2015-05-07

- backup - wikipedia Heian

- BACK to the Daruma Museum -
. ABC List of Contents .
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Heian Period

backup from wikipedia
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !

The Heian period (平安時代 Heian jidai?) is the last division of classical Japanese history, running from 794 to 1185.[1] The period is named after the capital city of Heian-kyō, or modern Kyōto. It is the period in Japanese history when Buddhism, Taoism and other Chinese influences were at their height. The Heian period is also considered the peak of the Japanese imperial court and noted for its art, especially poetry and literature. Although the Imperial House of Japan had power on the surface, the real power was in the hands of the Fujiwara clan, a powerful aristocratic family who had intermarried with the imperial family. Many emperors actually had mothers from the Fujiwara family.[2] Heian (平安?) means "peace" in Japanese.

- - - Contents
1 History
1.1 Fujiwara regency
1.2 Rise of the military class
2 Heian culture
2.1 Developments in Buddhism
2.2 Literature
2.3 Beauty
3 Economics
4 Events
5 Current depictions
5.1 Literature
5.2 Games
6 Notes
7 References
8 External links

History
The Heian period was preceded by the Nara period and began in 794 A.D after the movement of the capital of Japan to Heian-kyō (present day Kyōto京都), by the 50th emperor, Emperor Kanmu.[3] Kanmu first tried to move the capital to Nagaoka-kyō, but a series of disasters befell the city, prompting the emperor to relocate the capital a second time, to Heian. The Heian Period is considered a high point in Japanese culture that later generations have always admired. The period is also noted for the rise of the samurai class, which would eventually take power and start the feudal period of Japan.


Nominally, sovereignty lay in the emperor but in fact power was wielded by the Fujiwara nobility. However, to protect their interests in the provinces, the Fujiwara and other noble families required guards, police and soldiers. The warrior class made steady political gains throughout the Heian period.[2] As early as 939 A.D, Taira no Masakado threatened the authority of the central government, leading an uprising in the eastern province of Hitachi, and almost simultaneously, Fujiwara no Sumitomo rebelled in the west. Still, a true military takeover of the Japanese government was centuries away, when much of the strength of the government would lie within the private armies of the shogunate.

The entry of the warrior class into court influence was a result of the Hōgen Rebellion. At this time Taira no Kiyomori revived the Fujiwara practices by placing his grandson on the throne to rule Japan by regency. Their clan (Taira clan) would not be overthrown until after the Gempei War, which marked the start of the shogunate. The Kamakura period began in 1185 when Minamoto no Yoritomo seized power from the emperors and established a bakufu, the Kamakura shogunate, in Kamakura.

Fujiwara regency
Byōdō-in Phoenix Hall, built in the 11th century during the Heian period of Japan.

When Emperor Kammu moved the capital to Heian-kyō (Kyōto), which remained the imperial capital for the next 1,000 years, he did so not only to strengthen imperial authority but also to improve his seat of government geopolitically. Nara was abandoned after only 70 years in part due to the ascendancy of Dōkyō and the encroaching secular power of the Buddhist institutions there.[4] Kyōto had good river access to the sea and could be reached by land routes from the eastern provinces. The early Heian period (784–967) continued Nara culture; the Heian capital was patterned on the Chinese Tang capital at Chang'an,[5] as was Nara, but on a larger scale than Nara. Kammu endeavoured to improve the Tang-style administrative system which was in use.[6] Known as the ritsuryō, this system attempted to recreate the Tang imperium in Japan, despite the "tremendous differences in the levels of development between the two countries".[7] Despite the decline of the Taika-Taihō reforms, imperial government was vigorous during the early Heian period. Indeed, Kammu's avoidance of drastic reform decreased the intensity of political struggles, and he became recognized as one of Japan's most forceful emperors.

Although Kammu had abandoned universal conscription in 792, he still waged major military offensives to subjugate the Emishi, possible descendants of the displaced Jōmon, living in northern and eastern Japan. After making temporary gains in 794, in 797 Kammu appointed a new commander under the title Seii Taishogun. By 801 the shogun had defeated the Emishi and had extended the imperial domains to the eastern end of Honshū. Imperial control over the provinces was tenuous at best, however. In the ninth and tenth centuries, much authority was lost to the great families, who disregarded the Chinese-style land and tax systems imposed by the government in Kyōto. Stability came to Heian Japan, but, even though succession was ensured for the imperial family through heredity, power again concentrated in the hands of one noble family, the Fujiwara which also helped Japan develop more.
A handscroll painting dated circa 1130, illustrating a scene from the "Bamboo River" chapter of the Tale of Genji.

Following Kammu's death in 806 and a succession struggle among his sons, two new offices were established in an effort to adjust the Taika-Taihō administrative structure. Through the new Emperor's Private Office, the emperor could issue administrative edicts more directly and with more self-assurance than before. The new Metropolitan Police Board replaced the largely ceremonial imperial guard units. While these two offices strengthened the emperor's position temporarily, soon they and other Chinese-style structures were bypassed in the developing state. Chinese influence effectively ended with the last imperial-sanctioned mission to Tang China in 838. Tang China was in a state of decline, and Chinese Buddhists were severely persecuted, undermining Japanese respect for Chinese institutions. Japan began to turn inward.

As the Soga clan had taken control of the throne in the sixth century, the Fujiwara by the ninth century had intermarried with the imperial family, and one of their members was the first head of the Emperor's Private Office. Another Fujiwara became regent, Sesshō for his grandson, then a minor emperor, and yet another was appointed Kampaku. Toward the end of the ninth century, several emperors tried, but failed, to check the Fujiwara. For a time, however, during the reign of Emperor Daigo (897-930), the Fujiwara regency was suspended as he ruled directly.

Nevertheless, the Fujiwara were not demoted by Daigo but actually became stronger during his reign. Central control of Japan had continued to decline, and the Fujiwara, along with other great families and religious foundations, acquired ever larger shōen and greater wealth during the early tenth century. By the early Heian period, the shōen had obtained legal status, and the large religious establishments sought clear titles in perpetuity, waiver of taxes, and immunity from government inspection of the shōen they held. Those people who worked the land found it advantageous to transfer title to shōen holders in return for a share of the harvest. People and lands were increasingly beyond central control and taxation, a de facto return to conditions before the Taika Reform.
Drawing of Fujiwara no Michinaga, by Kikuchi Yōsai.

Within decades of Daigo's death, the Fujiwara had absolute control over the court. By the year 1000, Fujiwara no Michinaga was able to enthrone and dethrone emperors at will. Little authority was left for traditional officialdom, and government affairs were handled through the Fujiwara family's private administration. The Fujiwara had become what historian George B. Sansom has called "hereditary dictators."

Despite their usurpation of imperial authority, the Fujiwara presided over a period of cultural and artistic flowering at the imperial court and among the aristocracy. There was great interest in graceful poetry and vernacular literature. Two types of phonetic Japanese script: katakana, a simplified script that was developed by using parts of Chinese characters, was abbreviated to hiragana, a cursive syllabary with a distinct writing method that was uniquely Japanese. Hiragana gave written expression to the spoken word and, with it, to the rise in Japan's famous vernacular literature, much of it written by court women who had not been trained in Chinese as had their male counterparts. Three late tenth century and early eleventh century women presented their views of life and romance at the Heian court in Kagerō Nikki by "the mother of Fujiwara Michitsuna", Makura no sōshi by Sei Shōnagon and Genji Monogatari by Murasaki Shikibu. Indigenous art also flourished under the Fujiwara after centuries of imitating Chinese forms. Vividly colored yamato-e Japanese style paintings of court life and stories about temples and shrines became common in the mid- and late Heian periods, setting patterns for Japanese art to this day.

As culture flourished, so did decentralization. Whereas the first phase of shōen development in the early Heian period had seen the opening of new lands and the granting of the use of lands to aristocrats and religious institutions, the second phase saw the growth of patrimonial "house governments," as in the old clan system. (In fact, the form of the old clan system had remained largely intact within the great old centralized government.) New institutions were now needed in the face of social, economic, and political changes. The Taihō Code lapsed, its institutions relegated to ceremonial functions. Family administrations now became public institutions. As the most powerful family, the Fujiwara governed Japan and determined the general affairs of state, such as succession to the throne. Family and state affairs were thoroughly intermixed, a pattern followed among other families, monasteries, and even the imperial family. Land management became the primary occupation of the aristocracy, not so much because direct control by the imperial family or central government had declined but more from strong family solidarity and a lack of a sense of Japan as a single nation.

Rise of the military class

Under the early courts, when military conscription had been centrally controlled, military affairs had been taken out of the hands of the provincial aristocracy. But as the system broke down after 792, local power holders again became the primary source of military strength. The re-establishment of an efficient military system was made gradually through a process of trial-and-error. At that time the imperial court did not possess an army but rather relied on an organization of professional warriors composed mainly of ORYOSHI, which were appointed to an individual province and TSUIBUSHI, which were appointed over imperial circuits or for specific tasks. This gave rise to the Japanese military class. Nonetheless final authority rested with the imperial court.[8]

Shōen holders had access to manpower and, as they obtained improved military technology (such as new training methods, more powerful bows, armor, horses, and superior swords) and faced worsening local conditions in the ninth century, military service became part of shōen life. Not only the shōen but also civil and religious institutions formed private guard units to protect themselves. Gradually, the provincial upper class was transformed into a new military elite based on the ideals of the bushi (warrior) or samurai (literally, one who serves).

Bushi interests were diverse, cutting across old power structures to form new associations in the tenth century. Mutual interests, family connections, and kinship were consolidated in military groups that became part of family administration. In time, large regional military families formed around members of the court aristocracy who had become prominent provincial figures. These military families gained prestige from connections to the imperial court and court-granted military titles and access to manpower. The Fujiwara family, Taira clan, and Minamoto clan were among the most prominent families supported by the new military class.

A decline in food production, the growth of the population, and competition for resources among the great families all led to the gradual decline of Fujiwara power and gave rise to military disturbances in the mid-tenth and eleventh centuries. Members of the Fujiwara, Taira, and Minamoto families—all of whom had descended from the imperial family—attacked one another, claimed control over vast tracts of conquered land, set up rival regimes, and generally upset the peace.

The Fujiwara controlled the throne until the reign of Emperor Go-Sanjō (1068-1073), the first emperor not born of a Fujiwara mother since the ninth century. Go-Sanjo, determined to restore imperial control through strong personal rule, implemented reforms to curb Fujiwara influence. He also established an office to compile and validate estate records with the aim of reasserting central control. Many shōen were not properly certified, and large landholders, like the Fujiwara, felt threatened with the loss of their lands. Go-Sanjo also established the Incho, or Office of the Cloistered Emperor, which was held by a succession of emperors who abdicated to devote themselves to behind-the-scenes governance, or insei.

The Incho filled the void left by the decline of Fujiwara power. Rather than being banished, the Fujiwara were mostly retained in their old positions of civil dictator and minister of the center while being bypassed in decision making. In time, many of the Fujiwara were replaced, mostly by members of the rising Minamoto family. While the Fujiwara fell into disputes among themselves and formed northern and southern factions, the insei system allowed the paternal line of the imperial family to gain influence over the throne. The period from 1086 to 1156 was the age of supremacy of the Incho and of the rise of the military class throughout the country. Military might rather than civil authority dominated the government.
Painting of the Battle of Dan-no-ura on April 25, 1185, Genpei War.

A struggle for succession in the mid-twelfth century gave the Fujiwara an opportunity to regain their former power. Fujiwara no Yorinaga sided with the retired emperor in a violent battle in 1156 against the heir apparent, who was supported by the Taira and Minamoto (Hōgen Rebellion). In the end, the Fujiwara were destroyed, the old system of government supplanted, and the insei system left powerless as bushi took control of court affairs, marking a turning point in Japanese history. In 1159, the Taira and Minamoto clashed (Heiji Rebellion), and a twenty-year period of Taira ascendancy began.

Taira Kiyomori emerged as the real power in Japan following the Minamoto's destruction, and he would remain in command for the next 20 years. He gave his daughter Tokuku in marriage to the young emperor Takakura, who died at only 19, leaving their infant son Antoku to succeed to the throne. Kiyomori filled no less than 50 government posts with his relatives, rebuilt the Inland Sea, and encouraged trade with Sung China. He also took aggressive actions to safeguard his power when necessary, including the removal and exile of 45 court officials and the razing of two troublesome temples, Todai-ji and Kofuku-ji.

The Taira were seduced by court life and ignored problems in the provinces, where the Minamoto Clan were rebuilding their strength. In 1183, two years after Kiyomori's death, Yoritomo Minamoto dispatched his brothers Yoshitsune and Noriyori to attack Kyoto. The Taira were routed and forced to flee, and the Empress Dowager tried to drown herself and the 7-year old Emperor (he perished, but his mother survived). Takakura's other son succeeded as Emperor Go-Toba.

With Yoritomo firmly established, the bakufu system that would govern Japan for the next seven centuries was in place. He appointed military governors, or daimyos, to rule over the provinces, and stewards, or jito to supervise public and private estates. Yoritomo then turned his attention to the elimination of the powerful Fujiwara family, which sheltered his rebellious brother Yoshitsune. Three years later, he was appointed shogun in Kyoto. One year before his death in 1199, Yoritomo expelled the teenage emperor Go-Toba from the throne. Two of Go-Toba's sons succeeded him, but they would also be removed by Yoritomo's successors to the shogunate.

- - - - - Heian culture

Developments in Buddhism
Danjogaran of Mount Kōya. The place is a center of the sacred ground of Shingon.
Bodhisattva Fugen Enmei, 12th century painting on silk, late Heian period.
Standing Komoku Ten (Virupakusa)

Buddhism began to spread throughout Japan during the Heian period, primarily through two major esoteric sects, Tendai and Shingon. Tendai originated in China and is based on the Lotus Sutra, one of the most important sutras of Mahayana Buddhism; Saichō was key to its transmission to Japan. Shingon is the Japanese transmission of the Chinese Chen Yen school. Shingon, brought to Japan by the monk Kūkai, emphasizes Esoteric Buddhism. Both Kūkai and Saichō aimed to connect state and religion and establish support from the aristocracy,[9] leading to the notion of 'aristocratic Buddhism'.[10] An important element of Tendai doctrine was the suggestion that enlightenment was accessible to "every creature".[11] Saichō also sought independent ordination for Tendai monks.[12] A close relationship developed between the Tendai monastery complex on Mount Hiei and the imperial court in its new capital at the foot of the mountain. As a result, Tendai emphasized great reverence for the emperor and the nation. Kammu himself was a notable patron of the otherworldly Tendai sect, which rose to great power over the ensuing centuries. Kūkai greatly impressed the emperors who succeeded Emperor Kammu, and also generations of Japanese, not only with his holiness but also with his poetry, calligraphy, painting, and sculpture. Shingon, through its use of "rich symbols, rituals and mandalas"[13] held a wide-ranging appeal.

Literature


Although written Chinese (Kanbun) remained the official language of the Heian period imperial court, the introduction and wide use of kana saw a boom in Japanese literature. Despite the establishment of several new literary genres such as the novel and narrative monogatari (物語) and essays, literacy was only common among the court and Buddhist clergy.

The lyrics of the modern Japanese national anthem, Kimi ga Yo, were written in the Heian period, as was The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu, one of the first novels ever written. Murasaki Shikibu's contemporary and rival Sei Shōnagon's revealing observations and musings as an attendant in the Empress' court were recorded collectively as The Pillow Book in the 990s, which revealed the quotidian capital lifestyle.[14] The Heian period produced a flowering of poetry including works of Ariwara no Narihira, Ono no Komachi, Izumi Shikibu, Murasaki Shikibu, Saigyō and Fujiwara no Teika. The famous Japanese poem known as the Iroha (いろは), of uncertain authorship, was also written during the Heian period.

The Japanese Names of Medical Herbs (本草和名 Honzō Wamyō), written in 918 was also written in this period and more can be seen under Kampo.

Beauty
During the Heian period, beauty was widely considered an important part of what made one a "good" person. In cosmetic terms, aristocratic men and women powdered their faces and blackened their teeth, the latter termed ohaguro. The male courtly ideal included a faint moustache and thin goatee, while women's mouths were painted small and red, and their eyebrows were plucked or shaved and redrawn higher on the forehead.

Women cultivated shiny, black flowing hair and a courtly woman's formal dress included a complex "twelve-layered robe" called jūnihitoe, though the actual number of layers varied. Costumes were determined by office and season, with a women's robes in particular following a system of color combinations representing flowers, plants, and animals specific to a season or month, (see the Japanese Wikipedia entries irome and kasane-no-irome).

Economics

While on one hand the Heian period was an unusually long period of peace, it can also be argued that the period weakened Japan economically and led to poverty for all but a tiny few of its inhabitants.[citation needed] The control of rice fields provided a key source of income for families such as the Fujiwara and were a fundamental base for their power.[15] The aristocratic beneficiaries of Heian culture, the Yokibito ("Good People") numbered about five thousand in a land of perhaps five million. One reason the samurai were able to take power was that the ruling nobility proved incompetent at managing Japan and its provinces. By the year 1000 the government no longer knew how to issue currency and money was gradually disappearing. Instead of a fully realised system of money circulation, rice was the primary unit of exchange.[15] The lack of a solid medium of economic exchange is implicitly illustrated in novels of the time. For instance, messengers were rewarded with useful objects, e.g., an old silk kimono, rather than paid a fee.

The Fujiwara rulers failed to maintain adequate police forces, which left robbers free to prey on travelers. This is implicitly illustrated in novels by the terror that night travel inspired in the main characters. The shōen system enabled the accumulation of wealth by an aristocratic elite; the economic surplus can be linked to the cultural developments of the Heian period and the "pursuit of arts".[16] The major Buddhist temples in Heian-kyō and Nara also made use of the shōen.[17] The establishment of branches rurally and integration of some Shinto shrines within these temple networks reflects a greater "organizational dynamism".[17]

Events

784: Emperor Kammu moves the capital to Nagaoka-kyō (Kyōto)
794: Emperor Kammu moves the capital to Heian-kyō (Kyōto)
804: The Buddhist monk Saichō (Dengyo Daishi) introduces the Tendai school
806: The monk Kūkai (Kōbō-Daishi) introduces the Shingon (Tantric) school
819: Kūkai founds the monastery of Mount Kōya, in the northeast portion of modern day Wakayama Prefecture
858: Emperor Seiwa begins the rule of the Fujiwara clan[18]
895: Sugawara Michizane halted the imperial embassies to China
990: Sei Shōnagon writes the Pillow Book essays
1000-1008: Murasaki Shikibu writes The Tale of Genji novel
1050: Rise of the military class (samurai)
1053: The Byōdō-in temple (near Kyōto) is inaugurated by emperor Fujiwara Yorimichi
1068: Emperor Go-Sanjo overthrows the Fujiwara clan
1087: Emperor Shirakawa abdicates and becomes a Buddhist monk, the first of the "cloistered emperors" (insei)
1156: Taira Kiyomori defeats the Minamoto clan and seizes power, thereby ending the "insei" era[19]
1180 (June): Emperor Antoku moves the capital to Fukuhara-kyō (Kobe)
1180 (November): Emperor Antoku moves the capital to Heian-kyō (Kyōto)
1185: Taira is defeated (Gempei War) and Minamoto Yoritomo with the support (backing) of the Hōjō clan seizes power, becoming the first shogun of Japan, while the emperor (or "mikado") becomes a figurehead


Current depictions

The iconography of the Heian period is widely known in Japan, and depicted in various media, from traditional festivals to anime. In the manga and TV series Hikaru no Go, the protagonist Hikaru Shindo is visited by a ghost of a go genius from the Heian period and its leading clan, Fujiwara no Sai.

Various festivals feature Heian dress – most notably Hinamatsuri (doll festival), where the dolls wear Heian dress, but also numerous other festivals, such as Aoi Matsuri in Kyoto (May) and Saiō Matsuri in Meiwa, Mie (June), both of which feature the jūnihitoe 12-layer dress. Traditional horseback archery (yabusame) festivals, which date from the beginning of the Kamakura period (immediately following the Heian period) feature similar dress.
Literature

The two-volume historical novel saga White as Bone, Red as Blood: The Fox Sorceress (2009),[20] and White as Bone, Red as Blood: The Storm God (2011)[21] depict in detail the pivotal years 1160–1185 in Japan, as seen through the eyes of protagonist Seiko Fujiwara. Both books were written by Cerridwen Fallingstar.
Games

The game Shogun 2 total war have the Rise of the Samurai campaign. The campaign is set and allows the player to make their own version of the Gempei War which happened during the Heian period. The player is able to choose one of the three most powerful families of Japan at the time, the Taira, Minamoto and Fujiwara each family has two branch clans.

Nue Houjuu, a character from the Touhou Project series has the tag "Heian" on her theme and a couple of her spellcards, referencing her origin at the end or during the Heian period. The plots of the 12th game and subsequent others also reference the peak of influence of Buddhism and Taoism.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heian_period

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



. Join the friends on Facebook ! .

- #heianhistory #heianperiodintroduction #heianwikipedia-
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

2015-01-10

- backup - About Heian Japan Parker

- BACK to the Daruma Museum -
. ABC List of Contents .
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

About Heian Japan by Parker

I.J. PARKER won the Private Eye Writers of America Shamus Award for Best P.I. Short Story in 2000 for "Akitada's First Case," published in 1999.
An Associate Professor of English and Foreign Languages (retired) at a Virginia university, Parker began research into eleventh century Japan because of a professional interest in that culture's literature. This led to the first Akitada short story, "Instruments of Murder," published in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine. The Akitada series of mystery novels soon followed and led to foreign publication as the novels were translated into other languages.
 藤原顕忠 (898 - 965) Fujiwara no Akitada


- source : ijparker.com/about_heian_japan -
and her novel hero, Sugawara no Akitada


The Heian Period in the history of Japan is often referred to as “the golden age.” It lasted from the 9th through the 12th centuries and preceded the medieval era of shoguns and samurai.

The Heian Age was characterized by relative peace and stability and a central government in the capital, Heian-kyo, by an emperor and the court aristocracy. It is the historical background for both the Akitada mystery series (11th century) and the novel The Hollow Reed (12th century).

Sugawara no Akitada

Sugawara no Akitada (in Japan, the family name comes before the given name, and the "no" is an obsolete link in noble names) is thought to have been born in 989 A.D. into a family of scholar officials (for his precise parentage, see THE HELL SCREEN). His childhood and early teens were spent in the family mansion in Heian Kyo (the capital of Japan at the time and modern Kyoto) as the only son of a minor functionary in the imperial administration.

Following in his father's footsteps, he attended the imperial university (for details about university life, see RASHOMON GATE) just south of the Daidairi, or Greater Palace, where his father and hundreds of other nobles worked in the offices of various ministries and bureaus.

Akitada pursued a legal curriculum and placed first in the final examinations. This guaranteed him a position in the government service, and he started his career as a very junior clerk in the Ministry of Law. By this time, his father had died, leaving him the only support for a demanding mother and two younger sisters, a responsibility he will have increasing difficulty with by getting involved in criminal cases that are none of his business and lead to reprimands and even dismissals (see "Akitada's First Case").

The People of Heian Japan:

In Akitada's time only two classes -- nobles and commoners -- existed, but there was also an underclass of "non-persons," the slaves and outcastes. Akitada was born one of the "good people," though he clings rather desperately to the bottom rung of that ladder. Perhaps it is this fact which gives him a greater closeness to and understanding for the less fortunate and causes him to keep breaking rigid social rules to associate with them.

Those above him in rank are far more powerful nobles, in particular members of the Fujiwara clan, one branch of which (the sekkanke) furnished the chancellors and senior ministers, most of the imperial consorts, and filled many other upper level positions in the central and provincial administrations.

Those below him are peasants, merchants, artisans, and soldiers. Of these, the peasants were the poorest but most highly respected because they fed the nation.

The merchants and artisans lived in the cities and sometimes became prosperous, especially if they dealt wholesale in rice, silk, or sake, or if they practiced a valued skill, for example sword making.

Among the slaves and outcastes were entertainers, laborers, and workers in despised trades (for example, butchery, leather-working, or handling the dead. This class originated probably from early prisoners of war, condemned criminals, and natives of the northern territories; it was perpetuated through birth and practice into the present day.

Beside the lay population, there was also the clergy which was essentially classless, but had its own ranks. There were Shinto priests and priestesses and Buddhist monks and nuns. Akitada, somewhat uncharacteristically for a nobleman of his period, dislikes and distrusts Buddhism and prefers the native Shinto beliefs.

Since both faiths played an enormous role in the lives of high and low, Buddhist and Shinto clergy were common and visible in society. Shinto priests were attached to Shinto shrines but participated in many public rituals. They could marry, and their functions were often hereditary. Buddhists clergy, who came from all classes, were supposed to be celibate.

Because many noble persons and emperors gave up the “world” in old age or because of serious illness or, in the case of women, because their husbands died, the highest-ranking Buddhist clergy came from the ruling class. Apart from those who lived in monasteries, Buddhist clergy also served as village priests or wandered the roads, begging and preaching.

Towards the end of the Heian age, large monasteries became increasingly warlike, maintained armies of warrior monks, attacked rival institutions, and took sides in secular politics. Akitada encounters warrior monks in THE DRAGON SCROLL.



The Ancient Capital

During Akitada’s time, the capital of Japan was Heian Kyo, the modern Kyoto. Founded in 794, it remained the capital until the 13th century and the seat of the emperor until 1869.

In plan, the capital was very similar to the great Chinese capitals like Chang-An, and followed the Chinese belief that cities needed three mountains nearby – to the north, west, and south.

They also needed rivers to the west and east, and a large pond to the south. The reasons for these geographic features were based on fears of evil influences which could approach a city from all sides.

Beyond these considerations, the layout of Heian Kyo followed strict rules of order. It was to be rectangular, bisected by a major north-south avenue, intersected at precise distances by north-south and east-west roads forming a grid pattern, and the seat of government had to occupy the northernmost center, forming a walled rectangular imperial city within the capital.

Such orderliness of planning pervaded much of the political thought of the time, and Akitada is thoroughly versed in the teachings of Confucian order and harmony. He strongly disapproves of disorder.

In Heian-kyo, the imperial residence (dairi) was part of the greater imperial city (daidairi) which encompassed all the government buildings and offices. It was walled and gated, as was the larger enclosure, the various ministries, and many of the noble mansions that surrounded the imperial city

The city itself, however, was merely enclosed by a moat and ramparts. Its main southern gate, Rashomon, means “rampart gate.” From the huge, two-storied Rashomon, Suzaku Avenue (80 yards wide, with a central canal and lined with willows) led north to Suzakumon, the gate into the imperial city. To the right and left of Rashomon stood two Buddhist temples, To-ji and Sai-ji, with five-storied pagodas. About halfway to the palace, to the east and west, two enormous market places served the people of Heian Kyo.

Closer to the palace were the east and west administrations of the capital, the university, and a large park. The quarters on either side of the imperial city were originally reserved for the ranking nobles, but the western quarter declined early.

Akitada works inside the imperial city in the Ministry of Justice, more than likely a large hall with wings that stood inside its own walled and gated courtyard. His residence is in the north-eastern quarter, a typical nobleman’s house in a walled enclosure, with separate pavilions, covered galleries, and outbuildings, such as stable and kitchen. Though large and in a good neighborhood, it is in constant poor repair and sadly under-staffed because the family has fallen on ill times.

In spite of the careful planning along the lines of Chinese ideals, the real world and the character of the Japanese people soon asserted themselves in Heian Kyo. In the precise plan of the capital all sorts of charming irregularities appeared. Small rivers and canals crossed the city in odd places, bisecting quarters and avenues as they were diverted into manmade landscape gardens and ponds.

People also resisted an orderly building program and preferred to settle on land east of the Kamo River, which led to the decline of the western half of the city. Great nobles, who built enormous estates surrounded by landscape gardens, instantly attracted clusters of more modest buildings around their walls. Parts of the city became rural, with vegetable plots, chickens, and life stock. Less charmingly, frequent fires destroyed the wooden buildings, creating empty land that was settled by squatters. Crime flourished in these quarters and spread even into the imperial enclosure. Great buildings collapsed in storms and were not always rebuilt. This eventually even eliminated the famous southern gate, Rashomon.

The emperors themselves moved constantly from the imperial residence to various noble houses because of fires in the palace. Storms, fires, and epidemics periodically decimated the population. Population figures for Heian Kyo vary wildly between 100,000 and 200,000. Life in the city was characterized by uncertainty and flux.


http://www.ijparker.com/about_heian_japan.htm

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



. Join the friends on Facebook ! .

- #heian -
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

- backup meishozue

- BACK to the Daruma Museum -
. ABC List of Contents .
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

都名所図会 Miyako Meisho Zue 平安城 Heian Jo


- source : sites.google.com/site/miyakomeisyo -

six chapters with names - hyperlinks to the illustrations on the source.

巻之一 平安城首 head
巻之二 平安城尾 tail
巻之三 左 青竜 left - East
巻之四 右 白虎 right - West
巻之五 前 朱雀 front - South
巻之六 後 玄武 back - North


巻之一 平安城首

上御霊社 上御霊神社(かみごりょうじんじゃ)Kami Goryo Jinja 京都市上京区上御霊前通烏丸東入上御霊堅町
万年山相国承天禅寺 相国寺(しょうこくじ)Shokoku-Ji  京都市上京区今出川通烏丸東入相国寺門前町701
京極八幡宮 京極寺(きょうごくでら) Kyogokudera  京都市北区小山下総町28-7
出雲路神 幸神社(さいのかみのやしろ) Sainokami no yashiro 京都市上京区寺町今出川上ル西入幸神町 303
県井戸 縣井(あがたのい)Agata no i  京都市上京区京都御苑   京都御苑
具足山妙覚寺 妙覚寺(みょうかくじ)Myokaku-Ji 京都市上京区上御霊前通堀川東入下清蔵口町135
卯木山炒蓮寺 妙蓮寺(みょうれんじ)Myoren-Ji 京都市上京区寺之内通大宮東入妙蓮寺前町875
具足山妙顕寺  妙顕寺(みょうけんじ)Myoken-Ji 京都市上京区寺之内通新町西入妙顯寺前町514
金剛山大応寺 大応寺(だいおうじ)Daio-Ji 京都市上京区堀川通上御霊前上ル扇町722
叡昌山本法寺 本法寺(ほんぽうじ)Hobo-Ji  京都市上京区小川通寺之内上ル本法寺前町617
今日庵宗且の家 今日庵(こんにちあん)Konnichi-An 京都市上京区小川寺之内上ル
尭天山報恩寺 報恩寺(ほうおんじ) O-On-Ji 京都市上京区小川通寺之内下ル射場町堀川
戻橋   一条戻橋(いちじょうもどりばし) Ichijo Modoribashi 京都市上京区堀川下之町
小野小町双紙洗の水 小野小町双紙洗水遺跡(こまちそうしあらいのみず)KomachiSoshiarai no Mizu
安倍晴明杜  晴明神社(せいめいじんじゃ)Seimei Jinja 京都市上京区堀川通一条上る晴明町806-1
水火天神 水火天満宮(すいかてんまんぐう)Suika Tenmangu 京都市上京区堀川通上御霊前上ル扇町722-10
瑞光院 瑞光院(ずいこういん)Zuiko-In 京都市山科区安朱堂ノ後町19-12
恵光山本隆寺 本隆寺(ほんりゅうじ)Honryu-Ji  京都市上京区智恵光院五辻上ル紋屋町330
桜葉宮 桜宮神社(さくらのみやじんじゃ)Sakuramiya Jinja 京都市上京区西神明町337-1
家隆山石像寺 石像寺(しゃくぞうじ)Shakuzo-Ji  京都市上京区千本上立売上ル花車町503
北向山歓喜寺 雨宝院(うほういん)Uho-In  京都市上京区上立売通浄福寺東入聖天町9-3
石神杜 岩上神社(いわがみじんじゃ) Iwagami Jinja  京都市上京区浄福寺通上立売大黒町聚楽亭
般舟三昧院 般舟院(はんじゅいん) Hanju-In 京都市上京区今出川通千本東入般舟院前町151
恵照山淨福寺 浄福寺(じょうふくじ)Jofuku-Ji 京都市上京区浄福寺一条上笹屋2-601
安穏山大超寺 大超寺(だいちょうじ)Daicho-Ji 京都市左京区岩倉花園町 640-2西陣
蓮台山阿弥陀寺 阿弥陀寺(あみだじ)Amida-Ji  京都市上京区寺町通今出川上ル鶴山町14
華宮山十念寺 十念寺(じゅうねんじ)Junen-Ji 京都市上京区寺町通今出川上ル鶴山町13
広布山本満寺 本満寺(ほんまんじ)Honman-Ji  京都市上京区寺町今出川上ル2丁目鶴山町16
淨華院 清浄華院(しょうじょうけいん) Shojoke-In 京都市上京区寺町通広小路上ル北之辺町395
廬山天台講寺 廬山寺(ろざんじ)Rozan-Ji 京都市上京区寺町通広小路上ル北之辺町397
下御霊社  下御霊神社(しもごりょうじんじゃ)Shimo Goryo Jinja 京都市中京区寺町通丸太町下ル下御霊前町
行願寺 行願寺(ぎょうがんじ)Gyogan-Ji  京都市中京区寺町通竹屋町上ル行願寺門前町17
清荒神社 常施無畏寺(じょうせむいじ)Josemui-Ji 京都市上京区荒神口通寺町通東入ル荒神町122
高田専修寺御坊 専修寺京都別院 (せんじゅじきょうとべついん)Senju-Ji 京都市右京区鳴滝音戸山町11-34
妙塔山妙満寺 妙満寺( みょうまんじ) Myoman-Ji京都市左京区岩倉幡枝町91
本能寺 本能寺(ほんのうじ)Honno-Ji 京都市中京区寺町通御池下ル下本能寺前町522
聞法山頂妙寺 頂妙寺(ちょうみょうじ)Chomyo-Ji 京都市左京区仁王門通新麩屋町西入
源三位頼政の旧蹟 Genzanmi Yorimasa
高松神明神社(たかまつしんめいじんじゃ) Karamatsu Meijinja 京都市中京区姉小路通釜座東入ル津軽町 西行水
曼荼羅山天性寺 天性寺(てんしょうじ)Tensho-Ji 京都市中京区寺町通三条上ル天性寺前町523
矢田山金剛寺 矢田寺(やたでら)Yatadera  京都市中京区寺町通三条上ル天性寺前町523-5
檀王法輪寺 檀王法林寺(だんのうほうりんじ)Danno Horin-Ji 京都市左京区川端通り三条上る法林寺門前町36
瑞泉寺 瑞泉寺(ずいせんじ)Suisen-Ji 京都市中京区木屋町三条下ル石屋町114-1先斗町
六角堂頂法寺  頂法寺(ちょうほうじ)Choho-Ji 京都市中京区六角通東洞院西入堂之前町248
錦天神社 錦天満宮(にしきてんまんぐう)Nishiki Tenmangu 京都市中京区新京極通四条上ル中之町537
大本山円福寺 円福寺 (えんぷくじ)Enpuku-Ji 愛知県岡崎市岩津町檀ノ上85
蛸薬師 永福寺(えいふくじ)Eifuku-Ji 京都市中京区新京極蛸薬師東側町503
西光寺 西光寺(さいこうじ)Saiko-Ji  京都市中京区新京極通蛸薬師上ル中筋町495-1
長金寺 長金寺(ちゃうごんじ)Chogon-Ji 廃寺
清帯寺 清帯寺(せいたじ)Seita-Ji  廃寺
誠心院 誠心院(せいしんいん)Seishin-In  京都市中京区新京極通六角下ル中筋町
誓願寺  誓願寺(せいがんじ)Seigan-Ji 京都市中京 区新京極通三条下る桜之町453
紫雲山極楽院光勝寺 光勝寺(こうしょうじ)Kosho-Ji  京都市中京区蛸薬師通堀川西入龜屋町
神泉苑   神泉苑(しんせんえん)Shinsen-En 京都市中京区御池通神泉苑 町東入ル門前町166
不来乎薬師   薬師院威徳堂(やくしいんいとくどう)Yakushi-In Itoku Do 京都市中京区釜座通二条上ル大黒 町



巻之二 平安城尾
祇園御旅所 八坂神社御旅所(やさかじんじゃ おたびしょ)Yasaka Jinja 京都市下京区貞安前之町
錦綾山金蓮寺 金蓮寺(こんれんじ)Konren-Ji 京都市北区鷹峯藤林町1-4
十位心院 染殿院(そめどのいん)Somedono-In  京都市中京区新京極通四条上ル中之町562
竜池山大雲院 大雲院(だいうんいん)Daiun-In 京都市東山区祇園町南側594-1祇園会の祭式
座頭積塔 清聚庵(せいじゅあん) Seiju-An 京都市高倉綾小路にあった。四条河原夕凉
芝居 京都四條南座 (きょうとしじょうみなみざ)Shijo Minamiza 京都市東山区四条通大和大路西入中之町198
仲源寺 仲源寺(ちゅうげんじ)Chugen-Ji  京都市東山区祇園町南側585-1宮川
東山建仁禅寺 建仁寺(けんにんじ) Kennin-Ji 都市東山区小松町584
蛭子社 京都ゑびす神社(きょうとえびすじんじゃ)Ebisu Jinja 京都市東山区大和大路通四条下ル小松町125
等覚山念仏寺 愛宕念仏寺(おたぎねんぶつじ) Otagi Nenbutsu-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨鳥居本深谷町2-5
普陀落山六波羅蜜寺 六波羅蜜寺 (ろくはらみつじ)Rokuharamitsu-Ji 京都市東山区松原通大和大路東入2丁目轆轤町
阿古屋塚 阿古屋塚(あこやづか) Akoyazuka
珍皇寺 六道珍皇寺(ろくどうちんのうじ)Rokudo Chinno-Ji  京都市東山区大和大路通四条下ル4丁目小松町595
十禅師杜 明治維新前に廃
若宮八幡  若宮八幡宮(わかみやはちまんぐう)Wakamiya Hachimangu 京都市東山区五条橋東5-480
五条橋(ごじょうばし)Gojobashi bridge
松豊八幡宮(まつとよやはたみや)Matsuyoyo Hachimangu 明治2年廃
新善光寺御影堂 新善光寺(しんぜんこうじ)Shinzenko-Ji 長浜市西上坂799
河原院 源融 河原院址(みなもとのとおるかわらいんあと) Kawara-In 京都市下京区木屋町通五条下る東側
本覚寺 本覚寺(ほんかくじ)Honkaku-Ji 京都市下京区冨小路通五条下ル本塩竈町5
塩竈社 上徳寺(じょうとくじ)Jotoku-Ji 京都市下京区富小路通五条下ル本塩竈町
太子堂白毫寺 白毫寺(びゃくごうじ) Byakuko-Ji京都市下京区富小路通 五条下る本塩竈町539
負別阿弥陀仏 蓮光寺(れんこうじ)Renko-Ji 京都市下京区富小路通六条上る本塩竈町534
後白河法皇の宸影 長講堂(ちょうこうどう)Chuko-Do 京都府京都市下京区富小路六条
萬年寺(まんねんじ)Mannen-Ji 京都市下京区富小路通六条下る本塩竈町526
鬼頭天王 竹林院(ちくりんいん)Chikurin-In 京都市下京区瓦町通五条通下ル平居町
橘行平卿塚 等善寺(とうぜんじ)Tozen-Ji 京都市下京区河原町通六条上ル平居町
市中山金光寺 金光寺(こんこうじ)Kongo-Ji 京都市下京区六条通河原町西入ル本塩竃町
延寿寺 延寿寺(えんじゅじ) Enju-Ji 京都市下京区河原町通六条下る本塩竈町588
籬の池 宗仙寺(そうせんじ)Sosen-Ji 京都市下京区高倉通五条下る堺町38藍染川
花開稲荷社 花咲稲荷社(はなさきいなりしゃ)Hanasaki Inarisha 京都市下京区間之町通松原上る稲荷町
俊成卿の社 俊成社(しゅんぜいしゃ) Shunzen-Sha 京都市下京区烏丸松原下ル俊成町438
汁谷山仏光寺 佛光寺(ぶっこうじ)Bukko-Ji 京都市下京区高倉通仏光寺下ル新開町397四条立売
神明宮  神明神社(しんめいじんじゃ)Shinmei Jinja 京都市下京区綾小路通高倉西入ル神明町
大原社  大原神社(おおはらじんじゃ)Ohara Jinja 京都市下京区綾小路新町東入ル西善長寺町 膏薬道場
匂天神杜 匂天神 (においてんじん)Nioi Tenjin  京都市下京区烏丸通高辻東入匂天神町
因幡堂平等寺 平等寺(びょうどうじ)Byodo-Ji 京都市下京区不明門通松原上ル因幡堂町728
繁昌社  繁昌神社(はんじょうじんじゃ)Hanjo Jinja   京都市下京区高辻通室町西入繁昌町308
朝日宮 朝日神明宮(あさひしんめいぐう)Asahi Shinmeigu 京都市下京区麩屋町五条上ル下鱗形町
神明宮 剣神社(つるぎじんじゃ)Tsurugi Jinja 京都市東山区今熊野剣宮町13
諏訪社 尚徳諏訪神社(しょうとくすわじんじゃ)Jotoku Suwa Jinja  京都市下京区諏訪町通五条下ル下諏訪町35
新玉津島社 新玉津島神社(にいたまつしまじんじゃ)Niitama Shimazu Jinja 烏丸通松原西入ル玉津島町309
菅大臣社 菅大臣神社(かんだいじんじんじゃ)Gandaijin Jinja 京区仏光寺通西洞院通東菅大臣町
北菅大臣 北菅大臣神社(きたかんだいじんじんじゃ)Kita Gandaijin Jinja 仏光寺通西洞院東入ル北側菅大臣町
五条天神宮  五條天神社(ごじょうてんじんじゃ)Gojo Tenjinsha 京都市下京区松原通西洞院西入ル天神前町
一音寺 一音寺 京都市下京区西洞院松原西入ル天神
新住吉社 新住吉社 京都市下京区醒井通高辻通下ル西高辻町207
荒神杜 観音寺 Kannon-Ji 京都市下京区醒ヶ井通高辻通上ル荒神町
化粧水 Keshomizu
天道社 天道神社 (てんどうじんじゃ) Tendo Jinja 京都市下京区仏光寺通猪熊西北角615
太刀懸松 天明8年焼失
石神社 中山神社 京都市中京区岩上通蛸薬師通上ル岩上町
更雀寺 更雀寺(きょうしゃくじ)Kyoshaku-Ji 京都市左京区静市市原町738-1
壬生寺 壬生寺(みぶでら) Mibudera 京都市中京区坊城通仏光寺上ル
大光山本圀寺 本圀寺(ほんこくじ) Honkoku-Ji 京都市山科区御陵大岩6
本願寺 本願寺(ほんがんじ)Hongan-Ji 京都市下京区堀川通花屋町下ル
常楽寺 常楽寺(じょうらくじ)Joraku-Ji 京都市下京区花屋町通東中筋東入学林町
興正寺 興正寺(こうしょうじ)Kosho-Ji 京都市下京区堀川七条上ル花園町70
東本願寺  東本願寺(ひがしほんがんじ)Higashi Hongan-Ji 京都市下京区烏丸通七条上る
炬火殿 松明殿稲荷神社(たいまつでんいなりじんじゃ)Taimatsuden Inari Jinja 下京区七条通加茂川西入稲荷町452
成興寺 城興寺(じょうこうじ)Joko-Ji 京都市南区東九条烏丸町7-1
宇賀神社(うがじんじゃ)Uga Jinja 京都市南区東九条東札辻町33
薮内紹智の家 薮内流燕庵(やぶうちりゅうえんなん)Yabuuchi Ryoen-An  京都市下京区西洞院通正面下鍛冶屋町430
芹根水 芹根水(せりねすい)Serinesui  京都市下京区木津屋橋通堀川西入御方紺屋町
稲荷杜 明王院不動堂(ふどんどうみょうおういん)Fudo-Do 京都市下京区油小路塩小路下ル南不動堂町
道祖神  道祖神社(どうそじんじゃ)Dosojinja 都市下京区油小路通塩小路下る南不動堂町
稲荷御旅所  伏見稲荷大社 御旅所(ふしみいなりたいしゃ おたびじょ)Fushimi Inari Taisha 南区西九条池ノ内町
春日森・蔵王森 Kasuga no Mori 今なし
古御旅所 善能寺(ぜんのうじ)Zenno-Ji 京都市東山区泉涌寺山内町34
粟島社 粟嶋堂宗徳寺(あわしまそうしゅうとくじ)Jutoku-Ji 京都市下京区岩上通塩小路上ル三軒替地町124
清盛の舘  若一神社(にゃくいちじんじゃ)Nyakuichi Jinja 京都市下京区七条御所ノ内本町98
住吉社 島原住吉神社(しまばらすみよしじんじゃ)Shimabara Myojinja  京都市下京区島原西新屋敷下之町1-2
八幡山教王護国寺秘密伝法院  東寺(とうじ)To-Ji 京都市南区九条町1
羅城門の旧蹟  Rasho-Mon 唐橋花園公園 京都市南区唐橋羅城門町万祥山大通寺遍照心院
六孫王神社(ろくそんおうじんじゃ)Rokusono Jinja 京都市南区壬生通八条角
島原傾城町  島原(しまばら)Shimabara 京都市下京区西新屋敷町




巻之三 左青竜
三の蜂稲荷大明神の杜 伏見稲荷大社(ふしみいなりたいしゃ)Fushimi Inari Taisha 伏見区深草藪之内町68
恵日山東福寺    東福寺(とうふくじ)Tofuku-Ji 京都市東山区本町15-778
東山泉涌寺  泉涌寺(せんにゅうじ)Sennyu-Ji  京都市東山区泉涌寺山内町27
新熊野観音   今熊野観音寺(いまくまのかんのんじ)Imakumano Kannon-JI 東山区泉涌寺山内町32
新熊野社 新熊野神社(いまくまのじんじゃ)Imakumano Jinja 京都市東山区今熊野椥ノ森町42
蓮華王院三十三間堂 Sanjusangendo 蓮華王院本堂(れんげおういんほんどう)三十三間堂廻町657
新日吉杜 新日吉神宮(いまひえじんぐう)Imahie Jingu 京都市東山区妙法院前側町 451-1
智積院 智積院(ちしゃくいん)Chishaku-In 京都市東山区東大路通七条下ル東瓦町964
養源院 養源院(ようげんいん)Yogen-In 京都市東山区三十三間堂廻り町656
宝生院 宝生院(ほうしょういん)Hosho-In 京都市東山区渋谷通東大路東入ル3丁目瓦役町515
妙安寺  明暗寺 (めいあんじ)Meian-Ji 京都市東山区本町15-797
実相寺(じっそうじ) Jisso-Ji京都市南区上鳥羽鍋ヶ渕町10-1
大仏殿方広寺  方廣寺(ほうこうじ)Hoko-Ji 大和大路通七条上ル茶屋町527-2
耳塚 耳塚(みみづか) Mimizuka 京都市東山区東山区正面通大和大路西入南側
平相国清盛公六波羅の館 六波羅邸門(ろくはらていもん)Rokuhara Rateimon 小松町584
小松谷正林寺 正林寺(しょうりんじ)Shorin-Ji 京都市東山区渋谷通東大路東入3丁目上馬町553
三島明神の杜  三嶋神社(みしまじんじゃ) Mishima Jinja 東山区渋谷通り東大路東入上馬町3
継信・忠信の石塔婆  佐藤継信・忠信之塚(さとうつぐのぶ・ただのぶのつか) Satotsugu Tadanobu no tsuka 馬町通東大路東入北側
阿弥陀が峰  太閤担(たいこうだいら) Taikodaira
清閑寺 清閑寺(せいかんじ)Seikan-Ji 京都市東山区清閑寺山ノ内町3
音羽山清水寺 清水寺(きよみずでら)Kiyomizudera 京都市東山区清水1-294
子安観音 泰産寺(たいさんじ)Taisan-Ji 京都市東山区清閑寺下山町
大谷本廟(おおたにほんびょう)Otani Honbyo 京都市東山区五条橋東6丁目514
鳥辺野 鳥辺野(とりべの) Toribeno Graveyard
霊鷺山正法寺 正法寺(しょうぼうじ)Shobo-JI 京都市東山区清閑寺霊山町35
鷲峰山高台寺 高台寺(こうだいじ)Kodai-Ji 京都市東山区高台寺下河原町526
八坂法観寺 法観寺(ほうかんじ)Hokan-Ji 京都市東山区清水八坂上町388
八坂庚申堂 金剛寺(こんごうじ)Kongo-Ji 京都市東山区金園町390
伽羅の観音 青龍寺(せいりゅうじ)Seiryu-Ji 京都市東山区南町411
七観音 七観音院(しちかんのんいん) Shichikannon-In 京都市東山区南町423
八坂 八坂(やさか) Yasaka
安井観勝寺光明院  安井金比羅宮(やすいこんぴらぐう)Yasui Konpiragu 東大路松原上ル下弁天町70
菊水の井 Kikusui no I 京都市東山区上弁天町
蛙が池の古蹟 Kaerugaike no koseki
祇園社  八坂神社(やさかじんじゃ)Yasaka Jinja Gion 京都市東山区祇園町北側625
金玉山双林寺 雙林寺(そうりんじ)Sorin-Ji 京都市東山区下河原鷲尾町526
大谷 大谷祖廟(おおたにそびょう)Otani Sobyo 京都市東山区円山町477
東漸寺・本住寺 / 明治初年に廃寺 / 真葛原
祇園女御の旧蹟 祇園女御供養塔(ぎおんにょうごくようとう)Gion Nyogokuyo To 祇園町南側604
東山長楽寺 長楽寺(ちょうらくじ)Choraku-Ji 京都市東山区八坂鳥居前東入る円山町626
円山安養寺 安養寺(あんようじ) Anyo-Ji 京都市東山区八坂鳥居前東入る円山町
華頂山大谷寺知恩教院 知恩院(ちおんいん)Chion-In 京都市東山区林下町400
白川の水上 Shirakwa 白川橋京都市東山区三条通東大路東入ル
東三条金蔵寺御猿堂 尊勝院(そんしょういん)Sonsho-In  京都市東山区粟田口三条坊町東部1
粟田天王杜  粟田神社(あわたじんじゃ)Awata Jinja 京都市東山区粟田口鍛冶町1
仏光寺の廟所 佛光寺本廟(ぶっこうじほんびょう)Bukko-Ji Honbyo 粟田口鍛冶町14
華頂山親鸞聖人植髪の尊像 青蓮院 植髪堂(しょうれんいんうえかみどうShoren-In Uekami-Do 粟田口三条坊町
栗田神明宮 Awata Shinmyo-Gu
日向大神宮(ひむかいだいじんぐう)Himukai Daijingu 京都市山科区日ノ岡一切経谷町29
東岩蔵真性院 粟田山山頂にあった。
日岡の峠 Hioka no Toge
御廟野 御廟野古墳(ごびょうのこふん)Gobyo no Kofun 京都市山科区御陵上御廟野町
吉祥山安祥寺 安祥寺(あんしょうじ)Anyo-Ji 京都市山科区御陵平林町22
山科毘沙門堂 毘沙門堂(びしゃもんどう)Bishamon-Do 京都市山科区安朱稲荷山町18
諸羽明神の社 諸羽神社 (もろはじんじゃ) Moroha Jinja 京都市山科区四ノ宮中在寺町17
廻地蔵 徳林庵(とくりんあん)Tokurin-An 京都市山科区四ノ宮泉水町16
追分 Oiwake / 音羽山 Otowayama
牛尾山法厳寺 法厳寺(ほうごんじ)HOgon-Ji 京都市山科区音羽南谷1
山科本願寺南殿跡(やましなほんがんじなんんでんあと)Yamashina Hongan-Ji 音羽伊勢宿町
花山 元慶寺(がんぎょうじ) Gangyo-Ji 京都市山科区北花山河原町13
苦集滅道 東福寺退耕庵 玉章地蔵
瑞竜山太平興国南禅禅寺 南禅寺(なんぜんじ)Nanzen-Ji 京都市左京区南禅寺福地町
聖衆来迎山禅林寺永観堂 禅林寺(ぜんりんじ)Zenrin-Ji 京都市左京区永観堂町48
正東山若王寺 若王子神社(にゃくおうじじんじゃ)Nyakuoji Jinja 京都市左京区若王子町2
霊芝山光雲寺 光雲寺(こううんじ)Koun-Ji 京都市左京区南禅寺北ノ坊町59
鹿ヶ谷 霊鑑寺(れいかんじ)Reikan-Ji 京都市左京区鹿ケ谷御所ノ段町12
住蓮山安楽寺 安楽寺(あんらくじ)Anraku-Ji  京都市左京区鹿ケ谷御所ノ段町21
善喜山万無寺 法然院(ほうねんいん)Honen-Ji  京都市左京区鹿ヶ谷御所ノ段町30
紫雲山金戒光明寺黒谷 金戒光明寺(こんかいこうみょうじ)Konkai Komyo-Ji 黒谷町121
鈴声山真正極楽寺真如堂 真正極楽寺(しんしょうごくらくじ) Shinsho Gokuraku-Ji 浄土寺真如町82
吉田宮斎場所 吉田神社(よしだじんじゃ)Yoshida Jinja 京都市左京区吉田神楽岡町30
長徳山知恩寺百万遍 知恩寺(ちおんじ)Chion-Ji  京都市左京区田中門前町103
慈照寺 慈照寺(じしょうじ)Jisho-Ji  京都市左京区銀閣寺町2
干菜山光福寺 光福寺(こうふくじ)Kofuku-Ji  京都市左京区田中上柳町56
瓜生山将軍地蔵 将軍山城(しょうぐんやまじょう)Shogunyamajo 北白川清沢口町 瓜生山
本願寺北山別院(ほんがんじきたやまべついん)Hongan-Ji Kitayama Betsuin 一乗寺薬師堂町29
詩仙堂 詩仙堂 (しせんどう) Shisen-Do 京都市左京区一乗寺門口町27
天王杜 / 八大神社(はちだいじんじゃ)Hachidai Jinja 京都市左京区一乗寺松原町1
赤山の杜 赤山禅院(せきざんぜんいん)Sekizan Zenin 京都市左京区修学院開根坊町18
玉山稲荷杜(ぎょくさんいなりしゃ)Gyokusan Inari Sha 京都市伏見区深草藪之内町
御蔭杜 御蔭神社(みかげじんじゃ)Mikage Jinja 京都市左京区上高野東山207
矢背の里 Yase no sato / 大原 Ohara
惟喬親王遺跡 小野御霊神社 京都市左京区大原上野町 / 融通寺
浄蓮華院(じょうれんげいん)Jorenge In 京都市左京区大原来迎院町  
魚山来迎院 来迎院(らいこういん)Raigo-In 京都市左京区大原来迎院町537
音無滝 Otonashi no Taki
小野山 Onoyama
梶井宮円融院梨本房 三千院(さんぜんいん)Sanzen-In 京都市左京区大原来迎院町540
魚山勝林寺 勝林院(しょうりんいん) Shorin-In 京都市左京区大原勝林院町187
実光坊 実光院(じっこういん)Jikko-In 京都市左京区大原勝林院町
古知谷光明山阿弥陀寺 阿弥陀寺(あみだじ)Amida-Ji 京都市左京区大原古知平町83
寂光院 寂光院(じゃっこういん)Jako-In 京都市左京区大原草生町676 . 朧清水
江文の杜 江文神社(えぶみじんじゃ)Ebumi Jinja 京都市左京区大原野村町643
比叡山延暦寺一乗止観院 延暦寺根本中堂(こんぽんちゅうどう)Enryaku-Ji Konpon Chudo 大津市坂本本町4220
日吉山王社 日吉大社(ひよしたいしゃ)Hiyoshi Taisha 大津市坂本5-1-1 Otsu



巻之四 右白虎
愛宕山の社 愛宕神社(あたごじんじゃ)Atago Jinja 京都市右京区嵯峨愛宕町1
鎌倉山月輪寺 月輪寺(つきのわでら)Tsukinowadera 京都市右京区嵯峨清滝月ノ輪町7
妓王寺 祇王寺(ぎおうじ)Gio-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨鳥居本小坂32
三宝寺 三宝寺(さんぽうじ)Sanbo-Ji 京都市右京区鳴滝松本町32
小倉山二尊院 二尊院(にそんいん)Nison-In 京都市右京区嵯峨二尊院門前長神町27
檀林寺 檀林寺(だんりんじ)Danrin-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨鳥居本小坂町2-10
西行法師の庵の跡 西行法師庵の跡(さいぎょうほうしいおりのあと)Saigyo Hoshi hermitage 二尊院境内
車僧の塚 車僧影堂(くるまそうえいどう)Kurumasoei-Do 京都市右京区太秦海正寺町
京極黄門定家卿の山荘 時雨亭跡(しぐれていあと)Shigure Tei remains 京都市右京区嵯峨小倉山小倉町
五台山清涼寺 清凉寺(せいりょうじ)Seiryo-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨釈迦堂藤ノ木町46
大沢の池 大沢池(おおさわのいけ)Osawa no Ike pond 京都市右京区嵯峨大沢町
大覚寺宮 大覚寺(だいかくじ)Daikaku-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨大沢町4
広沢池 広沢池(ひろさわのいけ)Hirosawa no Ike pond 京都市右京区嵯峨広沢町
遍照寺山 遍照寺(へんじょうじ)Henjo-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨広沢西裏町14
野宮 野宮神社(ののみやじんじゃ)Nonomiya Jinja 京都市右京区嵯峨野々宮町1
常寂寺 常寂光寺(じょうじゃっこうじ)Jojakko-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨小倉山小倉町3
霊亀山天竜資聖禅寺 天龍寺(てんりゅうじ) Kameyama Tenryu-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨天龍寺芒ノ馬場町68
檪谷社 櫟谷宗像神社(いちたにむなかたじんじゃ)Ichitani Munakata Jinja - Arashiyama 京都市西京区嵐山中尾下町61
戸難瀬滝 戸難瀬の滝(となせのたき) Tonase no Taki waterfall
坐禅石 夢窓疎石坐禅石(むそうそせきざぜんせき)Muso Soseki stone 西芳寺境内
大悲閣 大悲閣(だいひかく) Daihikaku 京都市西京区嵐山中尾下町62
智福山法輪寺 法輪寺(ほうりんじ)Horin-Ji 京都市西京区嵐山虚空蔵山町68-3
大堰川 大堰川(おおいがわ)Oigawa river - Arashiyama 嵐山公園あたり
渡月橋 渡月橋(とげつきょう)Togetsukyo Bridge - Arashiyama
小督桜 小督塚(こごうづか)Kogozuka 京都市右京区嵯峨天竜寺芒ノ馬場町
千鳥淵 千鳥ヶ淵(ちどりがふち)CHidorigafuchi river pool 京都市右京区
西行桜 法輪寺(ほうりんじ)Horin-Ji 京都市西京区嵐山虚空蔵山町68-3
霊亀山臨川寺 臨川寺(りんせんじ)Rinsen-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨天龍寺造路町33
鹿王院 鹿王院(ろくおういん)Rokuo-In 京都市右京区嵯峨北堀町
車折社 車折神社(くるまざきじんじゃ)Kurumazaki Jinja 京都市右京区嵯峨朝日町23
有楢川 斎宮神社(さいぐうじんじゃ)Saigu Jinja 京都市右京区嵯峨野宮ノ元町34
帷子辻 帷子ケ辻(かたびらのつじ) Katabira no tsuji 京都市右京区太秦帷子ケ辻町
常盤墓 源光寺 (げんこうじ) Genko-Ji 京都市右京区常盤馬塚町1
太秦広隆寺 広隆寺(こうりゅうじ)Koryu-Ji 京都市右京区太秦蜂岡町32
木島社 木嶋坐天照御魂神社(このしまにますあまてるみたま)Konoshima Nimasuamateru Mitama Jinja 太秦森ヶ東町50
海生寺 車僧影堂(くるまそうえいどう)Kurumasoei-Do 京都市右京区太秦海正寺町31
梅宮 梅宮大社(うめのみやたいしゃ)Umenomiya Taisha 京都市右京区梅津フケノ川町30
梅津川 長福寺(ちょうふくじ)Chofuku-Ji 京都市右京区梅津中村町36
春日社・住吉社 西院春日神社(さいいんかすがじんじゃ)Sai-In Kasuga Jinja 西院春日町61
松尾社 松尾大社(まつのおたいしゃ)Matsuo Daisha 京都市西京区嵐山宮町3
月読社 月読神社(つきよみじんじゃ)Tsukiyomi Jinja 京都市西京区松室山添町15
華厳寺 華厳寺(けごんじ)Kegon-Ji 京都市西京区松室地家町31
衣手杜 衣手の杜(ころもでのもり)Kormete no mori forest
西芳寺 西芳寺(さいほうじ)Saiho-Ji 京都市西京区松尾神ケ谷町56
衣笠山地蔵院 地蔵院(じぞういん)Jizo-Iin 京都市西京区山田北ノ町23
葉室山浄住寺 浄住寺(じょうじゅうじ)Joju-Ji 京都市西京区山田開キ町9
天鼓の森 天鼓の森古墳(てんこのもりこふん )Tenko no Mori Kofun 京都市西京区上桂森下町
文徳天皇陵 天皇の杜古墳(てんのうのもりこふん)Tenno no Moir Kofun 西京区御陵塚ノ越町
御霊社 下桂御霊神社(しもかつらごりょうじんじゃ)Shimokatsura Goryo Jinja 西京区桂久方町47-1
桂川 桂川(かつらがわ) Katsuragawa river
廻地蔵 地蔵寺(じぞうじ)Jizo-Ji 京都市西京区桂春日町9
久遠寺 本願寺西山別院(にしやまべついん) Nishiyama betsuin 京都市西京区川島北裏町29
大枝の坂 首塚大明神(くびづかだいみょうじん) Kubizuka Daimyojin 京都市西京区大枝沓掛
唐櫃越 唐櫃越(からとごえ) Karatogoe pass
春日社 大原野神社(おおはらのじんじゃ) Oharano Jinja 京都市西京区大原野南春日町1152
小塩山勝持寺 勝持寺(しょうじじ) Shoji-Ji 京都市西京区大原野南春日町1194
長岡の都 長岡京跡(ながおかきょうあと)Nagaoka kyo remains 向日市鶏冠井町大極殿
栢社 大歳神社(おおとしじんじゃ)Otoshi Jinja 京都市西京区大原野灰方町575
西岩倉金蔵寺 金蔵寺(こんぞうじ) Konzo-Ji 京都市西京区大原野石作町1639-11
西山三鈷寺 三鈷寺(さんこじ)Sango-Ji 京都市西京区大原野石作町3
西山善峰寺 善峯寺(よしみねでら)Yoshiminedera 京都市西京区大原野小塩町1372
小塩山十輪寺 十輪寺(じゅうりんじ)Jurin-Ji 京都市西京区大原野小塩町481
権現堂 権現寺(ごんげんじ)Gongen-Ji 京都市下京区朱雀裏畑町10
源為義の塚 六條判官源為義公塚(みなもとのためよしこうつか)Minamoto Tameyoshi mound 権現寺門前
綱敷天神 綱敷行衛天満宮(つなしきいくえいてんまんぐう)Tsunashiki Kuei Tenmangu 七条御前上ル西七条北東野町
水薬師寺 水薬師寺(みずやくしじ)Mizuyakushi-Ji 京都市下京区西七条石井町54
西寺の旧跡  唐橋西寺公園(からはしさいじこうえん) Karahashi Sai-Ji park 京都市南区唐橋西寺町
唐橋 唐橋花園公園(からはしはなぞのこうえん)Karahashi Hanasono park 京都市南区唐橋羅城門町
吉祥院天満宮  吉祥院天満宮(きっしょういんてんまんぐう)Kissho-In Tenmangu 京都市南区吉祥院政所町3
実相寺 実相寺(じっそうじ)Jisso-Ji - Toba 京都市南区上鳥羽鍋ヶ渕町10-1
廻地蔵 浄禅寺(じょうぜんじ)Jozen-Ji 京都市南区上鳥羽岩ノ本町93
小枝橋 小枝橋(さえだばし)Saedabashi bridge 京都市伏見区中島流作町付近
恋塚寺 恋塚寺 (こいづかでら) Koizukadera 京都市伏見区下鳥羽城ノ越町132
法伝寺 法傳寺(ほうでんじ)Hoden-Ji 京都市伏見区下鳥羽中三町61
上久世蔵王堂 蔵王堂光福寺(ざおうどうこうふくじ)Zao-Do Kofuku-Ji 京都市南区久世上久世町826
綾戸社 綾戸國中神社(あやとくなかじんじゃ)Ayatokunaka Jinja 京都市南区久世上久世町446
木下明神 木下神社(きのしたじんじゃ)Kinoshita Jinja 京都市南区久世大藪町
福田寺 福田寺(ふくでんじ) Fukuden-Ji 京都市南区久世殿城町4
向日明神 向日神社(むこうじんじゃ)Mukoo Jinja 向日市向日町北山65
真経寺 北真経寺(きたしんきょうじ)Kita Shinkyo-Ji - - -
南真経寺(みなみしんきょうじ)Minami Shinkyo-Ji 向日市鶏冠井町御屋敷28
寺戸の願徳寺 願徳寺(がんとくじ)Gantoku-Ji 京都市西京区大原野南春日町1223-2
乙訓社 角宮神社(すみのみやじんじゃ)Suminomiya Jinja 長岡京市井ノ内南内畑35
夫慈山乙訓寺 乙訓寺(おとくにでら)Otokunitera 長岡京市今里3-14-7
報国山光明寺 光明寺(こうみょうじ)Komyo-Ji 長岡京市粟生西条ノ内26-1
木上山奥海印寺寂照院 寂照院(じゃくしょういん)Jakusho-In 長岡京市奥海印寺明神前31
柳谷観音堂 楊谷寺(ようこくじ) Yokuni-Ji 長岡京市浄土谷2
長岡天満宮 長岡天満宮(ながおかてんまんぐう)Nagaoka Tenmangu 長岡京市天神2-15-13
小倉の社 小倉神社(おぐら) Ogura Jinja 大山崎町字円明寺小字鳥居前83
円明寺 円明教寺(えんみょうきょうじ)Enmyokyo-Ji 大山崎町字円明寺小字薬師前 35
帰海印寺  正覚寺(しょうかくじ)Shokaku-Ji   大山崎町字下植野小字宮脇 99
勝竜寺の城跡  勝竜寺城公園(しょうりゅうじじょうこうえん)Shoryu-Ji park  長岡京市勝竜寺13-1
大山崎天王の社  酒解神社(さかとけじんじゃ)Saitoke Jinja   大山崎町字大山崎小字天王山
観音寺 観音寺(かんのんじ)Kannon-Ji 大山崎町字大山崎小字白味才 62
宝寺 宝積寺(ほうしゃくじ)LHoshaku-Ji  大山崎町字大山崎小字銭原1
妙音庵  妙喜庵(みょうきあん)Myoki-An 大山崎町字大山崎小字竜光 56
山崎の橋 山崎の橋(やまざきのはし)Yamazaki no hashi bringe
離宮八幡宮  離宮八幡宮(りきゅうはちまんぐう)Rikyu Hachimangu   大山崎町字大山崎小字西谷21-1
天満宮の社  腰掛天神社(こしかけてんじんしゃ) Koshikake Tenjinsha 離宮八幡宮 境内
宗鑑法師の幽居の地  宗鑑旧居跡(そうかんきゅうきょあと) Sokan remains 島本町山崎 1-4
関戸明神  関大明神社(せきだいみょうじん) Seki Daimyo Jinja 島本町山崎1-5-10



巻之五 前朱雀
石清水正八幡宮 石清水八幡宮(Iwashimizu Hachimangu いわしみずはちまんぐう) 八幡市八幡高坊30
徳迎山正法寺 正法寺(しょうぼうじ)Jobo-Ji 八幡市八幡清水井73
女郎花塚 女郎花塚 (おみなえしつか)Ominaeshi zuka 八幡市八幡女郎花
岩田 石田神社(いしだじんじゃ) Ishida Jinja 八幡市上津屋里垣内77
淀姫の社 與杼神社(よどじんじゃ)Yodo Jinja 京都市伏見区淀本町167 / 大荒木の杜
伊勢向宮 伊勢向神社(いせむこうじんじゃ)Isemuko Jinja 京都市伏見区淀下津町
城南神の社 城南宮(じょうなんぐう) Jonangu 京都市伏見区中島鳥羽離宮町7
城南離宮 鳥羽離宮跡(とばりきゅうあと)Toba Rikyu remains 京都市伏見区中島御所ノ内町
北向不動院 北向山不動院(きたむきざんふどういん)Kitamuki Fudo-In 京都市伏見区竹田浄菩
西行寺 西行寺址(さいぎょうでらあと)Saigyo-Ji remains 京都市伏見区竹田西内畑町
安楽寿院 安楽寿院(あんらくじゅいん)Anrakuju-In 京都市伏見区竹田中内畑町74
墨染寺 墨染寺(ぼくせんじ) Bokusen-Ji 京都市伏見区墨染町741
欣浄寺 欣浄寺(ごんじょうじ) Gonjo-Ji 京都市伏見区西桝屋町
藤杜の社 藤森神社 (ふじのもりじんじゃ)Fujinomori Jinja 京都市伏見区深草鳥居崎町609
安楽行院 嘉祥寺 (かしょうじ) Kasho-Ji 京都市伏見区深草坊町
真宗院 (しんじゅいん) Shinju-In 京都市伏見区深草真宗院山町26
瑞光寺  瑞光寺 (ずいこうじ)Zuiko-Ji  京都市伏見区深草坊町4
昭宣公の墳 三十番神社(さんじゅうばんしんしゃ) Sanjuban Jinja
深草山宝塔寺  宝塔寺 (ほうとうじ)Hoto-Ji 京都市伏見区深草宝塔寺山町32
百丈山石峰禅寺 石峰禅寺 (せきほうぜんじ)Sekihozen-Ji 京都市伏見区深草石峰寺山町26
即成院 (そくじょういん)Sokujo-In 京都市東山泉涌寺山内町28
吉利倶八幡宮 八幡宮(はちまんぐう)Hachimangu 京都市山科区勧修寺御所内町94
勧修寺 勧修寺(かじゅうじ)Kaju-Ji 京都市山科区勧修寺仁王堂町27-6
大石屋舗 大石神社(おおいしじんじゃ)Oishi Jinja 京都市山科区西野山桜ノ馬場町116
大宅寺 大宅廃寺跡(おおやけはいじあと) Oyake Haiji remains 京都市山科区大宅鳥井脇町
興福寺の旧跡 山階寺跡(やましなでらあと)Yamashinadera remains 京都市山科区御陵大津畑町
小野随心院 随心院(ずいしんいん)Zuishin-In 京都市山科区小野御霊町35
深雪山醍醐寺 醍醐寺 (だいごじ)Daigo-Ji 京都市伏見区醍醐東大路町22
上醍醐 上醍醐 (かみのたいご) Kami no Daigo
一言寺 一言寺(いちごんじ)Ichigon-Ji 京都市伏見区醍醐一言寺裏町21
日野薬師 法界寺(ほうかいじ)Hokai-Ji 京都市伏見区日野西大道町19
重衝の塚 平重衝墓(たいらのしげひらのはか) Taira no Shigehira grave 京都市伏見区醍醐外山街道町(公園内)
長明方丈石 長明方丈石(ちょうめいほうじょうせき)Chomei Hojo stone 京都市伏見区日野船尾
石田の杜 天穂日命神社(あめのほひみこと)Amenohohimikoto 京都市伏見区石田森西町66
天王山仏国寺 仏国寺(ぶっこくじ) Bukkoku-Ji 京都市深草大亀谷古御香町30
城山 伏見城(ふしみじょう)Fushimi castle 京都市伏見区桃山町
梅渓 清涼院(せいりょういん)Seiryo-In 京都市伏見区深草大亀谷五郎太町31
御香宮 御香宮神社(ごこうのみやじんじゃ)Gokonomiya Jinja 京都市伏見区御香宮門前町
巨椋の入り江 巨椋池(おぐらいけ) Oguraike pond
巨椋の社 巨椋神社(おぐらじんじゃ) Ogura Jinja 宇治市小倉町寺内31
指月山月橋院 月橋院(げっきょういん)Gekkyo-In 京都市伏見区桃山町泰長老120
六地蔵 大善寺(だいぜんじ)Daizen-Ji 京都市伏見区桃山町西町24
櫃河の橋 櫃川橋跡(ひつかわばしあと)Hitsukawabashi remains 京都市伏見区桃山町西尾
柳大明神 許波多神社(こはたじんじゃ) Kohada Jinja 宇治市五ヶ庄古川13
西方寺弥陀次郎の旧跡 西方寺(さいほうじ)Saiho-Ji 宇治市五ヶ庄大林43-1
安養寺(あんようじ) Anyo-Ji 久世郡久御山町東一口113
黄葉山万福寺 万福寺(まんぷくじ) Manpuku-Ji 宇治市五ヶ庄三番割34
明星山三室戸寺 三室戸寺(みむろとじ)Mimurodo-Ji 宇治市莵道滋賀谷21
宇治橋 宇治橋(うじばし) Ujibashi bridge
橋寺 放生院 放生院(ほうじょういん)Hojo-In 宇治市宇治東内11
離宮八幡宮 宇治神社・宇治上神社 Uji Jinja 宇治市宇治山田1・59
朝日山恵心院 恵心院(えしんいん) Eshin-In 宇治市宇治山田67
仏徳山興聖禅寺 興聖寺(こうしょうじ) Kosho-Ji 宇治市宇治山田27
橋姫の社 橋姫神社(はしひめじんじゃ) Hashihime Jinja 宇治市宇治蓮華47
平等院 平等院 (びょうどういん)Byodo-In 宇治市宇治蓮華116
県の社 縣神社(あがたじんじゃ) 宇治市蓮華72
金色院白山権現 白山神社(はくさんじんじゃ) Hakusan Jinja 宇治市白川娑婆山16
大宮明神 大宮神社(おおみやじんじゃ)Omiya Jinja 宇治田原町大字荒木小字天皇38
田原親王の御廟 田原天皇社旧跡(たわらてんのうしゃ)Tawara Tenno Sha
鷲峰山金胎寺 金胎寺(こんたいじ)Kodai-Ji 相楽郡和束町原山
百丈山大智寺 大智寺(だいちじ)Daichi-Ji 相楽郡和束町大字湯船小字中山20−1
椎尾山光明寺 光明寺(こうみょうじ)Komyo-Ji 相楽郡精華町大字乾谷小字北里内127
普門山蟹満寺 蟹満寺(かにまんじ)Kaniman-Ji 木津川市山城町綺田36
涌出社 涌出宮(わきでのみや) Wakide no Miya 木津川市山城町平尾里屋敷54
北吉野神童寺 神童寺(じんどうじ)Jindo-Ji 木津川市山城町神童子不晴谷112
妙勝禅寺 酬恩庵(しゅうおんあん)Shuon-An 京田辺市薪字里ノ内102
天神宮 天神社(でんじんしゃ)Tenjinsha 京田辺市松井里ケ市1
和泉式部が墓 和泉式部の墓(いずみしきぶのはか)Izumi Shikibu grave 木津川市木津殿城
橋柱寺 大智寺(だいちじ)Daichi-Ji 木津川市木津町木津雲村42-1
泉橋寺 泉橋寺(せんきょうじ)Senkyo-Ji 木津川市山城町上狛西下55
高麗寺の旧蹟 高麗寺跡(こうらいじあと) Korai-Ji remains
山城国分寺跡(やましろこくぶんじあと)Yamashiro Kokubun-Ji remains 相楽郡南山城村童仙房簀子橋
海修山寺 海住山寺(かいじゅうせんじ) Kaijusen-Ji 木津川市加茂町例幣海住山境外20
恭仁の都の旧地 恭仁京跡(くにきょうあと)Kunikyo remains 木津川市加茂地区
鹿路山笠置寺 笠置寺(かさぎでら)Kasaokidera / Kasagidera 相楽郡笠置町大字笠置小字笠置山29
栗栖天神宮 栗栖神社(くりすじんじゃ)Kurisu Jinja 相楽郡笠置町笠置栗栖43



巻之六 後玄武
鴨下上皇大神宮の御社 賀茂御祖神社(かもみおやじんじゃ)Kamo Mioya Jinja 京都市左京区下鴨泉川町59
松崎本涌寺 涌泉寺(ゆうせんじ)Yusen-Ji 京都市左京区松ヶ崎堀町53
御菩薩池 深泥池(みどろがいけ)Midorogaike 京都市北区上賀茂深泥池町・狭間町
市原の普陀洛寺 補陀洛寺(ふだらくじ)Fudaraku-Ji 京都市左京区静市市原町1140
北岩蔵大雲寺 大雲寺(だいうんじ) Daiun-Ji 京都市左京区岩倉上蔵町305
八塩の岡 八塩岡(やしおのおか)Yashio no Oka 京都市左京区
長谷八幡宮 長谷八幡宮(ながたにはちまんぐう)Nagatani Hachimangu 左京区岩倉長谷町1117.
朗詠谷 朗詠谷(ろうえいだに)Roeidani 京都市左京区岩倉長谷町朗詠谷
松尾山鞍馬寺 鞍馬寺(くらまでら)Kuramadera 京都市左京区鞍馬本町1074
僧正谷 僧正ガ谷不動堂(そうじょうがだにふどうどう)Sojogata Fudo Do 京都市左京区鞍馬本町
真布禰社 貴船神社(きふねじんじゃ)Kifune Jinja 京都市左京区鞍馬貴船町180
暗部山 貴船山(きぶねやま)Kifuneyama 京都市左京区鞍馬貴船町
大悲山 峰定寺 (ぶじょうじ) Fujo-Ji 京都市左京区花背原地町772
岩屋山金峰寺 志明院(しみょういん)Shimyo-In 京都市北区雲ケ畑出谷町261
西加茂神光院 神光院(じんこういん)Jinko-In 京都市北区西賀茂神光院町120
同所霊源寺 霊源寺(れいげんじ)Reigen-Ji 京都市北区西賀茂北今原町41
吉祥山正伝寺 正伝寺(しょうでんじ)Shoden-Ji 京都市北区西賀茂北鎮守菴町72
船の送り火 正伝寺(しょうでんじ)Shoden-Ji 京都市北区西賀茂北鎮守菴町72
薬師山 一様院(いちよういん) 京都市北区大宮薬師山東町16
鷹峰寂光山常照寺 常照寺(じょうしょうじ)Josho-Ji 京都市北区鷹峯北鷹峯町45
同源光庵 源光庵(げんこうあん)Genko-An 京都市北区鷹峯北鷹峯町47
同光悦寺 光悦寺(こうえつじ)Koetsu-Ji 京都市北区鷹峯光悦町29 同題目堂
石門 霊鑑寺(れいかんじ) Reikan-Ji 京都市左京区鹿ヶ谷御所ノ段町12
菩提の滝 菩提の滝(ぼだいのたき)Bodai no Taki Waterfall 京都市北区鷹峯菩提
小野道風の社 道風神社(とうふうじんじゃ)Dofu Jinja 京都市北区杉阪道風町1 / 冠石
龍宝山大徳寺 大徳寺(だいとくじ)Daitoku-Ji 京都市北区紫野大徳寺町53
今宮の社 今宮神社(いまみやじんじゃ)Imamiya Jinja 京都市北区紫野今宮町21
常盤の古跡・義経誕生水 牛若丸誕生井・胞衣塚 Ushiwakamaru 京都市北区紫竹牛若町
舟岡山 船岡山(ふなおかやま)Funaoka yama 京都市北区紫野北舟岡町
雲林院 雲林院(うんりんいん)Unrin-In 京都市北区紫野雲林院町23
七野社 櫟谷七野神社(いちいだにななのじんじゃ)Ichiidani Nanano Jinja 上京区大宮通盧山寺上ル西入社横町277
今宮神社御旅所(いまみやじんじゃおたびしょ)Imamiya Jinja Otabi-sho 上京区大宮通鞍馬口上ル
上品蓮台寺 上品蓮台寺(じょうぼんれんだいじ)Jobonrendai-Ji 京都市北区紫野十二坊町33-1
金山天王寺 廬山寺 (ろざんじ) Rozan-Ji 京都市上京区寺町通広小路上ル1丁目北ノ辺町397
紅梅殿 紅梅殿 (こうばいでん) Kobaiden 北野天満宮 境内
清和院 清和院(せいわいん)Seiwa-In 京都市上京区七本松通一条上る一観音町428-1
具足山立本寺 立本寺(りゅうほんじ)Ryuhon-Ji 京都市上京区七本松通仁和寺街道上ル一番町107
千本焔魔堂 引接寺(いんじょうじ)Injo-Ji 京都市上京区千本通鞍馬口下ル閻魔前町34
大報恩寺 大報恩寺(だいほうおんじ)Daihoon-Ji 京都市上京区今出川通七本松上ル溝前町
天満天神宮 北野天満宮(きたのてんまんぐう) Kitano Tenmangu 京都市上京区馬喰町
東向観音 東向観音寺(ひがしむかいかんのんじ)Higashimuki Kannon-Ji 京都市上京区観音寺門前町863
願成就寺 北野経王堂願成就寺 大報恩寺 境内
平野社  平野神社(ひらのじんじゃ)Hirano Jinja  京都市北区平野宮本町1
金閣寺 鹿苑寺(ろくおんじ)Rokuon-Ji (Kinkaku-Ji) 京都市北区金閣寺町1
鏡石 鏡石(かがみいし) 京都市北区衣笠鏡石町
等持院 等持院(とうじいん)Toji-In 京都市北区等持院北町63
衣笠山 衣笠山(きぬがさやま)Kinugasa yama
大雲山竜安寺 龍安寺(りょうあんじ) Ryoan-Ji 京都市右京区龍安寺御陵下町13
真如寺 真如寺(しんにょじ) Shinnyo-Ji 京都市北区等持院北町61
正法山妙心寺 妙心寺(みょうしんじ)Myoshin-Ji 京都市右京区花園妙心寺町64
双の岡 双ヶ丘(ならびがおか)Narabigaoka 京都市右京区御室双岡町
兼好法師の旧跡 長泉寺(ちょうせんじ) Chosen-Ji 京都市右京区御室岡の裾町44
法金剛院 法金剛院(ほうこんごういん) Hokongo-In 京都市右京区花園扇野町49
西光庵 西光庵(さいこうあん) Saiko-An 京都市右京区花園宮ノ上町9
御室仁和寺 仁和寺(にんなじ)Ninna-Ji 京都市右京区御室大内33
鳴滝 鳴滝(なるたき) Narutaki
妙光寺 妙光寺(みょうこうじ)Myoko-Ji 京都市右京区宇多野上ノ谷町20
泉谷の法蔵寺 法蔵寺(ほうぞうじ)Hozo-Ji 京都市右京区鳴滝泉谷町19
五台山 般若寺(はんにゃじ)Hannya-Ji 京都市右京区嵯峨樒原高見町8
五智山 蓮華寺(れんげじ) Renge-Ji 京都市右京区御室大内20
三宝寺 三宝寺(さんぽうじ) Sanbo-Ji 京都市右京区鳴滝松本町32
泉殿 法蔵寺(ほうぞうじ)Hozo-Ji 京都市右京区鳴滝泉谷町
平岡の八幡宮 平岡八幡宮(ひらおかはちまんぐう)Hiraoka Hachimangu 右京区梅ヶ畑宮ノ口町23
梅畑善妙寺 為因寺(いいんじ) Iin-Ji 京都市右京区梅ケ畑奥殿町46
栂尾山高山寺 高山寺(こうざんじ)Kozan-Ji 京都市右京区梅ケ畑栂尾町8
槙尾山平等院 西明寺(さいみょうじ)Saimyo-Ji 京都市右京区梅ケ畑槇尾町2
高雄山神護寺 神護寺(じんごじ)Jingo-Ji 京都市右京区梅ヶ畑高雄町5


https://sites.google.com/site/miyakomeisyo/home/maki-no-roku--go-genbu

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


- - - - - Most temples and shrines are mentioned here:

. Welcome to visit shrines and temples of Japan ! .


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



. Join the friends on Facebook ! .

- #heianmeishozue #meishozue -
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

2015-01-07

- backup Heian-Kyo

- BACK to the Daruma Museum -
. ABC List of Contents .
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

- - - - - - see below :
The Heian period (794 - 1185) by Brad Shows
JAANUS - Heian jidai 平安時代


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


The Heian Period - Court and Clan

- quote -
- source : samurai-archives.com - F.W. Seal -

Heian-Kyo
The Fujiwara
Buddhism in Heian Japan
The Clans
Early Exploits
Hachiman Taro - Minamoto Yoshiie
The Rise of the Taira

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Heian-Kyo
In the year 794 ad the Japanese Imperial Court departed Nagaoka and transferred its seat to Heian-Kyo, or Tsuki no Miyako - the City of the Moon. The city had been laid out and built specifically to provide a new capital. Its builders, borrowing freely from Chinese conventions, had created an earthen-walled city three miles by three and a half miles, with straight streets intersecting to form no fewer then 1,200 blocks. The palace grounds, or daidairi, measured one mile by three quarters of a mile, and specific quarters were created to cater to merchants, nobility, and artisans. Japan had never seen a community like Heian-Kyo before and it is perhaps at this point that Japan as a state came into its own. At the same time, the Imperial shift to the new capital was in fact gradual, and could not be said to have been fully complete until a century or more had passed. Also shifting gradually was Japan's priorities, especially in the cultural field. Contact with China gradually petered off while native arts began to experience a state of great refinement, especially in literature. The great women writers of the later 10th century dominate the Heian Period's literary landscape, from the anonymous composer of the Kagero Nikki (the longest of the 'court diaries', ca. 975) to the famed 'Pillow Book' of Sei Shonagon and the monumental 'Tale of Genji' by Murasaki Shikubu. While reasonably well known outside Japan, the latter, composed around 1022, has yet to receive the recognition it deserves as possibly the world's 1st true novel. In most cultural pursuits -and in the realm of architecture- Chinese extravagance began to give way to a more thoughtful and conservative approach.

In the provinces, the movement towards imperial consolidation began to give way, out of a certain necessity, to the institution of shoen - estates which enjoyed a number of privileges, including varying degrees of tax exemption. Developed in the Nara Period and expanded in both scale and practice in the Heian Period, the granting of shoen allowed for the court to provide both individuals and institutions with a means of wealth in a country that lacked a real monetary system. In time, much of the imperial family's own income would be drawn from its own shoen (allowing for an increasingly comfortable lifestyle). This practice laid the framework for what would in time become the Japanese version of feudalism. 'Public' lands were known as kokugaryo and were administered by governors, often men of some ranking within either the court or religious community.

The Fujiwara
The Fujiwara clan continued to grow in strength until it had assumed a virtual monopoly on Heian politics. The manner in which this was accomplished was not through military force (or even the thinly-veiled threat of it) but rather a systematic implantation of marriage ties with the Imperial house. For a good two centuries, few emperors would have a mother of non-Fujiwara blood, even as this entailed the emperor commonly taking first cousins as consorts. The most successful of the Fujiwara, Michinaga (966-1027), had no fewer then four of his daughters married to emperors (with another marrying a prince who evidently suffered a breakdown before he could become emperor). The Fujiwara never made a bid for the throne itself, instead being content to act as regents and power brokers. Threats (real and potential) were identified and eliminated (often by means of exile) through the imperial apparatus and rarely through force of arms. By the time of Michinaga's death, a Fujiwara or close ally of the Fujiwara filled virtually every important civilian post within the government. At the same time, the Heian Period saw the growth of the practice of Insei, otherwise known as rule by 'cloistered' or retired emperors. Perhaps originally conceived as a way of keeping Fujiwara power in check, the strategy of retiring early and endeavoring to rule from 'behind the scenes' actually played into Fujiwara hands. At one point during the career of Fujiwara Kaneie (929-990) were no fewer then three retired emperors holding court, a situation that divided imperial authority and allowed Kaneie and his successor Michinaga to consolidate the Fujiwara hold on Kyoto.

This hold would finally be broken with the reigns of the emperors Go-Sanjo and Shirakawa. Go-Sanjo assumed the throne in 1068 at the age of 30, and it happened that his mother was not of Fujiwara blood. A heated dispute developed between the emperor and the steadily alienated Fujiwara over the issue of shôen (an area in which Go-Sanjo zealoulsy worked for reform). Faced with the danger that the Fujiwata would simply leave their court duties altoghether in protest, Go-Sanjo elected to continue his fight from behind the scenes. He retired in favor of his son Shirakawa in 1072 and was much freer to shape events now that he was unburdened of the many trappings of his former position. Unlike the former retired emperors who had spent their time living off the court's finances, Go-Sanjo stayed busy ruling through his son. While he was destined to die the following year, Go-Sanjo had established a precedent that Shirakawa would in time follow - this insei system essentially out-puppeteered the Fujiwara and assured that never again would that family hold the power it once had even as its vital role in running the goverment was left intact.

Buddhism in Heian Japan
Buddhism continued to grow during the Heian period, helped by an almost harmonious co-existence with the native Shinto religion and the acceptance of its teachings by the Court. Great religious complexes sprang up in the central provinces, aided by grants of shoen and other land rights. Chief among these was the Enryakuji on Mt. Hiei, to the northeast of the capital. Founded in 788 by the monk Saicho, the Enryakuji grew throughout the Heian period to include thousands of buildings and to hold considerable influence as the vanguard of Tendai Buddhism. As the monastic complex grew, so did the willingness of its inhabitants to actively involve themselves in temporal affairs, or rather, to deal with issues in a very temporal manner. The early rivals of the Enryakuji included the older Nara temples, and, after the 10th Century, the Mii-dera temple. The latter came about as a result of a schism with the Tendai sect of Buddhism that saw a fair number of monks driven from Mt. Hiei and forced to establish their own place of worship. Outright battles between the Enryakuji and Mii-dera were common during the later Heian Period, and saw the later burned to the ground numerous times.

The famous warrior monks, or Sohei, of Mt. Hiei came about, it would seem, in an unexpected way.1 From its earliest times, the Enryakuji was held to be off limits to both women and law enforcement bodies. The latter prohibition attracted such a large criminal element to Mt. Hiei that Kakûjin (1012-81), the 35th abbot of the Enryakuji, called for his followers to form an army and drive away the undesirables. In fact, many of the men who took up arms may well have been those very same unwelcome fugitives they were intended to fight. From this time forward, Mt. Hiei would maintain a martial arm, one that it rarely hesitated to use. One frequent victim of the Enryakuji's heavy-handed tactics was none other then the emperor himself. As emperor Shirakawa is alleged to have said, "There are three things that even I cannot control: the waters of the Kamo river, the roll of the dice, and the monks of the mountain." When the monks of Mt. Hiei found themselves at odds with court over some affair (perhaps a question of land rights or taxation), they would gather and march down at to the gates of Kyoto, bearing on their shoulders the sacred palanquin (mikoshi) of the Shinto deity Sanno. So revered was this artifact that no one dared block its passage and much more often then not the emperor would give in to the monk's demands. The warrior monks of the Enryakuji would continue to play an important role in the Kyoto area for hundreds of years, until the advent of Oda Nobunaga. While evidently not the first monastic complex to take on a military aspect, the Enryakuji's reputation was great indeed.

The other great Buddhist movement of the Heian period had been founded by the priest Kukai (774-835) and was called Shingon. Shingon (or True Word) was centered on the worship of Maha-Vairocana (or Great Illuminator, otherwise known as the Dainichi Nyorai), believed to be the first and greatest of the Buddhas. Shingon held that the Dainichi Nyori was present in all things in the universe and by extension was all people. Essentially, Kukai taught that to understand the Great illuminator, one needed to unlock the mysteries of their own minds and spirits. This involved a large amount of ceremony and ritual - hence earning Shingon the label of 'esoteric Buddhism'.

A third school of thought in Buddhism was to emerge at the tale end of the Heian Period. The monk Hônen (1133-1212), a former priest of the Enryakuji, founded what would become known as the Jodo, or Pure Land. Jodo popularized Amidism, a form of Buddhism the monk Genshin (942-1017) had written about and that centered on the worship of the Amida Buddha. The Amida resided in the Western Paradise and welcomed in all the faithful. No undo ceremony or spiritual honing was necessary for admittance to Paradise, only a honest belief in the Buddha and the reciting of his name in praise (the nembutsu). By the start of the Kamakura Period, Jôdo would have a strong following among the common people, for whom its straightforward approach appealed. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the established schools of Buddhism did not take kindly to Jôdo, and made very effort to limit its spread. Yet by the 15th and 16th centuries, Jôdo was to prove an exceptionally powerful force.

The Clans
The capital was perhaps not an exceedingly dangerous place for those notables of non-Fujiwara blood, but it could be a decided dead end. It is tempting, and not implausible, to imagine frustrated nobles departing for the wilds of the east, determined to make a name for themselves in the provinces. Those who left Heian-Kyo did so in the knowledge that they would never again be able to move casually in the 'world of the shining price'. As the Heian Period wore on, the divide in culture between those in the capital and those in the provinces would grow into a gulf.

The most famous of these clans (and by extension many later families) owed their existence to a bit of foresight on the part of the Emperor Temmu. Concerned that in time the Imperial house would grow to an unmanageable size and cost, Temmu declared that descendants of the emperors in the sixth generation were to be deprived of the rank of prince and instead receive a family name. This began to be observed in the time of Kammu (r.782-805) and provided the genesis of the Taira and Minamoto. The Taira (or Heike, or Heishi) were descended from Prince Katsurabara (the emperor Kammu's son), whose eldest son Takamune first took the name Taira. Katsurabara's second son, Takami, received permission to give the Taira name to his own son, Takamochi. Takamochi received the name in 889 on the authority of the emperor Uda and his son Kunika (d.935) settled in Hitachi province. It is primarily the line established by Takami's descendants that we will be encountering from this point onward.

The Minamoto (or Genji) were founded in a similar way but in their case, a total of four branches were established, each of which was named after the emperor from it was descended: the Saga-Genji, Murakami-Genji, Uda-Genji, and Seiwa-Genji. Of these four, the last could be considered the most important historically. Founded by the son of Prince Sadazumi (and therefore grandson of the emperor Seiwa), Tsunemoto (894-961), this branch took the name Minamoto in 961.

At this point, a common misconception should be noted. Contrary to what one might think, there was little unity of purpose amongst the various branches of the Taira and Minamoto. This is relevant in that the rise of the warrior house is sometimes attributed to the formation and growth of these two clans, which while true to some extent, is misleading. The names Taira and Minamoto were practically generic by the 11th Century, and numerous members of the two families formed their own offshoot families, often taking the name of the district in which they lived (the Ashikaga of Shimotsuke are a nice example). Furthermore, the court enjoyed a greater influence in the provinces then might be expected. One of the ways in which it affected this was the appointment of trusted men who became career governors. Most commonly drawn from the Minamoto and Taira families, these men were given successive appointments in various provinces, sometimes where a questionable element was thought to exist. As well as providing strong governors where needed, this strategy also assured that no Minamoto or Taira chieftain would be in one place long enough to form dangerously strong ties with his vassals there. As Jeffery Mass has pointed out, the various heads of the Minamoto and Taira were military-nobles, leaders whose ties were strong in both capital and province. Later events (those leading up to and following the Gempei War) do not weaken this view - rather, they substantiate them. The Heiji Distrubance of 1156, for instance, saw Minamoto and Taira allied on either side of the contest, and very much a part of Kyoto politics in general. Taira Kiyomori and Minamoto Yoritomo were able to achieve what they did largely as a result of the familiarity of their houses and the court, a point we will touch on again somewhat later.

The court had at one time moved to limit the potential power of the clans by decreeing that weapons were to be restricted to the Imperial military or otherwise regulated by the Ministry of Military Affairs (the Hyôbûsho). As conscription was abandoned in the early Heian Period, so was this decidedly half-hearted law. Just when one could really begin to refer to 'warrior houses', however, is a matter of great debate. The truth is that much of the development of the samurai is a matter of conjecture. We do see the term applied to palace guards in the 10th Century, but little can be drawn from that example beyond an affirmation of the 'one who serves' translation of the word. That the clans maintained some form of private army can be safely assumed, but to the extent that these were professional is most unclear, and likely the archetypal samurai of the 10th-13th Century was much like the later jizamurai - men of the land who counted military service as but one of their duties. Nonetheless, that a plentiful basis for the warrior tradition in Japan would be provided in the Heian Period goes without saying.

Early Exploits
In the year 935, a grandson of Taira Takamochi, Taira Masakado, petitioned the court for the respectable title of Kebiishi (Commissioner of Government Police). Masakado was something of a hothead, and according to the Konjaku Monogatari, was quick to resort to battle to resolve problems with his neighbors. Perhaps in view of this, the court refused Masakado the title he sought. Infuriated, he returned to his lands in the Kanto region and threw up the flag of rebellion, though perhaps not so much against the court as his local rivals. He killed his uncle Kunika and clashed with Taira Sadamori while attracting a number of neighboring landowners to his side. Emboldened by his successes and the lack of a reaction from Kyoto, Masakado went so far as to declare himself emperor, claiming a mandate to do so from the Sun Goddess herself. This proved a grave error, however, as it stiffened the opposition of his enemies and allowed the court to declare him a rebel. Loyalist forces under the command of Taira Sadamori and Fujiwara Hidesato first forced Masakado onto the defensive then defeated him at the Battle of Kojima in 940. In the course of the fighting Masakado was struck by an arrow in the head and was killed.

At around the same time the Minamoto clan gained some prestige by suppressing a formidable fleet of pirates commanded by Fujiwara Sumimoto that preyed on shipping in the Inland Sea between 936 and 941. Both Masakado and Sumimoto had presented the court with very real challenges, and both had failed due to the willingness of other chieftains to respect the wishes of the court and offer battle on the emperor's behalf. Those who rendered such services could hope for land grants and other rewards, and over the years certain families came to grow particularly powerful. Once such family was the Minamoto, whose capture of Fujiwara Sumimoto had earned them acclaim soon to be overshadowed by the endeavors of one of their most famous sons: Minamoto Yoshiie.

Hachiman Taro
Minamoto Yoshiie, a man who came to embody the spirit of the samurai and a legend even in his own time, was the son of Minamoto Yoriyoshi. Yoriyoshi, the third generation of the Seiwa Genji, was a noted commander, and in 1051 was commissioned to defeat the rebellious Abe family of Dewa. The Abe had for years held prominent posts in this distant, forbidding region, and had come to enjoy a near autonomous existance. Like Taira Masakado, the Abe had been tasked with subduing the northern barbarians, and, from the Court's point of view and over time, become barbarians themselves.

Yoriyoshi's chief opponent was Abe Yoritoki, an unscrupulous character who died of an arrow wound in 1057. By this point in the so-called Former Nine-Years War, Yoriyoshi's son Yoshiie had joined the expedition. A promising young warrior, Yoshiie participated in the Battle of Kawasaki (later in 1057) against Yoritoki's heir Sadato. In a snowstorm, the Minamoto assaulted Sadato's stronghold at Kawasaki and were driven back; in the course of the hard-fought retreat Yoshiie distinguished himself and earned the nickname 'Hachimantaro', or 'First son (or First born) of the God of War (Hachiman)'. Abe Sadato comes across as an altogether more impressive man than his father, and proved a formidable foe even for Yoshiie and Yoriyoshi. Yet the Minamoto cause was much assisted by the enlistment of Kiyowara Noritake, a locally powerful figure whose rugged northern men swelled Yoriyoshi's ranks.

In 1057 the fighting culminated in a series of actions that further enhanced Yoshiie's reputation. Sadato had attacked the Minamoto troops but suffering a reverse retreated into a fort by the Koromo River. Yoriyoshi ordered a spirit assault on the fort, which Sadato was forced to flee. During the chaotic retreat, Yoshiie was supposed to have chased Sadato and had an impromptu renga (linked verse) session with his enemy from horseback, afterwards allowing him to escape, as related in the Mutsu Waki…

'Yoriyoshi's first son, Hachiman Taro, gave hot pursuit along the Koromo River and called out, "Sir, you show your back to your enemy! Aren't you ashamed? Turn around a minute, I have something to tell you." When Sadato turned around, Yoshiie said:

Koromo no tate wa hokorobinikeri
Koromo Castle has been destroyed. [The warps in your robe have come undone]

Sadato relaxed his reins somewhat and, turning his helmeted head, followed that with:


toshi o heishi ito no midare no kurushisa ni
over the years its threads became tangled, and this pains me

Hearing this, Yoshiie put away the arrow he had readied to shoot, and returned to his camp. In the midst of such a savage battle, that was a gentlemanly thing to do. 3

The likelihood that this incident actually occurred is probably nil but it made Yoshiie seem all the more colorful, and gave him an opponent worthy in both warfare and culture. Tales like these laid the groundwork for the samurai mystique, and provided young warriors with ready-made role models and measures against which to test their own prowess and bravery.

Yoshiie may have spared his noble opponent, but the war was nearly over. Sadato continued his flight until he reached one of his remaining forts, this one on the Kuriyagawa, and prepared for another stand. The government troops arrived and after a few days of fighting brought the fort down. Sadato and his son died, and his brother Muneto was captured. Yoshiie gave thanks to his (nick)namesake by establishing the Tsurugaoka Hachiman shrine near Kamakura on the way back to Kyoto. Yoriyoshi was awarded the governorship of Iyo for his services against the Abe while Yoshiie was named Governor of Mutsu. Interestingly, Abe Muneto was released into the custody of the Minamoto and lived in Iyo, becoming a companion of Yoshiie's.

In 1083 Yoshiie was commissioned by the Court to subdue another rebel, this time against the same Kiyowara family who had assisted the Minamoto in the previous war. After the Abe's defeat, the Kiyowara had been elevated and filled the power vacuum in the north. A power struggle had broken out among various family members, and in the end Yoshiie was sent to quell the disturbance. The conflict became known as the Later Three-Year War and culminated, after a setback at Numu (1086), in the Battle of Kanazawa. In an incident that became a famous military anecdote, Yoshiie's men were advancing to contact when a flock of birds began to settle in a certain spot then abruptly flew off. Yoshiie suspected an ambush and had the place surrounded, sure enough revealing the enemy army. Yoshiie went on to reduce Kanazawa through siege and the Later Three-Year War drew to a close. The Court was pleased that the Kiyowara had been suppressed, but viewed the conflict as outside the Court's responsibility, as technically Yoshiie had not been commissioned by the emperor to fight. This meant that no rewards would be distributed to Yoshiie's men, an unfortunate situation Yoshiie remedied by paying them himself with his own lands. This action greatly enhanced Yoshiie's reputation and also secured lasting bonds of loyalty for the Minamoto in the Kanto region, bonds that would pay dividends in the following century.

Stinginess aside, the aristocracy held Yoshiie in near-awe, and Fujiwara Munetada dubbed him 'The Samurai of the greatest bravery under heaven.' At the same time, the Court kept Yoshiie at arm's length. It did go so far as permitting Yoshiie to visit the Imperial Court in 1098; a rare honor that by it's very rareness indicates the widening gulf between the Court and provincial houses. This alienation would in the end contribute to the eclipse of Imperial authority by the samurai in the later 12th Century.

The Rise of the Taira
Perhaps as a result of Taira Masakado's belligerence or simply through the whims of fortune, the Taira family had not achieved the same fame as had the Minamoto. This began to change during the career of Taira Tadamori (1096-1153). His father, Taira Masamori, had been a particularly successful 'career-governor', acting as headman to no fewer then nine provinces over the course of his life. Tadamori would not match that record, but did become close to retired emperor Shirakawa, and as a result received the title of kebiishi and the governorship of Bizen, Harima, and Ise. He earned the gratitude of the court by suppressing Inland Sea pirates, and gradually the Taira's power base shifted to the western provinces. Tadamori received a favored concubine from his Imperial patron, and nine months later she gave birth to a child who would come to be known as Taira Kiyomori (1115-1181). He became a commander of palace guards in the capital and in 1146 the governor of Aki province, in the meantime earning a reputation for decisiveness. In one celebrated (and possibly apocryphal) event in 1146, one of his men insulted the head priest of Kyoto's Gion Shrine, prompting a large group of warrior monks to march on the city and demand Kiyomori's chastisement. Kiyomori rode out and to the shock of all present, shot an arrow into their mikoshi, a decided act of sacrilege that did have the effect of scattering the monks.

Tadanori died in 1153 and was succeded by Kiyomori, who was to advance his family's fortunes considerably by backing the right horse during the Hôgen Disturbance (Hôgen no ran) of 1156. Trouble had been brewing in the court since 1141. In that year, the retired emperor Toba forced his eldest son, the Emperor Sutoku (r.1123-1441), to abdicate in favor of a two-year old (borne by a favorite consort) to be known as Konoe. Konoe died in 1155, but Toba, rather then sponsoring Sotoku's son as successor, insisted that a half-brother be placed on the throne. Much to Sutoku's chagrin, Go-Shirakawa took the throne in November of 1155. Lines began to be drawn between Sutoku and Go-Shirakawa, a situation enflamed by a bitter feud that divided the Fujiwara family. Toba died in August of 1156 and events began to move quickly, though Sutoku was gripped by a hesitation that would prove fatal for his cause.

The Taira and Minamoto were both to be divided in the conflict. Kiyomori threw in with Go-Shirakawa, while his uncle Tadamasa took up Sutoku's cause. Minamoto Yoshitomo joined with Kiyomori even as his own uncle Tameyoshi and brother Tametomo joined Sutoku. The warrior monks of Mt. Hiei gave their nominal support to Sutoku, but could not be counted on. Yoshitomo suggested a sudden and decisive night raid on Sutoku's compound, the Shirakawa-den, a strategy that his brother Tametomo had actually urged Sutoku to authorize against Go-Shirakawa. Unlike his half-brother, Go-Shirakawa gave permission for the attack to proceed and in a violent action that left the Shirakawa-den in flames, Sutoku's side was crushed. Master archer Tametomo distinguished himself with great acts of bravery, and was afterwards spared, though at the cost, we are told, of the tendons in his firing arm. Sutoku was sent into exile to Sanuki Province, where he later died at the age of 64. Kiyomori and Yoshitomo were not so lenient towards their own uncles, whom they had executed.

The Hôgen Disturbace left Kiyomori in a strong position, and the following year he was made the head of the Daifuzu on Kyushu, a post once considered a dead-end but now a chance for Kiyomori to consolidate his hold on the western provinces. He actually remains a popular figure in western Japan, remembered for his economic initiatives and his patronage of the Itskushima Shrine on Miyajima. Thanks to his friendship with Go-Shirakawa's chief councilor Fujiwara Michinori (Shinzei), Kiyomori's influence at court and prestige continued to grow - much to Minamoto Yoshitomo's dismay. Yoshitomo had not been as fortunate in the wake of the Hogen Disturbance, and he became jealous of his erstwhile ally. He made an alliance with a certain Fujiwara Nobuyuki, a rival of Michinori, and together they plotted to depose their respective opponents. By this point, Go-Shirakawa had retired in favor of his son Nijô, and as the latter was also fond of Kiyomori, the conspirators were careful to wait for just the right opportunity to move.

Yoshitomo's chance came in January of 1160. Kiyomori had recently departed the capital to make a pilgrimage to Kumano and in his absence Yoshitomo seized both Go-Shirakawa and Nijô. Fujiwara Michinori suffered the burning of his mansion and was forced to commit suicide in an attempt to reach Kiyomori. In the afterglow of their success, Yoshitomo and Nobuyuki granted themselves titles and rewards-only to reap the consequences of their actions. Kiyomori rushed back to capital and with the able assistance of his son Shigemori made his way to his mansion at Rokuhara. Even as the two plotted some counter-attack, both Nijô and Shirakawa were rescued and brought under Taira protection, leaving Kiyomori a free hand in his planning. The Minamoto headquarters were assaulted, and after a stiff battle Yoshitomo was forced to flee the capital and headed eastward. He made it as far as Owari province before being murdered in his bath by Taira supporters even as three of his sons fell into Kiyomori's hands. These were Yoritomo, Noriyori, and Yoshitsune, all of whom Kiyomori spared and sent to the eastern provinces. This act of benevolence would later be bitterly regretted by the Taira. To the other members of the conspiracy, little compassion was shown. Yoshitomo's rashness had seen the Minamoto clan stripped of many of its most prestigious chieftains and the Taira left virtually unchallengeable.

With a now doubly grateful Go-Shirakawa and Nijô restored to their places in Kyoto, Kiyomori's influence continued to grow. That same year he received a court title (the Senior Third Rank) and in 1167 was granted the title of dajodaijin, or Grand Minister of State-the highest rank bestowed on a subject by the Emperor. Popular history has traditionally painted Kiyomori as a cruel military dictator, who relegated his imperial patrons to the role of mere puppets. In fact, at least initially, Kiyomori and Go-Shirakawa may have acted more as partners then puppet-puppeteer, and Kiyomori's military strength does not justify the picture of a warrior usurping the throne. Like so much of Japanese history, the relationship of the court and clan (be that warrior or otherwise) defies easy explanation or quantification.

Needless to say, Kiyomori was not without an enormous ambition, and as the years passed, his relationship with Go-Shirakawa proceeded to turn sour. The Taira clan began to resemble the Fujiwara in its rampant nepotism, and it is perhaps only now that we can begin to describe either 'Taira' or 'Minamoto' as inclusive units. Stung and shamed by the events of the Heiji Disturbance, the Minamoto went dormant for the next twenty years. In that time, the three sons that Kiyomori had spared came of age. The stage for the epic Gempei War had been set.

- - - - -

1. The term sohei was in fact not a contemporary term, and many of the accepted assumptions regarding the activities of the so-called warrior monks are now being challanged. For what promises to be an illuminating look at the secular powers held by religous institutions in medieval Japan, see the forthcoming work by Prof. Mikael S. Adolphson - "The Gates of Power' (Hawaii, to be published in December).

2. Sato Legends of the Samurai pg. 99

3. Much of the following chapter is drawn from the biography of Yoshiie found elswhere on this page.


- source : F.W. Seal -
http://www.samurai-archives.com/HeianPeriod.html

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


- quote -
The Heian period (794 - 1185)
by Brad Shows
To escape the Buddhist Monastery influence on the court the capital was moved to Nagaoka in 784. Then, before it was actually completed, it was moved to Heian in 794, the present location of the city of Kyoto. In the beginning of the ninth century Emperor Kanmu restricted the places where Buddhist temples were built keeping them away from the center of the city and palace until his death in 806. However after his death things changed and Buddhist temples were built throughout the city (Leonard 31).

Inside the city, according to Totman, the Heian city population was around one hundred thousand, with only about five thousand of those being aristocrats. The rest were from various classes of people from the untitled but influential subordinates and clerics to the slaves. The aristocratic courtiers had to have attendants who took care of their needs and craftsmen who created the elaborate decorations of the court, monasteries, or shrines. There were also merchants and artisans who occupied the markets of the city to trade their goods like animal skins, vegetables, ceramics, medicine, and iron utensils (#Totman 57). Also, many of the nobles were large landowners or administrators of Shoen.

Outside the city the country was still a barbaric place to live in the Nara and Heian periods. Most people of that time lived in the provinces and were primarily agricultural producers who produced rice for themselves and their superiors. There were also the provincial officials, administrators, and clerics living in the provinces. Local provincial monasteries, and shrines existed as well. There were various other people from the constable forces to the peasants. The peasants lived in close-knit village communities. They paid taxes through produce or labor and may have traded goods locally as well. Also, there were still Ainu and Ezo areas in the northeast, but they were eventually defeated or retreated to the north (Totman 58).

The post of regent to the emperor was established in the Heian period. It is the most powerful of any of the other offices in the government. He actually has control over the imperial government giving little or no power to the emperor himself. The emperor ruled in name only. The early emperors were usually children and therefore, it was very easy for the regent to exercise control over the government.

The Fujiwara family also increased its influence on the Imperial family and Japan with the establishment of the post of Regent to the Emperor. They made this post hereditary sealing the families control over both the Imperial family and Japan until the eleventh century (Leonard 31-32). During the beginning of the 9th century the city was being built, and the majority of Japan's people consisted of the peasant class. The people above that level who were slightly more cultivated were the provincial officials, priests, and landowners (Leonard 32). The highest class of people were the aristocrats who lived in the city itself. They were directly associated with the Imperial family in some way. Many of the historical accounts of this era come form this group of highly educated class of people.

The Heian period is considered the classical period in Japanese history because during that period, the development of the Japanese culture flourished. Japan had an explosion of artistic and literary expression during that time (Leonard 31). It was during the period from 794 to 1185 that this explosion took place. During that period the aristocracy ruled the country from a lavish city called Heian-kyo. There the aristocracy practiced writing literature, poetry, music, and art. They wore elaborately decorated clothing (Leonard 35). The aristocracy developed a court culture of values and rituals. The Japanese writing system "kana" was developed during this period. Many of the classical writings of poems and stories were developed during this time like, "The Tales of Genji," "Kagero Nikki" court lady's diary and others. This was a period of peace and tranquility in which the aristocratic Japanese, of that time, were able to create a unique culture.

In the early classical period art always had a religious theme, but much latter art was used to represent the daily life of the aristocrats. The art that represented court life was known as Yamato-e a form of Japanese painting (Totman 42). This form of painting was colorful and was used to illustrate landscapes and the life of notable courtesans (Totman 42).

The architecture of the time was also borrowed from the Chinese. The elaborate buildings of the time required great architectural knowledge and skills. As with all other forms of art it began as a direct copy, but by the end of the Heian period it had been given a Japanese flavor. The first cities were laid out in the symmetrical model of the Chinese, but latter strayed from symmetrical layout and construction (Totman 42).

Additionally, woodworking, bronze casting, writing poetry, sculpting, and music were all perfected during Japan's classical period. Music was used in the court and was known as gagaku. It was an orchestra form of music using wind instruments, kotos Japanese string instruments, and percussion instruments (Totman 51). It was performed in concert form and also was accompanied by dancers (Totman 51). This form of court music is still in use today (Totman 51).

Dai Nichi, Heian Era 1176, at Enjyo-ji in Nara Photo Courtesy Emperor Kwammu sent Saicho (Dengyo Daishi) and Kukai (Kobo Daishi) to China to find a more spiritual form of Buddhism (Bunce 9). Saicho brought back the Tendai sect and Kukai brought the Shingon sect of Buddhism. Both sects promised that they would be beneficial to the state and allow state control of their monasteries and their activities (Totman 34). Kukai's Shingon sect had elaborate ceremonies that the Tendai sect eventually adopted. This form of religion esoteric Buddhism appealed to the aristocrats of the court. The religions used secrete formulae, magnificent symbolism, and emotional participation in its rituals. Only the court elite could afford to practice such a religion with its expensive and time consuming practices (Totman 37). This is known as Aristocratic Buddhism, and it created a separation of those who are worthy of and could attain the grace Buddha and those who are not worthy (Totman 37).

The Tendai-Shingon was the religion of the aristocrats, but the rest of the country followed other sects of Buddhism and Shinto beliefs. Still in the villages the people mainly followed the Shinto religion because they had little contact with the court elite.

In the late Heian period a combining of the Shinto and Buddhist religions in the form of Ryobu-Shinto took place. It was a way to spread Buddhism among the non-aristocratic people of Japan. Ryobu-Shinto is a combination of the Shingon Buddhism and Shinto religions. It eventually became more like, Buddhism absorbing the Shinto religion because many of the Shinto rituals and native deities took on a Buddhist appearance (Bunce 11).

The period from 650 to 1100 has been described as the "classical age of Japan." It was so named because great and lasting strides in education, literature, government, and religion were made during that period. However, this was true for only a small handful of people lucky enough to be born of noble blood. The majority of Japan was still a barbaric and backward place in which to live. Probably the most notable developments of the period were the establishment of a central government and a writing system. The classical period eventually came to an end, as the aristocrats focused on court life and lost sight of the country outside of the walls of their "heaven on earth" they had created. This eventually led to the power shifting from the central government to the outlying provinces and gave rise to the warrior class.
- source : Brad Shows, 2003 -

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


- source : JAANUS - Heian Jidai -

The Heian period (794-1185), during which Heiankyou 平安京 (later, Kyoto) became the political and cultural capital of Japan.
The period is divided into Early ; *Kounin-Jougan jidai 弘仁貞観時代 or simply Jougan jidai 貞観時代 (794-894), Middle ; *Fujiwara jidai 藤原時代 (894-1086) and Late ; Insei (Cloistered Rule) jidai 院政時代 (1086-1185).

Early Heian culture was still under the influence of the Chinese Tang dynasty, but in 894 imperially sponsored embassies to China were abolished because it was thought that the Tang dynasty would soon be overthrown and a new, Japanese culture *kokufuu bunka 国風文化 began to develop.
The end of the period is almost universally placed at 1185, the year in which the Minamoto 源 shogunate was established in Kamakura 鎌倉.

During the early part of the Heian period, two new sects of esoteric Buddhism were introduced from China to Japan: these were the Tendai 天台 which focused on *Shaka 釈迦 (the historical Buddha) at the center of devotion, and Shingon 真言 which worshipped Vairocana (Birushana 毘盧遮那) the Buddha of Essence. Both sects established temples in the mountains, adapting their building arrangements to suit the environment. Murouji 室生寺 in Nara, is the only esoteric temple from this time that remains untouched by fire. The images worshipped at these isolated temples were provincial variations of urban prototypes. They were made by local workers, sometimes the monks themselves, and were carved out of single tree trunks, a style that seems traceable to the Kushan Indian and the Gandaharan style. A good example is the *Yakushi 薬師 (9c) at Jingoji 神護寺 in Kyoto. Shingon also brought with it a pantheon of deities inspired by Indian Hindu gods. These images had multiple arms and heads and fierce countenances to indicate their intensity of purpose. Both sculpted and painted mandalas, or cosmic graphs were used to focus believers' meditation.
See *mandara 曼荼羅 mandala.
A life-sized sculptural mandara is set on a large altar in the Lecture Hall *Koudou 講堂 of Touji 東寺 (Kyouougokokuji 教王護国寺) in Kyoto, and the famous painted *Ryoukai mandara 両界曼荼羅 (Two World Mandara ) also belongs to this temple. The middle part of the Heian period was dominated by the Fujiwara family who inspired exquisitely elegant art forms. Pure Land Buddhism joudokyou 浄土教, based on the worship of *Amida 阿弥陀 and rebirth into the Western Paradise saihou joudo 西方浄土, became popular with the court and, in time, the common people as well. Byoudouin Hououdou Hoo-Do 平等院鳳凰堂 (1053) in Kyoto is an example of an aristocratic residence complete with temple, garden and pond that was constructed in order to replicate in this world, the Western Paradise in all its splendor.

Literature
flourished under the Fujiwara with the creation of such notable works as GENJI MONOGATARI 源氏物語 (The Tale of Genji) written around 1000 CE by a noblewoman of the court, Murasaki Shikibu 紫式部, and KAGEROU NIKKI 蜻蛉日記 (Gossamer Years), written by the mother of Fujiwara no Michitsuna, Fujiwara no Michitsuna no haha 藤原道綱母 (977), and with the development of the thirty one syllable poem waka 和歌.

The late Heian period, characterized by the rule of cloistered, retired emperors insei 院政, was even more opulent than the middle period, as the imperial family spent lavishly on the new clan temples and secular projects such as the creation of one hundred paintings illustrating excerpts from GENJI MONOGATARI (see *genji-e 源氏絵) and poems of the thirty-six poets, the SANJUUROKUNIN SHUU 三十六人集 Sanjurokunin Shu, on scrolls of gorgeous colored papers with gold and silver decorations.
The elaborate and beautiful HEIKE NOUKYOU 平家納経 Heike Nokyo (Sutras Dedicated by the Heike) were also produced during this period.

Finally, the lengthy peace and prosperity of the era was broken by conflicts over competition for power between the Minamoto (Genji 源氏) and Taira 平 (Heike 平家) clans.

- JAANUS - 526 documents with HEIAN -

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



. Join the friends on Facebook ! .

- #heiankyo #heianhistory #heianseal -
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::