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Kamakura and period
There have been six non-imperial families who have controlled Japanese emperors: the Soga ( 530s – 645 ), the Fujiwara ( 850s – 1070 ), the Taira ( for a relatively short period ), the Minamoto ( and Kamakura bakufu ) ( 1192 – 1333 ), the Ashikaga ( 1336 – 1565 ) and the Tokugawa ( 1603 – 1867 ).
Late Middle Japanese covers the years from 1185 to 1600, and is normally divided into two sections, roughly equivalent to the Kamakura period and the Muromachi period, respectively.
By the 15th century, the Sengoku Jidai civil war erupted, and the vast need for swords together with the ferocity of the fighting caused the highly artistic techniques of the Kamakura period ( known as the " Golden Age of Swordmaking ") to be abandoned in favor of more utilitarian and disposable weapons.
Since the earliest samurai government in Japan, during the Kamakura period ( 1185 – 1333 ), sword fighting, together with horse riding and archery, were the main martial pursuits of the military clans.
His descendants established themselves in the Iwami province as local administrators of Mino, and from the Kamakura period became part of the regional warrior caste under the name of the Masuda clan.
Nichiren ( 日蓮 ) ( February 16, 1222 – October 13, 1282 ) was a Buddhist monk who lived during the Kamakura period ( 1185 – 1333 ) in Japan.
The Kamakura period of 13th century Japan, in which Nichiren was born-was characterised by natural disasters, internal strife and confusion within Mahayana schools about whether: "... the world had further entered a period of decline " referring to the Latter Day of the Law.
After the Heian period, during the Kamakura period and later, renga, a form of collaborative linked poetry, began to develop.
Kamakura period.
Kamakura period.
Kamakura period.
There were emperors who abdicated and cloistered emperors before and after the Heian period, but the cloistered rule system usually refers to the governing system put in place by Emperor Shirakawa in 1086 and remained in force until the rise of the Kamakura shogunate in 1192.
Usually the establishment of Kamakura Bakufu marks the beginning of Kamakura period.
At least at the early Kamakura period, Chiten kept substantial power over many important decisions.
Kamakura period.
* The Heian period ends and the Kamakura period begins in Japan.
The shinobi proper, a specially trained group of spies and mercenaries, appeared in the Sengoku or " warring states " period, in the 15th century, but antecedents may have existed in the 14th century, and possibly even in the 12th century ( Heian or early Kamakura era ).
The shogun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
During the Kamakura period ( 1185-1333 ) the Japanese sword smiths achieved the highest level of technical excellence and because the war between two influential families, the Minamoto and the Taira, made it possible to test and evaluate swords under the severest of conditions.

Kamakura and ends
* Kamakura, Japan has a temple whose Nichiren Buddhist priests in training practice a ritual of 100 days of fasting, meditation and walking which ends with stripping to loincloths and dousing with ice cold water.

Kamakura and Kemmu
Other instances, such as Emperor Go-Toba's 1221 rebellion against the Kamakura shogunate and the 1336 Kemmu Restoration under Emperor Go-Daigo, show the power struggle between the Imperial House and the military governments of Japan.
During the Kemmu Restoration, after the fall of the Kamakura shogunate in 1333, another short-lived shogun arose.
The Kamakura shogunate was overthrown, and Go-Daigo began the process which came to be known as the Kemmu Restoration.
The Kamakura shogunate was succeeded by the Kemmu Restoration.
The destruction of the Kamakura shogunate of 1333 and the failure of the Kemmu Restoration in 1336 opened up a legitimacy crisis for the new shogunate.
In 1333, when Emperor Go-Daigo ( from the Daikakuji-tō ) staged the Kemmu Restoration and revolted against the Kamakura shogunate, the Shōgun responded by declaring Emperor Kōgon, Go-Daigo's second cousin once removed and the son of an earlier emperor, Emperor Go-Fushimi of the Jimyōin-tō, as the new emperor.
* 1333-1336 ( Kemmu 1 ): The Kemmu Restoration was an attempt by Emperor Go-Daigo to restore Imperial authority after the fall of the Kamakura shogunate.
* 1331-1333: The Genkō War ( 元弘の乱, Genkō no Ran ) lasted the entire length of the era, which marked the fall of the Kamakura Shogunate and led to the ultimately unsuccessful Kemmu Restoration.
Like his brother, Tadayoshi resolutely abandoned the Kamakura shogunate to ally himself with Emperor Go-Daigo during the Kemmu Restoration of 1333.

Kamakura and restoration
At the rise of the Minamoto to its ruling seat and the opening of Kamakura Shogunate, Nara enjoyed the support of Minamoto no Yoritomo toward restoration.
The clan governed and held Tsushima Island from the 13th-century through the late 19th-century, from the Kamakura period until the end of the Edo period and the Meiji restoration.

Kamakura and begins
Approximately 100 metres after the second torii, the dankazura, a raised pathway flanked by cherry trees that marks the center of Kamakura, begins.
When the Kamakura era at which a samurai grasps the government begins, the “ new ” Buddhism for the newly-risen class ( samurai ) appears.

Kamakura and Japan
In fact, from 1192 to 1867, the shoguns, or their shikken regents in Kamakura ( 1203 – 1333 ), were the de facto rulers of Japan, although they were nominally appointed by the Emperor.
( Kamakura, Japan )
* 1147 – Minamoto no Yoritomo, Japanese founder and the first shogun of the Kamakura Shogunate of Japan ( d. 1199 )
* 1293 – An earthquake strikes Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan, killing about 30, 000.
He left Seichō-ji shortly thereafter to study in Kamakura and several years later traveled to western Japan for more in-depth study in the Kyoto – Nara area, where Japan's major centers of Buddhist learning were located.
* 1498 – The 1498 Meiō Nankaidō earthquake generates a tsunami that washes away the building housing the statue of the Great Buddha at Kōtoku-in in Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan ; since then the Buddha has sat in the open air.
3 Shogunates of Japan: Minamoto no Yoritomo, the first shogun ( 1192 – 1199 ) of the Kamakura shogunate
Minamoto no Yoritomo seized certain powers from the central government and aristocracy and established a feudal system based in Kamakura in which the private military, the samurai, gained some political powers while the Emperors of Japan and the aristocracy in Japan remained the de jure rulers.
* 1185: Beginning in this year the Kamakura Shogunate deprives the emperor of Japan of political power.
* Minamoto no Yoritomo, shōgun of Japan, founder of the Kamakura Shogunate
* Hōjō Yoshitoki, regent of the Kamakura shogunate of Japan ( b. 1163 )
* September 25 – Prince Morikuni, 9th Kamakura shogun of Japan ( b. 1301 )
* 1268 – Kublai Khan sends an emissary to the Kamakura Shogunate of Japan demanding an acknowledgment of souzerainty and payment of tribute ; the Japanese refuse, starting a diplomatic back-and-forth lasting until the Mongols attempt to invade in 1274.
Though Kamakura Bakufu took over the police force and ruled Eastern Japan, the authority of Emperor and retired Emperors remained.
* Hōjō Mototoki becomes Kamakura shogun of Japan.
* May 26 – An earthquake in Kamakura, Japan kills an estimated 30, 000.
* The Hikitsuke, a judicial organ of the Kamakura and Muromachi shogunates of Japan, is established.
* Kublai Khan sends an emissary to the Kamakura Shogunate of Japan demanding an acknowledgment of suzerainty and payment of tribute ; the Japanese refuse, starting a diplomatic back-and-forth lasting until the Mongols attempt to invade in 1274.

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