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- Jinya abstract "Not to be confused with the word jinja, which denotes a Shinto shrine.During the Edo period of Japanese history, a jin'ya (陣屋) was the administrative headquarters of a small domain or parcel of land held by the Tokugawa shogunate, as well as the residence of the head of the administration, and the associated grain storehouse. While larger domains had castles, certain smaller domains did not, and the jin'ya, much smaller than a castle, housed the administration. Some, such as the Komono Jin'ya in Komono, Mie Prefecture, had a watchtower (yagura), mimicking the donjon of a castle. Others had moats or earthen walls, in some cases left over from an earlier castle on the site.Generally, domains assessed at 30,000 koku or less had a jin'ya instead of a castle. Additionally, they were found on shogunal lands and those headed by hatamoto, and within large domains jin'ya served as district headquarters (gun daikan-sho). They were also found in exclaves of domains.The \"three great jin'ya\" were at the Iino, Tokuyama and Tsuruga Domains.".
- Jinya thumbnail Takayama_jinya.jpg?width=300.
- Jinya wikiPageExternalLink catalog.
- Jinya wikiPageExternalLink offen.
- Jinya wikiPageID "15924271".
- Jinya wikiPageID "15926656".
- Jinya wikiPageLength "1852".
- Jinya wikiPageLength "44".
- Jinya wikiPageOutDegree "1".
- Jinya wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Jinya wikiPageRedirects Jinya.
- Jinya wikiPageRevisionID "343883526".
- Jinya wikiPageRevisionID "668393348".
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Edo_period.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Category:Government_of_feudal_Japan.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Edo_period.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Han_system.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Hatamoto.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Japan.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Iino_Domain.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Imanishi_familys_House.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_architecture.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Jinya.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Koku.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Komono,_Mie.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Mie_Prefecture.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Shinto_shrine.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_shogunate.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Tokuyama_Domain.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink Tsuruga_Domain.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLink File:Takayama_jinya.jpg.
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jin'ya".
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jinya".
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Kuroishi Jin'ya".
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLinkText "Yokkaichi Jin’ya".
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLinkText "jin'ya".
- Jinya wikiPageWikiLinkText "jinya".
- Jinya wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Jinya wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Japan-hist-stub.
- Jinya wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Jinya wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:R_from_modification.
- Jinya subject Category:Edo_period.
- Jinya subject Category:Government_of_feudal_Japan.
- Jinya hypernym Headquarters.
- Jinya type Place.
- Jinya type Redirect.
- Jinya type Thing.
- Jinya comment "Not to be confused with the word jinja, which denotes a Shinto shrine.During the Edo period of Japanese history, a jin'ya (陣屋) was the administrative headquarters of a small domain or parcel of land held by the Tokugawa shogunate, as well as the residence of the head of the administration, and the associated grain storehouse. While larger domains had castles, certain smaller domains did not, and the jin'ya, much smaller than a castle, housed the administration.".
- Jinya label "Jin'ya".
- Jinya label "Jinya".
- Jinya sameAs Q908908.
- Jinya sameAs Jinya.
- Jinya sameAs 陣屋.
- Jinya sameAs 진야.
- Jinya sameAs m.03qgyzq.
- Jinya sameAs Q908908.
- Jinya sameAs 陣屋.
- Jinya wasDerivedFrom Jinya?oldid=343883526.
- Jinya wasDerivedFrom Jinya?oldid=668393348.
- Jinya depiction Takayama_jinya.jpg.
- Jinya isPrimaryTopicOf Jinya.