Ōmi Province
- For other meanings of Omi, see Omi (disambiguation).
Ōmi (近江国 Ōmi no kuni?) is an old province of Japan, which today comprises Shiga Prefecture. It was one of the provinces that made up the Tōsandō circuit. It is nicknamed as Gōshū (江州?)
The ancient capital was near Ōtsu, which was also a major castle town.
Hōjō Tokimasa (北條 時政, 1138-1215), the first shikken of the Kamakura shogunate, was made daimyo of Omi province in the 10th month of Shōji 2 (1200).[1]
During the Edo period, it was host to five of the Tōkaidō's stations. During the
Aki | Awa (Kanto) | Awa (Shikoku) | Awaji | Bingo | Bitchu | Bizen | Bungo | Buzen | Chikugo | Chikuzen | Chishima | Dewa | Echigo | Echizen | Etchū | Harima | Hida | Higo | Hitachi | Hidaka | Hizen | Hōki | Hyūga | Iburi | Iga | Iki | Inaba | Ise | Ishikari | Iwami | Iyo | Izu | Izumi | Izumo | Kaga | Kai | Kawachi | Kazusa | Kii | Kitami | Kōzuke | Kushiro | Mikawa | Mimasaka | Mino | Musashi | Mutsu | Nagato | Nemuro | Noto | Oki | Ōmi | Oshima | Ōsumi | Owari | Sado | Sagami | Sanuki | Satsuma | Settsu | Shima | Shimousa | Shimotsuke | Shinano | Shiribeshi | Suō | Suruga | Tajima | Tamba | Tango | Teshio | Tokachi | Tosa | Tōtōmi | Tsushima | Wakasa | Yamashiro | Yamato | Yoshino
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