The Koizumi Domain (小泉藩, Koizumi-han) was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, with its headquarters within the city limits of present-day Yamato-Kōriyama, Nara. It was ruled for the entirety of its history by the branch of the Katagiri family founded by Katagiri Sadataka, a younger brother of the famed Katagiri Katsumoto. In July 1871, with the abolition of the han system the Koizumi Domain became Koizumi Prefecture, and later it was finally made a part of Nara Prefecture.
List of lords
- Sadataka (貞隆)
- Sadamasa (貞昌)
- Sadafusa (貞房)
- Sadaoki (貞起)
- Sadanari (貞音)
- Sadayoshi (貞芳)
- Sadaaki (貞章)
- Sadanobu (貞信)
- Sadanaka (貞中)
- Sadateru (貞照)
- Sadatoshi (貞利)
- Sadaatsu (貞篤)
The second lord, Katagiri Sadamasa (1605-73), is an important figure in the history of the Japanese tea ceremony. He founded the Sekishū-ryū school of Japanese tea ceremony, and in Japanese tea history, is usually known as Katagiri Sekishū.
References
Koizumi Domain Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA