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is a professor in the Graduate School of Law at Hitotsubashi University, and professor emeritus of Tokyo Metropolitan University.Mizubayashi Takeshi
" Directory Database of Research and Development Activities (ReaD). 9 January 2009. Accessed 15 January 2009.
His field of specialty is the history of law in Japan, though he is perhaps most well known for his arguments regarding the political organization of
Tokugawa Japan The or is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan, when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country's 300 regional ''daimyo''. Emerging from the chaos of the Sengoku period, the Edo period was characterize ...
. Mizubayashi earned his
bachelor's degree A bachelor's degree (from Middle Latin ''baccalaureus'') or baccalaureate (from Modern Latin ''baccalaureatus'') is an undergraduate academic degree awarded by colleges and universities upon completion of a course of study lasting three to six ...
from the Faculty of Law at Tokyo University in 1970, and a
master's degree A master's degree (from Latin ) is an academic degree awarded by universities or colleges upon completion of a course of study demonstrating mastery or a high-order overview of a specific field of study or area of professional practice.
from the Graduate School, Division of Law and Politics at the same university, in 1972. He served as the Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Japan Legal History Association from 2005–2008.


Research

Mizubayashi coined the term ,Ravina, Mark. ''Land and Lordship in Early Modern Japan''. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999. p27. a term now widely used by Western scholars as well, including
Mark Ravina Mark Ravina (born 1961) is a scholar of early modern ( Tokugawa) Japanese history and Japanese Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he has taught since 2019. He currently holds the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Chair in Japanese Studi ...
and
Ronald Toby Ronald P. Toby (1942 — ) is an American historian, academic, writer and Japanologist. Early life Toby earned a doctorate in Japanese history from Columbia University in 1977. Career As a university professor, Toby's teaching experience ...
.Toby, Ronald. "Rescuing the Nation from History: The State of the State in Early Modern Japan." ''Monumenta Nipponica'', Vol. 56, No. 2. (Summer, 2001), pp. 197-237. Using this term, Mizubayashi and others reenvision the Tokugawa state not as a single, unified, bureaucratic entity, but as a feudal conglomeration of loosely tied together by their fealty to the shogunate, and by other obligations and systems imposed by the shogunate. In other words, he refocuses attention away from the shogunate, to the individual domains; building upon Mizubayashi's work, a considerable number of scholars have since published articles and books analyzing the history of individual ''han'' and reconsidering the extent to which they might be regarded as separate small countries, more loosely connected to the shogunate than was previously thought. Mizubayashi also argued that the decentralized nature of the Tokugawa state was due not primarily to a weak shogunate, but to the strength of the domains (''han''). In particular, he pointed to the strength of the ''ie'' system, under which daimyō (feudal lords) were dedicated to protecting the honor, integrity, and wealth or power of their clan. Not strictly a matter of family or household honor and integrity, ''ie'' or clans were often continued by an adopted heir without diminishing its legitimacy. In Mizubayashi's vision, the political system of Tokugawa Japan was founded upon the ''ie''. Tokugawa Japan consisted of a number of daimyō clans enfeoffed by the Tokugawa clan, and in turn regarding other smaller samurai clans, merchant households, and peasant households as their vassals or subjects; Ravina also points out that religious institutions were frequently operated like ''ie'' in the Tokugawa period, with continuation of the order under an heir (adopted or otherwise) of the current head.Ravina. pp37-38.


Selected publications

*「近世の法と国制研究序説」 (''Kinsei no hō to kokusei kenkyū josetsu'', "Introduction to Early Modern Law and Research of the Nation-System"). Parts 1–6. 国家学会雑誌 (''Kokka gakkai zasshi'', "Journal of the Association of Political and Social Sciences") vol. 90–95. 1977–1982. *「封建制の再編と日本的社会の確立」 (''Hōkensei no saihen to Nihon-teki shakai no kakuritsu'', "Reorganization of the Feudal System and the Establishment of Japanese Society"). Tokyo: Yamakawa Publishing, 1987. *「徳島藩の史的構造」 (''Tokushima han no shiteki kōzō'', "Historical Construction of Tokushima Domain"). Meicho Publishing, 1975.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Mizubayashi, Takeshi 1947 births Living people Historians of Japan 20th-century Japanese historians Legal historians University of Tokyo alumni Academic staff of the University of Tokyo 21st-century Japanese historians