was an
old province of
Japan, made up of the present-day
prefectures of
Fukushima,
Miyagi,
Iwate and
Aomori, and the municipalities of
Kazuno and
Kosaka in
Akita Prefecture. It was also known as
Ōshū (奥州), although that term usually referred to the combined provinces of Mutsu and
Dewa.
Historical record
Mutsu, on northern
Honshū, was one of the last provinces to be formed as land was taken from the indigenous
Ainu and became the largest as it expanded northward. The ancient capital was in modern Miyagi Prefecture.
In the 3rd month of the 2nd year of the Wadō era (709), there was an uprising against governmental authority in Mutsu and in nearby Echigo Province. Troops were dispatched to subdue the revolt.
In the 5th year of the Wadō era (712), Mutsu was separated from Dewa Province. Empress Gemmei's Daijō-kan made cadastral changes in the provincial map of the Nara period, as in the following year when Mimasaka Province was split from Bizen Province; Hyūga Province was sundered from Osumi Province; and Tamba Province was severed from Tango Province.
During the Sengoku period, various clans ruled different parts of the province. The Uesugi clan had a castle town at Wakamatsu in the south, the Nambu clan at Morioka in the north, and Date Masamune, a close ally of the Tokugawa, established Sendai, which is now the largest city in the Tōhoku region.
In the Meiji period, four provinces were created from Mutsu: Rikuchū, Rikuzen, Iwaki, and Iwashiro.
The area that is now Aomori Prefecture continued to be part of Mutsu until the Abolition of the han system and the nation-wide conversion to the prefectural structure of modern Japan.
Districts
Districts during the Meiji Era
References
- Titsingh, Isaac, ed. (1834). [Siyun-sai Rin-siyo/Hayashi Gahō, 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. ...Click link for digitized, full-text copy of this book (in French)
- Mutsu Province. SamuraiWiki. Retrieved on 2008-01-16..