@article{oai:stars.repo.nii.ac.jp:02000217, author = {島田 克彦}, issue = {2}, journal = {桃山学院大学総合研究所紀要}, month = {2022-12-12, 2023-08-12}, note = {Sefukuji Temple on Mount Makio in Izumi, the southern part of Osaka named Senshu Region, is a traditional issan temple, which is a collection of sub-temples and monks in one location. This paper elucidates how Sefukuji Temple acquired the land ownership recognized by the state of Japan in the transition to modern times. The study focuses on the following two processes. The first is how the spatial structure of the mountain and the sub-temples were connected to the complex legal structure. They were partly subjected to mountain land tax and partly exempt from tax as the estate of a temple. These were approved under the early modern feudal system; thus, we understand these factors as the historical premises of the transition period to modernity. The second is to clarify specific ways that the temple responded to the Meiji government’s land policy that developed from the disposition, or confiscation by the government, of the estates of temples and shrines to the land tax reform. This paper first explains that it is possible to understand the complex legal structure of the mountain in the modern era according to its spatial structure represented in the “Picture Map of Mt. Makio.” Second, it shows that the two stages, which led to the acquisition of land ownership by the temple in the modern era, correspond to the spatial structure of the mountain. Finally, it presents how Sefukuji Temple researched its own historic documents to examine its relationship with the land and the surrounding area since the early modern era, and how they utilized that information to construct an argument to demand land ownership from the government.}, pages = {23--46}, title = {近代移行期の泉州梶尾山施福寺による土地所有権の獲得}, volume = {48}, year = {} }