Emperor Go-Daigo

Emperor Go-Daigo

Infobox_Monarch
name = Emperor Go-Daigo
title =96th Emperor of Japan


caption =
reign =The 26th day of 2nd month of Bunpō 2 (1318) - The 15th day of 4th month of Engen 4 (1339)
coronation =The 29th day of 3rd month of Bunpō 2 (1318)
predecessor =Emperor Hanazono
successor =Emperor Go-Murakami
suc-type =
heir =
consort =Empress Fujiwara no "Kishi"
Imperial Princess "Junshi"
issue =
royal house =
royal anthem =
father =Emperor Go-Uda
mother =Fujiwara no "Chūshi"
date of birth =The 2nd day of 11th month of Shōō 1 (1288)
place of birth =Heian Kyō (Kyōto)
date of death =The 16th day of 4th month of Engen 4 (1339)
place of death =Yoshino no Angū (吉野行宮) (Nara)
place of burial=Tō-no-o no "Misasagi" (塔尾陵) (Nara)|

Emperor Go-Daigo (後醍醐天皇 "Go-Daigo-tennō") (November 26, 1288 – September 19, 1339) was the 96th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. Post-Meiji historians construe the years of his reign spanning 1318 through 1339; however, pre-Meiji accounts of his reign considered the years of his reign to last only between 1318 and 1332, when he was said to have been deposed by the shogun. Pre-Meiji scholars also considered Go-Daigō a pretender Emperor in the years from 1336 through 1339. [Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). "Annales des empereurs du Japon," pp. 281-294; Varley, H. Paul. (1980). "Jinnō Shōtōki." pp. 241-269.]

This 14th century sovereign was named after the 9th century Emperor Daigo and "go-" (後), translates literally as "later;" and thus, he is sometimes called the 'Later Emperor Daigo'. The Japanese word 'go' has also been translated to mean the "second one;" and in some older sources, this emperor may be identified as 'Daigo, the second,' or as 'Daigo II.'

Genealogy

Before his ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne, his personal name (his "imina") was Takeharu"-shinnō" (尊治親王). [Titsingh, p. 281; Varley, p. 241.]

He was the second son of the Daikakuji-tō emperor, Emperor Go-Uda. His mother was Fujiwara no "Chūshi"/Tadako (藤原忠子), daughter of Fujiwara no Tadatsugu (Itsutsuji Tadatsugu) (藤原忠継/五辻忠継). She became Nyoin called Dantenmon-in (談天門院).

Emperor Go-Daigo's ideal was the Engi era (901-923) during the reign of Emperor Daigo, a period of direct imperial rule. An emperor's posthumous name was normally chosen after his death, but Emperor Go-Daigo chose his personally during his lifetime, to share it with Emperor Daigo.

Consorts and children

Empress ("Chūgū") : Fujiwara no "Kishi" (藤原禧子) (Go-Kyōgoku-in, 後京極院) (1303-1333), daughter of Saionji Sanekane (西園寺実兼)
* princess (1314-?), died young
* Imperial Princess "Kanshi" (懽子内親王) (Senseimon-in, 宣政門院) (1315-1362), Saiō at Ise Shrine; later, married to Emperor Kōgon

Empress ("Chūgū") : Imperial Princess "Junshi" (珣子内親王) (Shin-Muromachi-in, 新室町院) (1311-1337), daughter of Emperor Go-Fushimi
* Imperial Princess Yukiko (幸子内親王) (1335-?)

"Nyōgo": Fujiwara no "Eishi" (藤原栄子), daughter of Nijō Michihira

Court lady: Minamoto no Chikako (源親子), daughter of Kitabatake Morochika (北畠師親)
* Imperial Prince Moriyoshi (or Morinaga) (護良親王) (1308-1335) - Head Priest of Enryakuji (Tendai-zasu, 天台座主) (Buddhist name: Prince Son'un, 尊雲法親王)
* Imperial Princess "Hishi" (妣子内親王) - nun in Imabayashi

Court lady: Fujiwara no "Ishi"/Tameko (藤原為子) (?-1311/2), daughter of Nijō Tameyo (二条為世)
* Imperial Prince Takayoshi (also Takanaga) (尊良親王) (1306/8-1337)
* Imperial Prince Muneyoshi (also Munenaga) (宗良親王) (1311-1385) - Head Priest of Enryakuji (Tendai-zasu, 天台座主) (Buddhist name: Prince Sonchō, 尊澄法親王)
* Imperial Princess Tamako (瓊子内親王) (1316-1339) - nun
* Imperial Princess "Kinshi" (欣子内親王) - nun in Imabayashi

Court lady: "Ichijō no Tsubone" (一条局), daughter of Saionji Sanetoshi (西園寺実俊)
* Imperial Prince Tokiyoshi (also Yoyoshi) (世良親王) (1306/8-1330)
* Imperial Prince Jōson (静尊法親王) (Imperial Prince Keison, 恵尊法親王) - priest in Shōgoin (聖護院)
* princess - nun in Imabayashi

Court lady: Fujiwara no "Renshi" (Ano "Renshi") (藤原廉子/阿野廉子) (Shin-Taikenmon-in, 新待賢門院) (1301-1359), daughter of Ano Kinkado (阿野公廉)
* Imperial Prince Tsunenaga (also Tsuneyoshi) (恒良親王) (1324-1338)
* Imperial Prince Nariyoshi (also Narinaga) (成良親王) (1326-1338/1344)
* Imperial Prince Noriyoshi (義良親王) (Emperor Go-Murakami) (1328-1368)
* Imperial Princess "Shoshi" (祥子内親王) - Saiō at Ise Shrine 1333-1336; later, nun in Hōan-ji
* Imperial Princess "Ishi" (惟子内親王) - nun in Imabayashi

Court lady: "Gon-no-Dainagon no Sammi no Tsubone" (権大納言三位局) (?-1351), daughter of Nijō Tamemichi (二条為道)
* Imperial Prince Hōnin (法仁法親王) (1325-1352) - priest in Ninna-ji
* Imperial Prince Kaneyoshi (also Kanenaga) (懐良親王) (1326-1383) - Seisei Taishōgun (征西大将軍) 1336-?
* princess

Princess: a daughter of Emperor Kameyama
* Kōshō (恒性) (1319-1333) - priest

Court lady: "Shōshō no Naishi" (少将内侍), daughter of Sugawara no Arinaka (菅原在仲)
* Imperial Prince Seijo (聖助法親王) (?-?) - Head Priest of Onjō-ji

Court lady: Fujiwara no Chikako (藤原親子), daughter of Kazan'in Munechika (花山院宗親)
* Imperial Prince Mitsuyoshi (満良親王)

Court lady: Fujiwara no "Shushi"/Moriko (藤原守子), daughter of Tōin Saneyasu (洞院実泰)
* Imperial Prince Gen'en (玄円法親王) - Head Priest of Kōfuku-ji

Court lady: "Konoe no Tsubone" (近衛局)
* Prince Tomoyoshi (知良王)

Court lady: "Shōnagon no Naishi" (少納言内侍), daughter of Shijō Takasuke (四条隆資)
* Sonshin (尊真) - priest

Court lady: "Gon-no-Chūnagon no Tsubone" (権中納言局), daughter of Sanjō Kinyasu (三条公泰)
* Imperial Princess Sadako (貞子内親王)

Court lady: "Mimbu-kyō no Tsubone" (民部卿局)
* princess - married to Konoe Mototsugu (divorced later)

(unknown women)
* Imperial Prince Saikei (最恵法親王) - priest in Myōhō-in
* Mumon Gensen (無文元選) (1323-1390) - founder of Hōkō-ji (Shizuoka)
* Yōdō (?-1398) - 5th Head Nun of Tōkei-ji

Go-Daigo had some other princesses from some court ladies.

Events of Go-Daigo's life

Emperor Go-Daigo became emperor at the age of 31, in the prime of his life.

* "Bunpō 2", in the 2nd month (1318): In the 11th year of Hanazono"-tennō"'s reign (花園天皇11年), the emperor abdicated; and the succession (‘‘senso’’) was received by his cousin, the second son of former-Emperor Go-Uda. Shortly thereafter, Emperor Go-Daigo is said to have acceded to the throne (‘‘sokui’’). [Titsingh, p. 281; Varley, p. 44. [A distinct act of "senso" is unrecognized prior to Emperor Tenji; and all sovereigns except Jitō, Yōzei, Go-Toba, and Fushimi have "senso" and "sokui" in the same year until the reign of Go-Murakami.] ]
* "Bunpō 3", in the 4th month (1319): Emperor Go-Daigo caused the "nengō" to be changed to "Gen'ō" to mark the beginning of his reign. [Varley, p. 243.] In 1324, with the discovery of Emperor Go-Daigo's plans to overthrow the Kamakura Shogunate, the Rokuhara Tandai disposed of his close associate Hino Suketomo in the Shōchū Incident.

In the Genkō Incident of 1331, Emperor Go-Daigo's plans were again discovered, this time by a betrayal by his close associate Yoshida Sadafusa. He quickly hid the Sacred Treasures in a secluded castle in Kasagiyama (the modern town of Kasagi, Sōraku district, Kyōto Prefecture) and raised an army, but the castle fell to the Bakufu's army the following year, and they enthroned Emperor Kōgon, exiling Emperor Go-Daigo to Oki Province (the Oki Islands in modern-day Shimane Prefecture), the same place to which Emperor Go-Toba was exiled in 1198.

In 1333, Emperor Go-Daigo escaped from Oki with the help of Nawa Nagatoshi and his family, raising an army at Funagami Mountain in Hōki Province (the modern town of Kotoura in Tōhaku District, Tottori Prefecture). Ashikaga Takauji, who had been sent by the Bakufu to find and destroy this army, sided with the Emperor and captured the Rokuhara Tandai. Immediately following this, Nitta Yoshisada, who had raised an army in the East, destroyed the Hōjō clan and captured the Bakufu.

Returning to Kyōto, Emperor Go-Daigo took the throne from Emperor Kōgon and began the Kemmu Restoration. The Restoration was ostensibly a revival of the older ways, but, in fact, the emperor had his eye set on an imperial dictatorship like that of the emperor of China. He wanted to imitate the Chinese in all their ways and become the most powerful ruler in the East. Impatient reforms, litigation over land rights, rewards, and the exclusion of the samurai from the political order caused much complaining, and his political order began to fall apart. In 1335, Ashikaga Takauji, who had travelled to eastern Japan without obtaining an imperial edict in order to suppress the Nakasendai Rebellion, became disaffected with the Restoration. Emperor Go-Daigo ordered Nitta Yoshisada to track down and destroy Ashikaga. Ashikaga defeated Nitta Yoshisada at the Battle of Takenoshita, Hakone. Kusunoki Masashige and Kitabatake Akiie, in communication with Kyoto, smashed the Ashikaga army. Takauji fled to Kyūshū, but the following year, after restructuring his army in Kyūshū, he again approached Kyōto. Kusunoki Masashige proposed a reconciliation with Ashikaga Takauji to the emperor, but Go-Daigo rejected this. He ordered Masashige and Yoshisada to destroy Takauji. Kusunoki's army was defeated at the Battle of Minatogawa (湊川の戦い).

When Ashikaga's army entered Kyōto, Emperor Go-Daigo resisted, fleeing to Mount Hiei, but seeking reconciliation, he sent the Sacred Treasures to the Ashikaga side. Takauji enthroned the Jimyōin-tō emperor, Kōmyō, and officially began his shogunate with the enactment of the Kemmu Law Code.

Go-Daigo escaped from the capital, the Sacred Treasures that he had handed over to the Ashikaga being counterfeit, and set up the Southern Court among the mountains of Yoshino, beginning the Period of Northern and Southern Courts in which the Northern Dynasty in Kyōto and the Southern Dynasty in Yoshino faced off against each other.

Emperor Go-Daigo ordered Imperial Prince Kaneyoshi to Kyūshū and Nitta Yoshisada and Imperial Prince Tsuneyoshi to Hokuriku, and so forth, dispatching his sons all over, so that they could oppose the Northern Court.

* "Engen 4", on the 15th day of the 8th month (1339), in the 21st year of Go-Daigo's reign, he abdicated at Yoshino in favor of his son, Noriyoshi"-shinnō," who would become Emperor Go-Murakami. [Varley, p. 270.]

In 1339, he died of an unknown disease. Go-Daigo's Imperial Tomb ("misasagi") is at Yoshino. [http://www.kiis.or.jp/kansaida/yoshino/yoshino06-e.html ..Link to Kansai Digital Archives, view of front of mausoleum enclosure]

Kugyō

"Kugyō" (公卿) is a collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras. Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.

In general, this elite group included only three to four men at a time. These were hereditary courtiers whose experience and background would have brought them to the pinnacle of a life's career. During Go-Daigo's reign, this apex of the "Daijō-kan included:
* "Sadaijin"
* "Udaijin"
* "Naidaijin"
* "Dainagon"

Eras of Go-Daigo's reign

The years of Go-Diago's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name or "nengō". Emperor Go-Daigo's eight era name changes are equalled in number only in the reign of Emperor Go-Hanazono, who also reigned through eight era name changes. [Titsinngh, p 281-294.]

:Pre"-Nanboku-chō" court
* "Bumpō" (1317-1319)
* "Gen'ō" (1319-1321)
* "Genkō" (1321-1324)
* "Shōchū" (1324-1326)
* "Karyaku" (1326-1329)
* "Gentoku" (1329-1331)
* "Genkō" (1331-1334)
* "Kemmu" (1334-1336)

:"Nanboku-chō" southern court
*Eras as reckoned by legitimate sovereign's Court (as determined by Meiji rescript)
** "Engen" (1336-1340)

:"Nanboku-chō" northern Court
*Eras as reckoned by pretender sovereign's Court (as determined by Meiji rescript)
** "Shōkei" (1332-1338)
** "Ryakuō" (1338-1342)

In popular culture

Emperor Go-Daigo appears in the alternate history novel "Romanitas" by Sophia McDougall.

References

* Titsingh, Isaac, ed. (1834). [Siyun-sai Rin-siyo/Hayashi Gahō, 1652] "Nipon o daï itsi ran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon, tr. par M. Isaac Titsingh avec l'aide de plusieurs interprètes attachés au comptoir hollandais de Nangasaki; ouvrage re., complété et cor. sur l'original japonais-chinois, accompagné de notes et précédé d'un Aperçu d'histoire mythologique du Japon, par M. J. Klaproth. Paris: Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. [http://books.google.com/books?id=18oNAAAAIAAJ&dq=nipon+o+dai+itsi+ran ...click link for digitized, full-text copy of this book (in French)]
* Varley, H. Paul , ed. (1980). [ Kitabatake Chikafusa, 1359] , "Jinnō Shōtōki ("A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns: Jinnō Shōtōki of Kitabatake Chikafusa" translated by H. Paul Varley)". New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-04940-4


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Emperor Kōgon — (光厳天皇 Kōgon tennō ) (August 1, 1313 [The ninth day of the seventh month of the second year of Shōwa, according to the traditional lunisolar calendar] ndash; August 5, 1364 [The seventh day of the seventh month of the third year of Jōji, according …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Kōmyō — (光明天皇 Kōmyō Tennō ) (January 11, 1322 ndash; July 26, 1380) was the second of the Ashikaga Pretenders, although he was actually the first to be supported by the Ashikaga Bakufu. According to pre Meiji scholars, his reign spanned the years from… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Go-Uda — (後宇多天皇 Go Uda tennō ) (December 17, 1267 ndash; July 16, 1324) was the 91st emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. His reign spanned the years from 1274 through 1287. [Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Go-Fushimi — (後伏見天皇 Go Fushimi tennō ) (April 5, 1288 ndash; May 17, 1336) was the 93rd emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. His reign spanned the years from 1298 to 1301. [Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du Japon …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Hanazono — (花園天皇 Hanazono tennō ) (August 14, 1297 December 2, 1348) was the 95th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. He is reign spanned the years from 1308 through 1318. [Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Go-Murakami — He reigned from Sumiyoshi, Ōsaka, Yoshino, Nara, and other temporary locations.This 14th century sovereign was named after the 10th century Emperor Murakami and go (後), translates literally as later; and thus, he is sometimes called the Later… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor of Japan — Tenno redirects here. For other uses, see Tenno (disambiguation). Emperor of Japan 天皇 Monarchy Imperial …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Go-Hanazono — (July 10, 1419 ndash; January 18, 1471) was the 102nd emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. His reign spanned the years from 1428 through] 1464. [Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du japon, pp. 331 351.] …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Daigo — Daigo Emperor of Japan Emperor Daigo Reign 897–930 Coronation 897 …   Wikipedia

  • Daigo, Go- — ▪ emperor of Japan Introduction in full  Go daigo Tennō,  personal name  Takaharu  born Nov. 26, 1288, Kyōto died Sept. 19, 1339, Mount Yoshino, south of Nara, Japan       emperor of Japan (1318–39), whose efforts to overthrow the shogunate and… …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”