著者
杉谷 昭
出版者
法制史研究
雑誌
法制史研究 (ISSN:04412508)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1966, no.16, pp.127-143,v, 1966

In this paper, I have made an inquiry into the San-chi-sei of<I> fu </I>(_??_), <I>ken </I>(_??_), and <I>han</I> (_??_) in the Early Meiji Era, especially into the part played by fu during the period just before the abolition of <I>han</I> (clans) and into the establishment of<I> ken</I> (prefecture) from the historical point of view of the word<I> fu</I>. Thus, I have partly made clear the process of the establishment of the centralized national government from the viewpoint of the constitutional history.
著者
杉谷 昭
出版者
法制史学会
雑誌
法制史研究 (ISSN:04412508)
巻号頁・発行日
no.20, pp.77-109,3, 1970

Through the Boshin (_??__??_) War of 1868, the Meiji Government tried to defeat the remaining Shogunate powers by the military force, and to build up a new centralized State of the Emperor's rule with the 8th Century Ritsuryo(_??__??_). The mobilization of military powers took the form of dispatching the Chinbushi (Suppressor), and resulted in the forming of the judicial court which actually was none other than the suppressor's office combined with the civil administration, and further in the establishment of Fu (_??_) as one of the three new administrative district divisions of Fu (_??_), Han (_??_), and Ken (_??_).<BR>Hakodate-Fu (Prefectural Government at the District of Hakodate) was established as an executive organization of civil administration for the development of Ezochi (or Hokkaido). But when it was captured by the remaining Shogunate naval force, the Meiji Government mobilized the military power of the Aomoriguchi Suppressor, and succeeded in uniting and strengthening the military powers of the new Government at the district of Hakodate by the decisive victory of the Boshin War.<BR>In order to clarify the historical significance of the establishment of the Hakodate-Fu prefectural government, the present author has studied the Shimizudani Kinkô Monjo (or the Diary and Notes of Mr. Kinkô Shimizudani, who was the prefectural governor of Hakodate-Fu) (in the National Diet Library, at the branch of the documents of Constitutional Government), and discussed the process from the Ansei period to the new Meiji Era, around the years 1854-1869.
著者
杉谷 昭
出版者
法制史学会
雑誌
法制史研究 (ISSN:04412508)
巻号頁・発行日
no.22, pp.105-125,VIII, 1972

The paper submitted by the present writer deals the historical data for investigation of Ezochi (Hokkaido) in 1857—'59. In the middle of the nineteenth century, the Tokugawa Shogunate reinforced political and economical regulation in Ezochi.<BR>Under the shogunal government, the magistrates and the mandataries at Hakodate carried out their policy by means of the patrols around Ezochi. The documents owned by the Hokkaido Government Office (_??__??__??__??_) are the diaries of those patrols around Ezochi in 1857—'59. These data are highly valuable in explaining the shogunal policy toward Ezochi in those days.
著者
杉谷 昭
出版者
法制史学会
雑誌
法制史研究 (ISSN:04412508)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1966, no.16, pp.127-143,v, 1967-03-30 (Released:2009-11-16)

In this paper, I have made an inquiry into the San-chi-sei of fu (_??_), ken (_??_), and han (_??_) in the Early Meiji Era, especially into the part played by fu during the period just before the abolition of han (clans) and into the establishment of ken (prefecture) from the historical point of view of the word fu. Thus, I have partly made clear the process of the establishment of the centralized national government from the viewpoint of the constitutional history.