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Oki province
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Oki_province" .
Map of Japanese provinces (
1868 ) with Oki Province highlighted
Oki Province (隠岐国 , Oki no kuni ? ) was an old province of Japan , which consisted of the Oki Islands in the Sea of Japan , located off the coast of the provinces of Izumo and Hoki .
The Oki Islands comprise two relatively big islands and some smaller ones. The capital of the province was located where the present-day city of Saigo stands, but few relics of the old capital have been found, apart from the provincial temple , which remains today in Saigo city.
Oki was an exile site, and both Emperor Go-Toba and Emperor Go-Daigo were exiled to this province.
From the Kamakura period Oki Province was governed primarily by the shugo of Izumo province. In the Muromachi period , it was ruled successively by the Sasaki clan , the Yamana clan and the Kyogoku clan . In the Sengoku period the Amago clan held this province. After they fell and the Tokugawa Shogunate arose, the Shogunate declared the province a dominion of the shogun and appointed as governor Matsue han , a daimyo belonging to the Matsudaira clan , relatives of the Shogun. At this time the rice production from Oki province was calculated at five thousand koku per year.
Today it is Oki District, Shimane , a part of Shimane prefecture .
The article incorporates text from OpenHistory .