
Map of Japanese provinces with Bizen Province highlighted
'Bizen' (å‚™å‰å›½ ''-no kuni'') was a
province of
Japan on the
Inland Sea side of
Honshū, in what is today the southeastern part of
Okayama Prefecture. Bizen borders
Mimasaka,
Harima, and
Bitchu provinces.
Bizen's original center was in the modern city of
Okayama. From an early time Bizen was one of Japan's main centers for
sword smithing.
Historical record
In the 3rd month of the 6th year of the ''
WadÅ''
era (
713), the land of Bizen''-no kuni'' was administratively separated from
Mimasaka province (美作国). In that same year,
Empress Gemmei's ''
DaijÅ-kan'' continued to organize other
cadastral changes in the provincial map of the
Nara period.
In ''WadÅ'' 6,
Tamba province (丹波国) was sundered from
Tango province (丹後国); and
HyÅ«ga province (æ—¥å‘国) was divided from
Osumi province (大隈国).
[1] In ''WadÅ'' 5 (
712),
Mutsu province (陸奥国) had been severed from
Dewa province (出羽国).
[1]
In the
Muromachi period, Bizen was ruled by the
Akamatsu clan from Mimasaka, but by the
Sengoku period the
Urakami clan had become dominant and settled in Okayama city. They were later supplanted by the Ukita clan, and
Ukita Hideie was one of the
regents Toyotomi Hideyoshi appointed for his son. After
Kobayakawa Hideaki helped
Tokugawa Ieyasu to win the
Battle of Sekigahara over Ukita and others, he was granted Ukita's domains in Bizen and Mimasaka.
Bizen passed through a variety of hands during the
Edo period before being incorporated into the modern prefecture system.
References
Notes
1. Titsingh, p. 64.
2. Titsingh, p. 64.
Further reading
★
Titsingh, Isaac, ed. (1834). [Siyun-sai Rin-siyo, 1652], ''
Nipon o daï itsi ran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon, tr. par M. Isaac Titsingh avec l'aide de plusieurs interprètes attachés au comptoir hollandais de Nangasaki; ouvrage re., complété et cor. sur l'original japonais-chinois, accompagné de notes et précédé d'un Aperçu d'histoire mythologique du Japon, par M. J.
Klaproth.'' Paris:
Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland.
--''Two copies of this rare book have now been made available online: (1) from the library of the University of Michigan, digitized January 30, 2007; and (2) from the library of Stanford University, digitized June 23, 2006.'' Click here to read the original text in French.