Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Emperor Go-Kōgon" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Nanboku-chō and sovereign
This Nanboku-chō " sovereign " was named after the 10th century Emperor En ' yū and go-( ), translates literally as " later ;" and thus, he may be called the " Later Emperor En ' yū ".
This Nanboku-chō " sovereign " was named after the 13th century Emperor Kameyama and go-( ), translates literally as " later ;" and thus, he may be called the " Later Emperor Kameyama ".
This Nanboku-chō " sovereign " was named after the 9th-century Emperor Kōkō, and go-( ), translates literally as " later.
This 17th-century sovereign was named after the 14th-century Nanboku-chō Emperor Kōmyō and go-( ), translates literally as later, and thus, he could be called the " Later Emperor Kōmyō ".

Nanboku-chō and was
After a brief period under true Imperial rule, the Ashikaga shogunate was established in 1336, and a series of conflicts known as the Nanboku-chō Wars began.
Less than a century after the end of the Nanboku-chō Wars, peace under the relatively weak Ashikaga shogunate was destroyed by the outbreak of the Ōnin War, a roughly ten-year struggle that converted the capital of Kyoto into a battlefield and a heavily fortified city that suffered severe destruction.
He was raised in the turbulent Nanboku-chō period of rival northern and southern courts in the mansion of Hino Sukenori ( 日野西資教 ).
( 1328 – March 29, 1368 ) was the 97th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession, and a member of the Southern Court during the Nanboku-chō period of rival courts.
Emperor Kōmyō of the illegitimate Northern Court ( see below ) was installed as emperor by Takauji in opposition to the exiled Southern Court, beginning the turbulent Northern and Southern Court period ( Nanboku-chō ), which saw two Emperors fight each other and which would last for almost 60 more years.
A provincial temple for monks was constructed in the Tenpyō era ; they were at modern Kokubuhiganjō in Kashiwara, but they went out of use in sometime around the Nanboku-chō Period.
The Nanboku-chō Period arrived as Ashikaga Takauji opposed Emperor Go-Daigo, and Kawachi became a hotspot for battles ; Kusunoki Masashige's eldest son Kusunoki Masatsura was killed in action at the battle of Shijō Nawate.
What emerged out of the exigencies of the Nanboku-chō ( Southern and Northern Court ) War was the Muromachi regime, which broadened the economic base of the warriors while undercutting the noble proprietors, a trend that had started already with the Kamakura bakufu.
The Nanboku-chō War was an ideological struggle between loyalists who wanted the Emperor back in power, and those who believed in creating another warrior regime modeled after Kamakura.
The shugo was able to make his provincial power effective, not through his traditional administrative capacity like the earlier governors, but through the intermediary ties of vassalage with the samurai who had taken over the estate lands during the Nanboku-chō War, and with the samurai residing on public lands ( kokugaryo ).
By doing this, he tied the regime closer to the imperial court, thereby erasing the stigma of the ideology that fueled the Nanboku-chō conflict: Ashikaga Takauji was seen as a traitor fighting against the restoration of imperial power.
From the middle of the Kamakura period to the end of the Nanboku-chō period, from roughly the 13th to 14th centuries, the district was controlled by the Hino and Kamonamochi clans.
Judging from his style, he was active from the late Kamakura period to the Nanboku-chō period.
In the Nanboku-chō period of 14th century, Taga was the object of military campaigns between the South and North Courts.
The clan was an ally of the Ashikaga shogunate against the ( Imperial ) Southern Court during the wars of the Nanboku-chō period, and was rewarded by the shogunate with the hereditary position of shugo ( Governor ) of the provinces of Yamashiro, Kii, Kawachi, Etchu, and Noto, at the end of the 14th century.
was the head of the Nitta family in the early fourteenth century, and supported the Southern Court of Emperor Go-Daigo in the Nanboku-chō period, capturing Kamakura from the Hōjō clan in 1333.
was a samurai general in the service of the Ashikaga Northern Court, during Japan's Nanboku-chō period.
was the Constable ( shugo ) of Echizen Province during the 14th century Nanboku-chō Wars in Japan.
was a Japanese court noble, and an important supporter of the Southern Court during the Nanboku-chō Wars.

Nanboku-chō and Emperor
* The Taiheiki ( Japanese: 太平記 ) is a Japanese historical epic written in the late 14th century that details the fall of the Hōjō clan and rise of the Ashikaga, and the period of war ( Nanboku-chō ) between the Northern Court of Ashikaga Takauji in Kyoto, and the Southern Court of Emperor Go-Daigo in Yoshino, which forever splintered the Japanese Imperial Family.
It deals primarily with the Nanboku-chō, the period of war between the Northern Court of Ashikaga Takauji in Kyoto, and the Southern Court of Emperor Go-Daigo in Yoshino.

Nanboku-chō and ),
The Sō clan fought for the Shōni clan and for the Ashikaga Northern Court during the Nanboku-chō period ( 1336-1392 ), and seized a portion of Chikuzen Province.

Nanboku-chō and later
This betrayal of the Kemmu Restoration by Takauji blackened his name in later periods of Japanese history, and officially started the Nanboku-chō War.

Nanboku-chō and called
By the Nanboku-chō Period, in the 13th and 14th centuries, the yamabushi had formed organized cohorts called konsha, and these konsha, along with sōhei and other monks began to take direction from the central temples of their sects.

sovereign and was
His duty was to his sovereign and to his nation, and an extension to peoples beyond the territorial boundaries was not to be contemplated.
The present issue in Atlantica -- whether to transform an alliance of sovereign nations into a federal union of sovereign citizens -- resembles the American one of 1787-89 rather than the one that was resolved by Civil War.
To their leaders the Constitution was a compact made by the people of sovereign states, who therefore retained the right to secede from it.
The champions of the Union maintained that the Constitution had formed, fundamentally, the united people of America, that it was a compact among sovereign citizens rather than states, and that therefore the states had no right to secede, though the citizens could.
But though the Southern States, when drafting a constitution to unite themselves, narrowed the difference to this fine point by omitting to assert the right to secede, the fact remained that by seceding from the Union they had already acted on the concept that it was composed primarily of sovereign states.
Lincoln saw that the act of secession made the issue for the Union a vital one: Whether it was a Union of sovereign citizens that should continue to live, or an association of sovereign states that must fall prey either to `` anarchy or despotism ''.
What Lincoln could not concede was that the states rather than the people were sovereign in the Union.
The European customs on which international law was based were to become, by force and fiat, the customs that others were to accept as law if they were to join this community as sovereign states.
According to the new theories, the nineteenth century corporate sovereign was `` sovereign '' in a quite new and different sense from his historical predecessors.
Law was seen as an emanation of the `` sovereign will ''.
However, the sovereign was not Hobbes' absolute monarch but rather the parliamentary sovereign of Austin.
The Articles of Confederation, formally the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, was an agreement among the 13 founding states that established the United States of America as a confederation of sovereign states and served as its first constitution.
Since the minting of coins was a prerogative accorded in Islamic practice only to a sovereign, it can be considered that Osmanli became independent of the Mongol Khans.
The doctrine that no man can cast off his native allegiance without the consent of his sovereign was early abandoned in the United States, and Chief Justice John Rutledge also declared in Talbot v. Janson, " a man may, at the same time, enjoy the rights of citizenship under two governments.
Part of Title I was found unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court as it pertains to states in the case of Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama v. Garrett as violating the sovereign immunity rights of the several states as specified by the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Albert of Prussia (; ) ( 17 May 1490 – 20 March 1568 ) was the 37th and last sovereign Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights and, after converting to Lutheranism, the first duke of the Duchy of Prussia, which was the first state to adopt the Lutheran faith and Protestantism as the official state religion.
In 1947, British rule in the South Asia was replaced by the sovereign, independent nations of India, Pakistan and later Bangladesh, resulting in the migration of millions people and significant loss of life and property.
Finally, in 1143, the Treaty of Zamora established peace between the cousins and the recognition by the Kingdom of León that Portugal was a sovereign kingdom.
The name appears to have been derived from Yussuf ben-Serragh, the head of the tribe in the time of Mohammed VII of Granada, al-Mustain, who did that sovereign good service in his struggles to retain the crown of which he was three times deprived.

0.203 seconds.