Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "1224" ¶ 12
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Hōjō and Yoshitoki
* Hōjō Yoshitoki, Kamakura regent ( d. 1224 )
The problem was solved choosing Kujo Yoritsune, a distant relation of the Minamoto, who would be the fourth shogun and figurehead, while Hōjō Yoshitoki would take care of day-to-day business.
* Hōjō Yoshitoki, r. 1205-1224
With the protector of the Emperor ( shogun ) a figurehead himself, strains emerged between Kyoto and Kamakura, and in 1221 the Jōkyū War broke out between the Cloistered Emperor Go-Toba and the second regent Hōjō Yoshitoki.
At the age of seven, in 1226, Yoritsune became Seii Taishōgun in a political deal between his father and the shogunate regent Hōjō Yoshitoki and Hōjō Masako who set him up as a puppet shogun.
She was the sister of Hōjō Yoshitoki, and was married to Minamoto no Yoritomo, the first shogun of the Kamakura period.
In 1180, Masako's elder brother Munetoki was killed at Battle of Ishibashiyama and Yoshitoki became heir of Hōjō clan.
Nonetheless, Masako and Yoshitoki, the heir to the Hōjō, were angry with their father, especially after their mother, Hōjō no Maki, died in 1204.
Masako's brother, Hōjō no Yoshitoki, had succeeded as shikken for Shogun Sanetomo, while Masako was in a powerful position as a negotiator with the court.
It was being decided who the next shogun would be, and Masako and Regent Yoshitoki finally decided on Kujō Yoritsune, otherwise known as Fujiwara no Yoritsune, who was not an adult, but a baby, and also not a Hōjō nor a male-line Minamoto, but rather, a member of the Kujō clan, which was part of the Fujiwara clan.
Regent Yoshitoki and his eldest son and heir, Hōjō Yasutoki, attacked Kyoto, and managed to regain the city and exile Cloistered Emperor Go-Toba.
In 1224, Hōjō Yoshitoki died of a sudden illness.
* Hōjō Yoshitoki
With the protector of the Emperor ( shogun ) a figurehead himself, strains emerged between Kyoto and Kamakura, and in 1221 the Jōkyū War broke out between the Cloistered Emperor Go-Toba and the second regent Hōjō Yoshitoki.
2 Hōjō Yoshitoki ( 1163 – 1224 ) ( r. 1205-1224 )
The name tokusō is said to have come from Tokushū ( 徳崇 ), the Buddhist name of Hōjō Yoshitoki, but Hōjō Tokimasa is usually regarded as the first tokusō.
# Hōjō Yoshitoki
When his father Yoshitoki and aunt Hōjō Masako died, he succeeded to become shikken in 1224.
# Hōjō Yoshitoki ( r. 1205 – 1224 )
Several days later, the Imperial Court declared Hōjō Yoshitoki, the regent and representative of the shogunate, to be an outlaw, and three days later the entirety of eastern Japan had officially risen in rebellion.
Hōjō Yoshitoki decided to launch an offensive against Go-Toba's forces in Kyoto, using much the same three-pronged strategy as was employed a few decades earlier.

Hōjō and regent
* Hōjō Tokimune, regent of Japan ( b. 1251 )
* 1279 – A diplomatic party of the Yuan Dynasty sent by Kublai Khan to Japan is killed by Japan's regent Hōjō Tokimune, leading to a second invasion attempt by the Mongols in 1281.
* Hōjō Tokimune, 8th regent of the Kamakura shogunate ( d. 1284 )
* July 14 – Hōjō Yasutoki, regent of Japan ( b. 1183 )
* Hōjō Tokiyori, regent of Japan ( b. 1227 )
* A Yuan diplomatic party sent by Kublai Khan to Japan is killed by Japan's regent Hōjō Tokimune, leading to a second invasion attempt by the Mongols in 1281.
In 1335, Hōjō Tokiyuki, son of last regent Takatoki, tried to re-establish the shogunate by force and defeated Kamakura's de-facto ruler Ashikaga Tadayoshi in Musashi, in today's Kanagawa prefecture.
In 1247, the newly installed shōgun's regent, Hōjō Tokiyori, invited Dōgen to come to Kamakura to teach him.
After Yoritomo's death, Hōjō Tokimasa, the clan chief of Yoritomo's widow, Hōjō Masako, and former guardian of Yoritomo, claimed the title of regent ( Shikken ) to Yoritomo's son Minamoto no Yoriie, eventually making that claim hereditary to the Hōjō clan.
Yoritomo's wife's family, the Hōjō, took control after his death at Kamakura, maintaining power over the shogunate until 1333, under the title of shikken ( regent to the Shogun ).
The head of Hōjō was installed as the regent for the shogun is called the Shikken in the period, although later positions were created with similar power such as Tokuso and Rensho.
In 1225 the third regent Hōjō Yasutoki established the Council of State, providing opportunities for other military lords to exercise judicial and legislative authority at Kamakura.
The Hōjō regent presided over the council, which was a successful form of collective leadership.
* 1225 ( Karoku 1, 11th month ): At Kamakura, Yoritsune's coming of age ceremonies took place at age 8 ; but control of all bakufu affairs remained entirely in the hands of Hōjō Yasutoki, the regent ( shikken ).
was the eldest child of Hōjō Tokimasa by his wife Hōjō no Maki, the first shikken, or regent, of the Kamakura shogunate.
Since he was only eighteen, Hōjō Tokimasa proclaimed himself shikken or regent for Yoriie.
The Miura were put down, and Regent Yasutoki became Hōjō regent.

Hōjō and Kamakura
Yoritomo's wife's family, the Hōjō, seized the power from the Kamakura shoguns.
The end of the Kamakura shogunate came when Kamakura fell in 1333 and the Hōjō Regency was destroyed.
* Hōjō Mototoki becomes Kamakura shogun of Japan.
Before the opening of the Entrances, access on land was so difficult that the Azuma Kagami reports that Hōjō Masako came back to Kamakura from a visit to Sōtōzan temple in Izu bypassing by boat the impassable Inamuragasaki cape and arriving in Yuigahama.
The Hōjō clan | Hōjō family Mon ( crest ) | crest, ubiquitous in Kamakura
The Hōjō regency, a unique episode in Japanese history, however continued until Nitta Yoshisada destroyed it in 1333 at the Siege of Kamakura.
During the preceding Kamakura period ( 1185 – 1334 ), the Hōjō clan enjoyed absolute power in the governing of Japan.
For reasons that are unclear, possibly because Ashikaga was the de facto leader of the powerless Minamoto clan, while the Hōjō clan were from the Taira clan the Minamoto had previously defeated, Ashikaga turned against the Kamakura bakufu, and fought on behalf of the Imperial court.
Although the Ashikaga shogunate had retained the structure of the Kamakura bakufu and instituted a warrior government based on the same social economic rights and obligations established by the Hōjō with the Jōei Code in 1232, it failed to win the loyalty of many daimyo, especially those whose domains were far from Kyoto.
* The Hōjō Regency during the Kamakura shogunate in Japan.
Yoritomo set himself up as the rightful heir of the Minamoto clan, and, with financial backing of the Hōjō, his wife's family, he set up a capital at Kamakura in the east.
Born from Tokimasa's daughter Hōjō Masako at Hiki Yoshikazu's residence in Kamakura, Yoriie had as wet nurses the wives of powerful men like Hiki himself and Kajiwara Kagetoki, and Hiki's younger sister.
Minamoto no Sanetomo ( 源 実朝, September 17, 1192 – February 13, 1219, r. 1203 – 1219 ) was the third shogun of the Kamakura shogunate Sanetomo was the second son of the founder of the Kamakura shogunate Minamoto no Yoritomo, his mother was Hōjō Masako, and his older brother was the second Kamakura shogun Minamoto no Yoriie.
In Kyōto, Minamoto no Michichika took power as steward, and in Kamakura, in 1199, upon the death of Minamoto no Yoritomo, Hōjō Tokimasa began to rule as Gokenin.

0.296 seconds.