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Minamoto no Yoshitomo

Samurai of the late Heian period; the head of the Minamoto clan

Minamoto no Yoshitomo

Samurai of the late Heian period; the head of the Minamoto clan

FieldValue
nameMinamoto no Yoshitomo
源義朝
imageMinamoto no Yoshitomo.jpg
officeHead of Kawachi Genji
birth_date1123
death_dateFebruary 11, 1160
spouseYura Gozen
children{{Plainlist
fatherMinamoto no Tameyoshi
predecessorMinamoto no Tameyoshi
successorMinamoto no Yoritomo
motherDaughter of Fujiwara no Tadakiyo
relationsTokiwa Gozen (concubine)
nationalityJapanese
branchMinamoto clan
allegianceMinamoto clan

源義朝

  • Minamoto no Yoshihira
  • Minamoto no Tomonaga
  • Minamoto no Yoritomo
  • Minamoto no Noriyori
  • Minamoto no Yoshitsune}}
Former Hiraji battle warfare Yoshimasa Shirakawa night view. It features Minamoto no Yoshitomo.

Minamoto no Yoshitomo (1123 – 11 February 1160) was the head of the Minamoto clan and a general of the late Heian period of Japanese history. His son Minamoto no Yoritomo became shōgun and founded the Kamakura shogunate, the first shogunate in the history of Japan.

His Dharma name was Shōjō Juin (勝定寿院).

Hōgen Rebellion

With the outbreak of the Hōgen Rebellion in 1156, the members of the Minamoto and Taira samurai clans were called into the conflict. Yoshitomo and Taira no Kiyomori both threw their support behind Emperor Go-Shirakawa and Fujiwara no Tadamichi, while Yoshitomo's father, Minamoto no Tameyoshi, sided with the retired Emperor Sutoku and Fujiwara no Yorinaga. Yoshitomo, defeating his father and the forces of Sutoku and Yorinaga, became head of the Minamoto clan and established himself as the main political power in the capital of Kyoto. However, despite attempts to have his father pardoned, he was forced to execute Tameyoshi personally. In the aftermath of the rebellion, the Taira and Minamoto became two of the strongest and most influential clans in Japan, which turned the two clans into bitter rivals.

Heiji Rebellion

In the first months of 1160 while Taira no Kiyomori was absent from the capital of Kyoto, Yoshitomo and Fujiwara no Nobuyori placed Go-Shirakawa under house arrest and killed his retainers, including the scholar Fujiwara no Michinori, in what is called the Heiji rebellion. The civil war wasn't to go on for very long as Kiyomori declared his support for the Emperor and rapidly defeated the rebel forces within the span of a month.

While making his escape from Kyoto, Yoshitomo was forced to sacrifice his son Tomonaga to buy time. Even so, Yoshitomo was eventually betrayed and murdered while taking a bath. Three of his surviving sons, Yoritomo, Yoshitsune and Noriyori, were spared execution and exiled by the victorious Kiyomori. However, Yoshitomo's allies Yoshihira and Nobuyori were both executed.

His grave in Aichi Prefecture is surrounded on all sides by wooden swords (bokuto), as by legend his last words were "If only I'd had a bokuto...".

Family

Yoshitomo fathered five sons in total. His two sons, Yoshihira and Tomonaga, lost their lives following the Minamoto Clan's defeat in the Heiji Rebellion in 1160. At the time of the outbreak of the Genpei War in 1180, Minamoto no Yoritomo was his eldest surviving son. His other two surviving sons were Minamoto no Noriyori and Minamoto no Yoshitsune.

  • Father: Minamoto no Tameyoshi (源為義, 1096–1156)
  • Mother: Daughter of Fujiwara no Tadakiyo (藤原忠清の娘)
    • Wife: Yura Gozen (由良御前, ?–1159), "Urahime" (由良姫), daughter of Fujiwara no Suenori (藤原季範).
    • Concubine: Tokiwa Gozen (常盤御前, 1138–c.1180)
      • 1st son: Minamoto no Yoshihira (源義平, 1140–1160)
      • 2nd son: Minamoto no Tomonaga (源朝長, 1144–1160)
      • 3rd son: Minamoto no Yoritomo (源頼朝, 1147–1199)
      • 4th son: Minamoto no Yoshikado (源義門, ?–?)
      • 5th son: Minamoto no Mareyoshi (源希義, 1152–1180 or 1182)
      • 6th son: Minamoto no Noriyori (源範頼, 1150–1193)
      • 7th son: Ano Zenjō (阿野全成, 1153–1203)
      • 8th son: Gien (義円, 1155–1181)
      • 9th son: Minamoto no Yoshitsune (源義経, 1159–1189)

References

Bibliography

  • Turnbull, Stephen (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & Co. page 60.

References

  1. "保元物語".
  2. See {{lang. ja. 愚管抄,. (2001). [[Kodansha]]. ja. 下向井龍彦)
  3. (1958). "A history of Japan to 1334". [[Stanford University Press]].
  4. Turnbull, Stephen. (1977). "The Samurai, A Military History". MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc..
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