[んち, nchi] (suf) house (e.g. of Tokugawa); family; (P) #90
[ばくまつ, bakumatsu] (n) closing days of the Tokugawa shogunate; end of Edo era; (P) #4617
[ふだい, fudai] (n) (1) successive generations; (2) (abbr) (See 譜代大名) hereditary daimyo (whose ancestors supported Tokugawa Ieyasu prior to the battle of Sekigahara) #18924
[あおいのごもん, aoinogomon] (n) wild ginger trefoil coat of arms of the Tokugawa clan
[かくれキリシタン, kakure kirishitan] (n) clandestine Christian (during the Tokugawa period); secret Christian
[とざま, tozama] (n) (1) (abbr) (See 外様大名) outside daimyo; non-Tokugawa daimyo; (2) outsider; one not included in the favored (favoured) group
[とざまだいみょう, tozamadaimyou] (n) non-Tokugawa daimyo
[かわらばん, kawaraban] (n) tile block print (newspaper in Tokugawa period)
[ごさんけ, gosanke] (n) (1) (See 三家・さんけ・2) three branch Tokugawa families (Owari, Kii, and Mito); (2) big three; top three
[ごさんきょう, gosankyou] (n) (See 三卿) three secondary Tokugawa branch families (Tayasu, Shimizu, and Hitotsubashi)
[さんけ, sanke] (n) (1) three noble families (Kan'in, Kazan'in, and Nakanoin or Koga); (2) (See 御三家・1) three branch Tokugawa families (Owari, Kii, and Mito)
[さんきょう, sankyou] (n) (See 御三卿) three secondary Tokugawa branch families (Tayasu, Shimizu, and Hitotsubashi)
[しゅうせん, shuusen] (n, vs) (1) good offices; recommendation; mediation; (2) (Tokugawa-era) employment office
[しょうぎたい, shougitai] (n) (See 上野戦争) Shogitai (group of former Tokugawa retainers opposed to the Meiji government who fought in the battle of Ueno)
[しんぱん, shinpan] (n) feudal domain owned by a Tokugawa family branch
[しんぱんだいみょう, shinpandaimyou] (n) the daimyo of a feudal domain owned by a Tokugawa family branch
[とくがわけ, tokugawake] (n) the House of Tokugawa; the Tokugawas
[とくがわじだい, tokugawajidai] (n) (See 江戸時代) Tokugawa period (i.e. the Edo period, 1600-1867 CE)
[とくがわぜい, tokugawazei] (n) Tokugawa forces
[とくがわがた, tokugawagata] (n) Tokugawa's side
[とくがわばくふ, tokugawabakufu] (n) Tokugawa shogunate (i.e. the Edo shogunate, 1603-1867)
[ふだいだいみょう, fudaidaimyou] (n) hereditary daimyo (whose ancestors supported Tokugawa Ieyasu prior to the battle of Sekigahara)
[ぶけしょはっと, bukeshohatto] (n) law decreeing rules for daimyo during Tokugawa shogunate