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He established an alternate attendance system known as sankin kotai. This required daimyo to live alternately between their domain and Edo. The Tokugawa Bakufu also required that the daimyo maintained a permanent residence in Edo and required that their families live there. Tokugawa Ieyasu also enforced a strict castle building and destruction system. He required daimyo to destroy certain castles in their domains if there were found to be too many. Conversely, when a new castle was being built, he would require daimyo provide materials for it's construction. Needless to say, this was a huge economic strain on them.
yes
To make them eat lollipops
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"Sankin kotai" was the system whereby the Tokugawa shoguns forced all daimyo to spend every other year at the Tokugawa court in Edo (later Tokyo). This increased both political and fiscal control over the daimyo by Edo.
He established an alternate attendance system known as sankin kotai. This required daimyo to live alternately between their domain and Edo. The Tokugawa Bakufu also required that the daimyo maintained a permanent residence in Edo and required that their families live there. Tokugawa Ieyasu also enforced a strict castle building and destruction system. He required daimyo to destroy certain castles in their domains if there were found to be too many. Conversely, when a new castle was being built, he would require daimyo provide materials for it's construction. Needless to say, this was a huge economic strain on them.
yes
To make them eat lollipops
Hey
The Tokugawa Dynasty
"Sankin kotai" was the system whereby the Tokugawa shoguns forced all daimyo to spend every other year at the Tokugawa court in Edo (later Tokyo). This increased both political and fiscal control over the daimyo by Edo.
IT is TAE firmware that control entry attendance.
An aid in internal control over payrolls that indicates employee attendance is a clock card. It can also be referred to as a time clock.
Tokugawa Shogun
a time card
Tokugawa Ieyasu (with an I, not an L) was the first Shogun of the Tokugawa Shogunate which ruled Japan from 1603 until 1868. The Tokugawa clan took control after a long period of civil war known as the Sengoku Jidai, the "warring states period".Shogun basically means "commander in chief". The Shogun was the overall commander of the Japanese military from the end of the 1100s until 1868. Although the Tenno (emperor) was technically the ruler of Japan, the Shoguns were the real rulers during this time.
Toshio George Tsukahira has written: 'Feudal control in Tokugawa Japan' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Feudalism, Daimyo