretations have construed these Japanese titles as "commissioner" or "overseer" or "governor".
The work was mainly done at the account office.
This bakufu title identifies an official with responsibility for finance. The office of kanjō-bugyō was created in 1787 to upgrade the status and authority of the pre-1787 finance chief (kanjō-gashira).{{Sfn | Roberts | 1998 | p = [https://books.google.com/books?id=aAeQREc0vz0C&dq=gusoku+bugyo&pg=PA207 207]}}
It was a high-ranking office, in status roughly equivalent to a gaikoku-bugyō; the status of this office ranked slightly below that of daimyō, ranking a little below the machi-bugyō. The number of kanjō bugyō varied, usually five or six in the late Tokugawa period.{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 324}}
The kanjō-bugyō was considered to rank approximately with the gunkan-bugyō.{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 322}} The kanjō-ginmiyaku were bakufu officials of lower rank who were subordinate to the kanjō-bugyō.{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 324}}
Clans
There are also accounts in various Domains, and like the accounts of the shogunate, they were in charge of duties such as finance and tax collection of the domains. The chief executive officer of the Accounts Office is the Kanjo Bugyo, and because of the domain's financial responsibilities, a superior with a relatively upper class samurai was appointed within the clan . In addition, there was an official of the accountant under the Kanjō bugyō, who was in charge of the duties.
List of ''kanjō-bugyō''
{{dynamic list}}
- Umezo Masagake{{Sfn | Nussbaum | Roth | 2005 | loc = "Umezo Masagake", {{Google books |p2QnPijAEmEC| p. 1014| page=1014}}}}
- Matsudaira Chikanao (1844–57).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 335}}
- Kawaji Toshiaki (1852–58){{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 334}}—negotiated the Shimoda Treaty.
- Mizuno Tadanori (1855–58, 1859).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 337}}
- Toki Tomoaki (1857–59).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 341}}
- Nagai Naomune (1858).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 338}}
- Takenuchi Tasunori (1861–64).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 340}}
- Oguri Tadamasa (1863, 1864–65).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 338}}
- Matsuaira Yasunao (1863–64).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 336}}
- Inoue Kiyonao (1864–66).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 333}}
- Kawazu Sukekuni (1867).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 334}}
- Kurimoto Sebei (1867).{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 335}}
- Kan'o Haruhide.{{Sfn | Screech | 2006 | p = [https://books.google.com/books?id=BLzQA7cpr7wC&q=screech+secret+memoirs+of+the+shoguns 241 n 69]}} Simultaneously Nikkō bugyō until 1746.
- Honda Yashuhide.{{Sfn | Beasley | 2001 | p = 107}}
- Hagiwara Shigehide.{{Sfn | Sansom | 1963 | p = [https://books.google.com/books?id=Oul3FkdYxR0C&dq=kura+bugyo&pg=PA27 27]}}
See also
- Bugyō
- Head of Accounts(勘定組頭) - Who directed and supervised the officials belonging to the Accounts Office.and was in charge of the Shogunate or Domains finances and agricultural policy.
- Kanjō-bugyō - Kanjobugyo is a financial accounting computer software released by Obic Business Consultants.
Notes
{{reflist|32em}}
References
- {{Citation | author-link = William G. Beasley| last = Beasley | first = William G | title = Select Documents on Japanese Foreign Policy, 1853–1868 | orig-year = 1955 Oxford University Press | publisher = RoutledgeCurzon | place = London | year = 2001 | isbn = 978-0-197-13508-2}}.
- {{Citation | last1 = Nussbaum | first1 = Louis-Frédéric | first2 = Käthe | last2 = Roth | year = 2005 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=p2QnPijAEmEC | title = Japan encyclopedia | place = Cambridge | publisher = Harvard University Press | isbn = 978-0-674-01753-5 | oclc = 58053128}}; n.b., Louis-Frédéric is a pseudonym of Louis-Frédéric Nussbaum, see [https://archive.today/20120524174828/http://dispatch.opac.ddb.de/DB=4.1/PPN?PPN=128842709 Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Authority File].
- {{Citation | last = Roberts | first = Luke Shepherd | year = 1998 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=aAeQREc0vz0C&q=gusoku+bugyo | title = Mercantilism in a Japanese Domain: The Merchant Origins of Economic Nationalism in 18th Century Tosa | place = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | isbn = 0-521-89335-6}}.
- {{Citation | author-link = George Bailey Sansom| last = Sansom | first = George Bailey | year = 1963 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Oul3FkdYxR0C&q=kura+bugyo | title = A history of Japan| publisher = Stanford University Press | isbn = 978-0-8047-0527-1 }}.
- {{Citation | author-link = Timon Screech| last = Screech | first = Timon | year = 2006 | title = Secret Memoirs of the Shoguns: Isaac Titsingh and Japan, 1779–1822 | place = London | publisher = RoutledgeCurzon | isbn = 0-7007-1720-X}}.
{{Tokugawa Organization Chart}}
{{Tokugawa officials}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kanjo-bugyo}}
Category:Government of feudal Japan
Category:Officials of the Tokugawa shogunate
{{Japan-hist-stub}}