References
- Akiyama, K. (1980). Kinsei Kyōto chō gumi hattatsu shi [The history of the development of the neighborhood groups of early modern Kyoto]. Tokyo: Hōsei Daigaku Shuppan Kyoku.
- Asao, N. (1994). Nobunaga to Hideyoshi [Nobunaga and Hideyoshi]. In Bukkyo Daigaku (Ed.), Kyōto no rekishi 3: Machishū no yakudō [History of Kyoto vol. 3: The pulse of the townspeople] (pp. 107–131). Kyoto: Kyoto Shinbun.
- Farris, W. W. (2006). Japan’s medieval population: Famine, fertility, and warfare in a transformative age. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
- Fukutō, S. (1991). Heian chō no haha to ko [Mothers and children in the Heian court]. Tokyo: Chūkō Shinsho.
- Fukutō, S. (1998). Heian chō josei no raifu saikuru [The life cycle of women in the Heian court]. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan.
- Gay, S. (2001). The moneylenders of late medieval Kyoto. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
- Goshima, K. (2004). Kyōto chō kyōdōtai seiritsu shi no kenkyū [Research on the history of the development of Kyoto communal neighborhoods]. Tokyo: Iwata Shoin.
- Hamano, K., & Nagata, M. L. (2014). Urban reproduction and fertility: Kyoto in late Tokugawa Japan. Kansai University review of economics, 16, 3–30.
- Hofmeester, K., Lucassen, J., Lucassen, L., Stael, R., & Zijdeman, R. 2015. Global collaboratory on the history of labour relations, 1500-2000: Background, set-up, taxonomy, and applications. ISH. Retrieved October 26, from. http://historyoflabourrelations.org
- Ishii, R. (1988). Shinpen Edo jidai manpitsu [New collection of essays on the Edo period] (2d ed.). Tokyo: Asahi Shinbun.
- Kamada, T. (2000). Kinsei Kyōto no toshi to minshu [The ethnic and urban structure of early modern Kyoto]. Kyoto: Shibunkaku.
- Katakura, H. (1986). Edo machi kata ni okeru sōzoku [Inheritance practices of Edo townspeople]. In R. Hayashi (Ed.), Kinsei josei shi [History of early modern women] (pp. 177–218). Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan.
- Makita, R. (1986). Kinsei Kyoto ni okeru josei no kasan shoyū [Female ownership of property in early modern Kyoto]. In R. Hayashi (Ed.), Kinsei josei shi [History of early modern women] (pp. 219–255). Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan.
- Nagata, M. L. (2003). Mistress or wife? Fukui Sakuzaemon vs Iwa. Continuity and Change, 18, 287–309. doi:10.1017/S0268416003004600
- Nagata, M. L. (2004a). Headship and succession in early modern Kyoto: The role of women. Continuity and Change, 19, 73–104. doi:10.1017/S0268416004004850
- Nagata, M. L. (2004b). Leaving the village for labor migration in early modern Japan. In F. van Poppel, M. Oris, & J. Lee (Eds.), The road to independence: Leaving home in eastern and western societies, 16th-20th centuries (pp. 273–311). Bern-Bruxelles: Peter Lang.
- Nagata, M. L. (2005a). Labor contracts and labor relations in early modern central Japan. London and New York: CurzonRoutledge.
- Nagata, M. L. (2005b). Domestic service and the law in early modern Japan. In A. Fauve-Chamoux (Ed.), Domestic service and the formation of european identity: Understanding the globalization of domestic work, 16th-21st centuries (pp. 211–233). Bern, CH: Peter Lang.
- Nagata, M. L. (2008). Brotherhoods and stock societies: Guilds in pre-modern Japan. In J. Lucassen, T. De Moor, & J. L. van Zanden (Eds.) The Return of the Guilds, International review of social history 53 (Suppl. 16) (pp. 121–142). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/S0020859008003635
- Nagata, M. L. (2009, August). Women’s roles in the family business: Evidence from Kyoto in the nineteenth century. Presented at the World Economic Congress, Utrecht.
- Nagata, M. L. (2013). Factors that shaped the organization of labor and the labor market in Tokugawa Japan: Kyoto and central Japan. In A. Stanziani (Ed.), Labour, coercion and economic growth in Eurasia, 17th-20th centuries (pp. 115–143). Leiden and Boston: Brill.
- Nagata, M. L., & Hamano, K. (2006, November). Households in need of assistance: Welfare in early modern Kyoto. Presented at the meeting of Social Science History Association, Minneapolis.
- Nagata, M. L., & Hamano, K. (2009). Marriage market in early modern Kyoto, 1843-1868. History of the Family, 14, 36–51. doi:10.1016/j.hisfam.2008.11.001
- Nagata, M. L., Hamano, K., & Jinno, K. (2013, November). Power relations in household and family in late Tokugawa era Kyoto. Presented at the meeting of Social Science History Association, Chicago.
- Nakano, T. (1978). Shōka dōzokudan no kenkyū [Research on merchant federations] (Vol. 1). Tokyo: Miraisha.
- Nelson, T. (2004). Slavery in medieval Japan. Monumenta Nipponica, 59, 463–492. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org
- Nickerson, P. (1993). Kinship, property and politics in mid Heian. Monumenta Nipponica, 48, 429–467. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org10.2307/2385292
- Nishiyama, R. (2004). Toshi Heian Kyō [Heian Kyo the city]. Kyoto: Kyoto University Press.
- Okabe, B. (1981). Kōriyama-shi shi [History of Koriyama city] (Vol. 2). Koriyama City: Koriyama City.
- Saito, O. (2011). The stem family and labour markets: Reflections on households and firms in Japan’s economic development. History of the Family, 16, 466–480. doi:10.1016/j.hisfam.2011.07.005
- Shigeta, S. (2008). Shomin tachi no Heian Kyō [The commoners’ city Heian Kyo]. Tokyo: Kadokawa Sensho.
- Souryi, P. F. (2001). The world turned upside down: Medieval Japanese society. (K. Roth, Trans.). New York: Columbia University Press.
- Sugimori T. (2008). Kinsei Kyōto no toshi to shakai [The social and spatial structure of early modern Kyoto]. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press.
- Suzuki, K. (1992). Buke no kakun to josei [Warrior house rules and women]. In S. Minegishi (Ed.), Chūsei wo kangaeru: Kazoku to josei [Thinking medieval: Family and women] (pp. 54–71). Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kobunkan.
- Tanahashi, M. (1988). Taikei Nihon no rekishi 4: Ōchō no shakai [Compendium of Japanese history 4: Society during the era of imperial court rule]. Tokyo: Shogakkan.
- Wakita H. (1994). Muromachi jidai no shōkōgyō [Commerce and manufacture during the Muromachi period]. In Bukkyo Daigaku (Ed.) Kyōto no rekishi 2: Chūsei no tenkai, [History of Kyoto vol. 2: Medieval developments] (pp. 170–185). Kyoto: Kyoto Shinbunsha.