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Emperor Go-Yōzei

Emperor Go-Yōzei (後陽成天皇, Go-Yōzei-tennō, December 31, 1571 – September 25, 1617) was the 107th Emperor of Japan,[1] according to the traditional order of succession.[2]: 111–111  Go-Yōzei's reign spanned the years 1586 through to his abdication in 1611,[3] corresponding to the transition between the Azuchi–Momoyama period and the Edo period.

Emperor Go-Yōzei
後陽成天皇
Emperor of Japan
ReignDecember 17, 1586 – May 9, 1611
CoronationJanuary 4, 1587
PredecessorŌgimachi
SuccessorGo-Mizunoo
RegentToyotomi Hideyoshi
Shōguns
BornKatahito (周仁) or Kazuhito (和仁)
December 31, 1571
Azuchi–Momoyama period
DiedSeptember 25, 1617(1617-09-25) (aged 45)
Heian Palace, Kyoto, Tokugawa shogunate
Burial
Fukakusa no kita no Misasagi (深草北陵) Kyoto
Spouse
(m. 1586)
Issue
more...
Posthumous name
Tsuigō:
Emperor Go-Yōzei (後陽成院 or 後陽成天皇)
HouseYamato
FatherPrince Masahito
MotherFujiwara no (Kajūji) Haruko
Signature

This 16th-century sovereign was named after the 9th-century Emperor Yōzei, and go- (), translates as later, and thus, he could be called the "Later Emperor Yōzei". The Japanese word go has also been translated to mean the second one, and in some older sources, this emperor may be identified as "Yōzei, the second", or as "Yōzei II".

Genealogy edit

Before Go-Yōzei's ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne, his personal name (imina) was Katahito (周仁) or Kazuhito (和仁).[2]: 9 [3] He was the eldest son of Prince Masahito (誠仁親王, Masahito-shinnō, 1552–1586),[2]: 424  also known as Prince Sanehito and posthumously named Yōkwōin daijō-tennō, who was the eldest son of Emperor Ōgimachi.[2]: 10  His mother was a lady-in-waiting.

Go-Yōzei's Imperial family lived with him in the Dairi of the Heian Palace. The family included at least 35 children.[2]: 113 

Consort and issue(s):

  • Empress (Nyōgo): Fujiwara (Konoe) Sakiko (藤原近衛 前子)(1575 –11 August 1630), later Chukamonin (中和門院), daughter of Konoe Sakihisa (近衛 前久)
    • First Daughter: Princess Shōkō (聖興女王; 1590–1594)
    • Second Daughter: Princess Ryūtōin (龍登院宮; 1592–1600)
    • Third Daughter: Imperial Princess Seishi (清子内親王; 1593–1674), married Takatsukasa Nobuhisa
    • Fourth Daughter: Princess Bunkō (文高女王; 1595–1644)
    • Third Son: Imperial Prince Kotohito (政仁親王, 29 June 1596 – 11 September 1680), later Emperor Go-Mizunoo
    • Fifth Daughter: Princess Son'ei (尊英女王; 1598–1611)
    • Fourth Son: Konoe Nobuhiro (近衛 信尋, 24 June 1599– 15 November 1649)
    • Seventh Son: Imperial Prince Takamatsu-no-miya Yoshihito (29 April 1603 – 14 July 1638; 高松宮好仁親王)[4]
    • Ninth Son: Ichijō Akiyoshi (一条 昭良, 12 June 1605 – 11 March 1672)
    • Sixth Daughter: Imperial Princess Teishi (貞子内親王; 1606–1675) married Nijō Yasumichi
    • Tenth Son: Imperial Prince Morochika (庶愛親王) later Imperial Prince Priest Sonkaku (1608–1661; 尊覚法親王)
    • Twelfth Daughter: Princess Son'ren (尊蓮女王; 1614–1627)
  • Consort (Hi): Kiyohara (Furuichi) Taneko (清原古市 胤子, 1583–1658), daughter of Furuichi Tanehide (古市胤栄)
    • Ninth Daughter: Princess Rei'un'in (冷雲院宮; 1611)[5]
    • Eleventh Son: Imperial Prince Priest Dōkō (道晃法親王; 8 April 1612 – 5 August 1679)
    • Tenth Daughter: Princess Kūkain (空花院宮; 1613)
  • Consort (Hi): Daughter of Chūtō Tokohiro (中東時広, d. 1680)
    • Twelfth Son: Imperial Prince Priest Dōshū (道周法親王; 1613–1634)
    • Thirteenth Son: Imperial Prince Priest Ji'in (慈胤法親王; 1617–1699)
  • Lady-in-waiting (Naishi-no-Suke): Fujiwara (Nakayama) Chikako (藤原中山親子; 1576–1608), daughter of Namayama Oyatsuna (中山親綱)
    • First Son: Imperial Prince Katahito (1588–1648; 良仁親王), later Imperial Prince Priest Kakushin
    • Second Son: Imperial Prince Priest Shōkai (承快法親王; 1591–1609)
  • Lady-in-waiting (Naishi-no-Suke): Fujiwara (Hino) Teruko (藤原日野 輝子, 1581–1607), daughter of Hino Terusuke (日野輝資)
    • Fifth Son: Imperial Prince Toshiatsu (1602–1651; 毎敦親王) later Imperial Prince Priest Sonsei (尊性法親王)
  • Lady-in-waiting (Naishi-no-Suke): Fujiwara (Jimyōin) Motoko (藤原持明院 基子; d. 1644), daughter of Jimyōin Motonori (持明院基孝)
    • Sixth Son: Imperial Prince Tsuneyoshi (常嘉親王), later Imperial Prince Priest Gyōnen (尭然法親王; 1602–1661)
  • Lady-in-waiting (Naishi-no-Suke): Minamoto (Niwata) Tomoko (源庭田 具子; d. 1626), daughter of Niwata Shigetomo (庭田重具)
    • Eight Son: Imperial Prince Priest Ryōjun(良純法親王; 1603–1669)
  • Lady-in-waiting (Naishi-no-Suke): Fujwara (Hamuro) Nobuko (藤原葉室 宣子; d. 1679), daughter of Hamuro Yorinobu (葉室頼宣)
    • Eleventh Daughter: Princess Sonsei (尊清女王; 1613–1669)
  • Handmaid (Naishi-no-Jō): Taira (Nishinotōin) Tokiko (平西洞院 時子, d. 1661), daughter of Nishinotōin Tokiyoshi (西洞院時慶)
    • Seventh Daughter: Princess Eishū (永崇女王; 1609–1690)
    • Eighth Daughter: Princess Kō'un'in (高雲院宮; 1610–1612)

Events of Go-Yōzei's life edit

Prince Katahito became emperor when his grandfather abdicated. The succession (senso) was considered to have been received by the new monarch; and shortly thereafter, Emperor Go-Yōzei is said to have acceded (sokui).[3] A distinct act of senso was unrecognized prior to Emperor Tenji and all sovereigns except Jitō, Yōzei, Go-Toba, and Fushimi have senso and sokui in the same year until the reign of Emperor Go-Murakami.[6] The events during his lifetime shed some light on his reign. The years of Go-Yōzei's reign correspond with the start of the Tokugawa shogunate under the leadership of Tokugawa Ieyasu and Tokugawa Hidetada.

On 31 December 1571, the Imperial prince who became known by the posthumous name of Go-Yōzei-tennō was born.[7] On 5 November 1586, Prince Katahito was given the title Crown Prince and heir[3] and within a month (Tenshō 14, on the 7th day of the 11th month), Ogimachi gave the reins of government to his grandson, who would become Emperor Go-Yōzei. There had been no such Imperial transition since Emperor Go-Hanazono abdicated in 1464 (Kanshō 5). The dearth of abdications is attributable to the disturbed state of the country and because there was neither any dwelling for an ex-emperor nor excess funds in the treasury to support him.[8][3][7] In 1586 (Tenshō 14, in the 12th month), a marriage with Lady Asahi, the youngest sister of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu, was arranged and the kampaku, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, was nominated to be Daijō-daijin (Chancellor of the Realm).[3] In 1588 (Tenshō 16, 7th month), Emperor Go-Yōzei and his father visit Toyotomi Hideyoshi's mansion in Kyoto. This was the first time that an emperor appeared in public since 1521.[2]: 111  Hideyoshi led an army to the Kantō where he lay siege to Odawara Castle in 1588 (Tenshō 18, 7th month). When the fortress fell, Hōjō Ujimasa died and his brother, Hōjō Ujinao submitted to Hideyoshi's power, thus ending a period of serial internal warfare which had continued uninterrupted since the Ōnin War (1467–1477).[3]

The Keichō expedition to Korea was en route to invade China in 1592 (Keichō 1).[2]: 111–112  Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the Taikō died in his Fushimi Castle at the age of 63 on 18 September 1598 (Keichō 3, on the 18th day of the 8th month).[3] The Battle of Sekigahara took place in 1600. On 21 October (Keichō 5, 15th day of the 9th month), the Tokugawa clan and its allies decisively vanquished all opposition.[3] Two years later (Keichō 8), the Kyōto Daibutsu was destroyed by fire. Tokugawa Ieyasu became shōgun on 24 March 1603 (Keichō 8), which effectively began what was later known as the Edo bakufu. Toyotomi Hideyori was elevated to Naidaijin in the Imperial court.[3] In 1605 (Keichō 10, 15th day of the 12th month), a new volcanic island, Hachijōko-jima, arose from the sea at the side of Hachijō Island (八丈島 Hachijō-jima) in the Izu Islands (伊豆諸島, Izu-shotō) which stretch south and east from the Izu Peninsula.[3] In 1606 (Keichō 11), construction began on Edo Castle and on Sunpu Castle the following year (Keichō 12).[3] 1609 (Keichō 14) saw the Invasion of Ryukyu by Shimazu daimyō of Satsuma.[2][3] During the following year (Keichō 15), reconstruction of the Daibutsu hall in Kyōto began and Toyotomi Hideyori came to Kyoto to visit the former-Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu. On 20 May 1610 (Keichō 15, the 27th day of the 3rd month), the emperor announces his intention to resign in favor of his son Masahito.[3][9] Go-Yōzei abdicated on 9 May 1611 and his son Prince Masahito received the succession (the senso). Shortly thereafter, Go-Mizunoo formally ascended to the throne (the sokui).[3][7]

Legacy edit

Go-Yōzei's reign corresponds to the rule of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and the beginning of the Edo Bakufu. He was the sovereign who confirmed the legitimacy of their accession to power; and this period allowed the Imperial Family to recover a small portion of its diminished powers. This Emperor gave Toyotomi Hideyoshi the rank of Taikō, originally a title given to the father of the emperor's chief advisor (Kampaku), or a retired Kampaku, which was essential to increase his status and effectively stabilize his power.[citation needed]

When Tokugawa Ieyasu was given the title of Sei-i Taishōgun, the future of any anticipated Tokugawa shogunate was by no means assured, nor was his relationship to the emperor at all settled. He gradually began to interfere in the affairs of the Imperial Court. The right to grant ranks of court nobility and change the era became a concern of the bakufu. However, the Imperial Court's poverty during the Warring States Era seemed likely to become a thing of the past, as the bakufu provided steadily for its financial needs.[citation needed]

Go-Yōzei did abdicate in favor of his third son; but he wanted to be succeeded by his younger brother, Imperial Prince Hachijō-no-miya Toshihito (八条宮智仁親王) (first of the Hachijō-no-miya line, later called Katsura-no-miya), who built the Katsura Imperial Villa.[citation needed]

Go-Yōzei loved literature and art. He published the Kobun Kokyo and part of Nihon Shoki with movable type dedicated to the emperor by Toyotomi Hideyoshi.[citation needed]

After abdication, Go-Yōzei lived for six years in the Sentō Imperial Palace; and thereafter, it became the usual place to which abdicated emperors would retire.[2]: 113  The name of this palace and its gardens was Sentō-goshō; and emperors who had abdicated were sometimes called Sentō-goshō. Go-Yōzei died on 25 September 1617.[7] The kami of Emperor Go-Yōzei is enshrined with other emperors at the imperial mausoleum (misasagi) called Fukakusa no kita no misasagi (深草北陵) in Fushimi-ku, Kyoto.[2]: 423 

Kugyō edit

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

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

Eras of Go-Yōzei's reign edit

The years of Go-Yōzei's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengō: Tenshō (1573–1592), Bunroku (1592–1596), and Keichō (1596–1615).[3]

Ancestry edit

See also edit

 
Japanese Imperial kamon — a stylized chrysanthemum blossom

References edit

  1. ^ "後陽成天皇 (107)" (in Japanese). Imperial Household Agency. n.d. Retrieved 2022-08-03.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ponsonby-Fane, Richard (1959). The Imperial House of Japan.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Titsingh, Isaac (1834). von Klaproth, Julius (ed.). Nipon o daï itsi ran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon. pp. 402–409.
  4. ^ first Takamatsu-no-miya
  5. ^ Died young
  6. ^ Kitabatake, Chikafusa (1980). A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns: Jinnō Shōtōki of Kitabatake Chikafusa. Translated by Varley, H. Paul. p. 44.
  7. ^ a b c d Meyer, Eva-Marie (1999). Japans Kaiserhof in der Edo-Zeit. p. 186.
  8. ^ Ponsonby-Fane, Richard A.B. (1956). Kyoto: the Old Capital of Japan, 794–1869. pp. 340–341.
  9. ^ Hirai, Kiyoshi (1950). "A Short History of the Retired Emperor's Palace in the Edo Era". Architectural Institute of Japan: The Japanese Construction Society Academic Dissertation Report Collection (61): 143–150. doi:10.3130/aijsaxx.61.0_143. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of Japan:
Go-Yōzei

1586–1611
Succeeded by

emperor, yōzei, 後陽成天皇, yōzei, tennō, december, 1571, september, 1617, 107th, emperor, japan, according, traditional, order, succession, yōzei, reign, spanned, years, 1586, through, abdication, 1611, corresponding, transition, between, azuchi, momoyama, period,. Emperor Go Yōzei 後陽成天皇 Go Yōzei tennō December 31 1571 September 25 1617 was the 107th Emperor of Japan 1 according to the traditional order of succession 2 111 111 Go Yōzei s reign spanned the years 1586 through to his abdication in 1611 3 corresponding to the transition between the Azuchi Momoyama period and the Edo period Emperor Go Yōzei後陽成天皇Emperor of JapanReignDecember 17 1586 May 9 1611CoronationJanuary 4 1587PredecessorŌgimachiSuccessorGo MizunooRegentToyotomi HideyoshiShōgunsSee list Tokugawa IeyasuTokugawa HidetadaBornKatahito 周仁 or Kazuhito 和仁 December 31 1571Azuchi Momoyama periodDiedSeptember 25 1617 1617 09 25 aged 45 Heian Palace Kyoto Tokugawa shogunateBurialFukakusa no kita no Misasagi 深草北陵 KyotoSpouseKonoe Sakiko m 1586 wbr Issuemore Emperor Go Mizunoo Konoe Nobuhiro Ichijō AkiyoshiPosthumous nameTsuigō Emperor Go Yōzei 後陽成院 or 後陽成天皇 HouseYamatoFatherPrince MasahitoMotherFujiwara no Kajuji HarukoSignatureThis 16th century sovereign was named after the 9th century Emperor Yōzei and go 後 translates as later and thus he could be called the Later Emperor Yōzei The Japanese word go has also been translated to mean the second one and in some older sources this emperor may be identified as Yōzei the second or as Yōzei II Contents 1 Genealogy 2 Events of Go Yōzei s life 2 1 Legacy 2 2 Kugyō 3 Eras of Go Yōzei s reign 4 Ancestry 5 See also 6 ReferencesGenealogy editBefore Go Yōzei s ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne his personal name imina was Katahito 周仁 or Kazuhito 和仁 2 9 3 He was the eldest son of Prince Masahito 誠仁親王 Masahito shinnō 1552 1586 2 424 also known as Prince Sanehito and posthumously named Yōkwōin daijō tennō who was the eldest son of Emperor Ōgimachi 2 10 His mother was a lady in waiting Go Yōzei s Imperial family lived with him in the Dairi of the Heian Palace The family included at least 35 children 2 113 Consort and issue s Empress Nyōgo Fujiwara Konoe Sakiko 藤原近衛 前子 1575 11 August 1630 later Chukamonin 中和門院 daughter of Konoe Sakihisa 近衛 前久 First Daughter Princess Shōkō 聖興女王 1590 1594 Second Daughter Princess Ryutōin 龍登院宮 1592 1600 Third Daughter Imperial Princess Seishi 清子内親王 1593 1674 married Takatsukasa Nobuhisa Fourth Daughter Princess Bunkō 文高女王 1595 1644 Third Son Imperial Prince Kotohito 政仁親王 29 June 1596 11 September 1680 later Emperor Go Mizunoo Fifth Daughter Princess Son ei 尊英女王 1598 1611 Fourth Son Konoe Nobuhiro 近衛 信尋 24 June 1599 15 November 1649 Seventh Son Imperial Prince Takamatsu no miya Yoshihito 29 April 1603 14 July 1638 高松宮好仁親王 4 Ninth Son Ichijō Akiyoshi 一条 昭良 12 June 1605 11 March 1672 Sixth Daughter Imperial Princess Teishi 貞子内親王 1606 1675 married Nijō Yasumichi Tenth Son Imperial Prince Morochika 庶愛親王 later Imperial Prince Priest Sonkaku 1608 1661 尊覚法親王 Twelfth Daughter Princess Son ren 尊蓮女王 1614 1627 Consort Hi Kiyohara Furuichi Taneko 清原古市 胤子 1583 1658 daughter of Furuichi Tanehide 古市胤栄 Ninth Daughter Princess Rei un in 冷雲院宮 1611 5 Eleventh Son Imperial Prince Priest Dōkō 道晃法親王 8 April 1612 5 August 1679 Tenth Daughter Princess Kukain 空花院宮 1613 Consort Hi Daughter of Chutō Tokohiro 中東時広 d 1680 Twelfth Son Imperial Prince Priest Dōshu 道周法親王 1613 1634 Thirteenth Son Imperial Prince Priest Ji in 慈胤法親王 1617 1699 Lady in waiting Naishi no Suke Fujiwara Nakayama Chikako 藤原中山親子 1576 1608 daughter of Namayama Oyatsuna 中山親綱 First Son Imperial Prince Katahito 1588 1648 良仁親王 later Imperial Prince Priest Kakushin Second Son Imperial Prince Priest Shōkai 承快法親王 1591 1609 Lady in waiting Naishi no Suke Fujiwara Hino Teruko 藤原日野 輝子 1581 1607 daughter of Hino Terusuke 日野輝資 Fifth Son Imperial Prince Toshiatsu 1602 1651 毎敦親王 later Imperial Prince Priest Sonsei 尊性法親王 Lady in waiting Naishi no Suke Fujiwara Jimyōin Motoko 藤原持明院 基子 d 1644 daughter of Jimyōin Motonori 持明院基孝 Sixth Son Imperial Prince Tsuneyoshi 常嘉親王 later Imperial Prince Priest Gyōnen 尭然法親王 1602 1661 Lady in waiting Naishi no Suke Minamoto Niwata Tomoko 源庭田 具子 d 1626 daughter of Niwata Shigetomo 庭田重具 Eight Son Imperial Prince Priest Ryōjun 良純法親王 1603 1669 Lady in waiting Naishi no Suke Fujwara Hamuro Nobuko 藤原葉室 宣子 d 1679 daughter of Hamuro Yorinobu 葉室頼宣 Eleventh Daughter Princess Sonsei 尊清女王 1613 1669 Handmaid Naishi no Jō Taira Nishinotōin Tokiko 平西洞院 時子 d 1661 daughter of Nishinotōin Tokiyoshi 西洞院時慶 Seventh Daughter Princess Eishu 永崇女王 1609 1690 Eighth Daughter Princess Kō un in 高雲院宮 1610 1612 Events of Go Yōzei s life editPrince Katahito became emperor when his grandfather abdicated The succession senso was considered to have been received by the new monarch and shortly thereafter Emperor Go Yōzei is said to have acceded sokui 3 A distinct act of senso was unrecognized prior to Emperor Tenji and all sovereigns except Jitō Yōzei Go Toba and Fushimi have senso and sokui in the same year until the reign of Emperor Go Murakami 6 The events during his lifetime shed some light on his reign The years of Go Yōzei s reign correspond with the start of the Tokugawa shogunate under the leadership of Tokugawa Ieyasu and Tokugawa Hidetada On 31 December 1571 the Imperial prince who became known by the posthumous name of Go Yōzei tennō was born 7 On 5 November 1586 Prince Katahito was given the title Crown Prince and heir 3 and within a month Tenshō 14 on the 7th day of the 11th month Ogimachi gave the reins of government to his grandson who would become Emperor Go Yōzei There had been no such Imperial transition since Emperor Go Hanazono abdicated in 1464 Kanshō 5 The dearth of abdications is attributable to the disturbed state of the country and because there was neither any dwelling for an ex emperor nor excess funds in the treasury to support him 8 3 7 In 1586 Tenshō 14 in the 12th month a marriage with Lady Asahi the youngest sister of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu was arranged and the kampaku Toyotomi Hideyoshi was nominated to be Daijō daijin Chancellor of the Realm 3 In 1588 Tenshō 16 7th month Emperor Go Yōzei and his father visit Toyotomi Hideyoshi s mansion in Kyoto This was the first time that an emperor appeared in public since 1521 2 111 Hideyoshi led an army to the Kantō where he lay siege to Odawara Castle in 1588 Tenshō 18 7th month When the fortress fell Hōjō Ujimasa died and his brother Hōjō Ujinao submitted to Hideyoshi s power thus ending a period of serial internal warfare which had continued uninterrupted since the Ōnin War 1467 1477 3 The Keichō expedition to Korea was en route to invade China in 1592 Keichō 1 2 111 112 Toyotomi Hideyoshi the Taikō died in his Fushimi Castle at the age of 63 on 18 September 1598 Keichō 3 on the 18th day of the 8th month 3 The Battle of Sekigahara took place in 1600 On 21 October Keichō 5 15th day of the 9th month the Tokugawa clan and its allies decisively vanquished all opposition 3 Two years later Keichō 8 the Kyōto Daibutsu was destroyed by fire Tokugawa Ieyasu became shōgun on 24 March 1603 Keichō 8 which effectively began what was later known as the Edo bakufu Toyotomi Hideyori was elevated to Naidaijin in the Imperial court 3 In 1605 Keichō 10 15th day of the 12th month a new volcanic island Hachijōko jima arose from the sea at the side of Hachijō Island 八丈島 Hachijō jima in the Izu Islands 伊豆諸島 Izu shotō which stretch south and east from the Izu Peninsula 3 In 1606 Keichō 11 construction began on Edo Castle and on Sunpu Castle the following year Keichō 12 3 1609 Keichō 14 saw the Invasion of Ryukyu by Shimazu daimyō of Satsuma 2 3 During the following year Keichō 15 reconstruction of the Daibutsu hall in Kyōto began and Toyotomi Hideyori came to Kyoto to visit the former Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu On 20 May 1610 Keichō 15 the 27th day of the 3rd month the emperor announces his intention to resign in favor of his son Masahito 3 9 Go Yōzei abdicated on 9 May 1611 and his son Prince Masahito received the succession the senso Shortly thereafter Go Mizunoo formally ascended to the throne the sokui 3 7 Legacy edit Go Yōzei s reign corresponds to the rule of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and the beginning of the Edo Bakufu He was the sovereign who confirmed the legitimacy of their accession to power and this period allowed the Imperial Family to recover a small portion of its diminished powers This Emperor gave Toyotomi Hideyoshi the rank of Taikō originally a title given to the father of the emperor s chief advisor Kampaku or a retired Kampaku which was essential to increase his status and effectively stabilize his power citation needed When Tokugawa Ieyasu was given the title of Sei i Taishōgun the future of any anticipated Tokugawa shogunate was by no means assured nor was his relationship to the emperor at all settled He gradually began to interfere in the affairs of the Imperial Court The right to grant ranks of court nobility and change the era became a concern of the bakufu However the Imperial Court s poverty during the Warring States Era seemed likely to become a thing of the past as the bakufu provided steadily for its financial needs citation needed Go Yōzei did abdicate in favor of his third son but he wanted to be succeeded by his younger brother Imperial Prince Hachijō no miya Toshihito 八条宮智仁親王 first of the Hachijō no miya line later called Katsura no miya who built the Katsura Imperial Villa citation needed Go Yōzei loved literature and art He published the Kobun Kokyo and part of Nihon Shoki with movable type dedicated to the emperor by Toyotomi Hideyoshi citation needed After abdication Go Yōzei lived for six years in the Sentō Imperial Palace and thereafter it became the usual place to which abdicated emperors would retire 2 113 The name of this palace and its gardens was Sentō goshō and emperors who had abdicated were sometimes called Sentō goshō Go Yōzei died on 25 September 1617 7 The kami of Emperor Go Yōzei is enshrined with other emperors at the imperial mausoleum misasagi called Fukakusa no kita no misasagi 深草北陵 in Fushimi ku Kyoto 2 423 Kugyō edit Kugyō 公卿 is a collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre Meiji eras Even during those years in which the court s actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal the hierarchic organization persisted In general this elite group included only three to four men at a time These were hereditary courtiers whose experience and background would have brought them to the pinnacle of a life s career During Go Hanazono s reign this apex of the Daijō kan included Kampaku Regent for an adult Emperor Hashiba Toyotomi Hideyoshi 1585 1592 Hashiba Toyotomi Hidetsugu 1592 1595 Kujō Fujiwara Kanetaka 1601 1604 Konoe Fujiwara Nobutada 1605 1606 Takatsukasa Fujiwara Nobufusa 1606 1609 Kujō Fujiwara Tadahide 1609 1612 Daijō daijin Chancellor Hashiba Toyotomi Hideyoshi 1586 1598 Sadaijin Minister of the Left Konoe Fujiwara Nobusuke 1585 1592 Hashiba Toyotomi Hidetsugu 1592 1595 Kujō Fujiwara Kanetaka 1601 Konoe Nobutada formerly Nobusuke second time 1601 1605 Takatsukasa Fujiwara Nobufusa 1606 1609 Udaijin Minister of the Right Imadegawa Fujiwara Harusue 1585 1595 1599 1603 Shōgun Tokugawa Minamoto Ieyasu 1603 Hashiba Toyotomi Hideyori 1605 1607 Kujō Fujiwara Tadahide 1607 1612 Naidaijin Minister of the Center Hashiba Toyotomi Hideyoshi 1585 1587 Oda Taira Nobukatsu 1587 1590 Sanjōnishi Kinkuni one day in 1588 Hashiba Toyotomi Hidetsugu 1592 Tokugawa Minamoto Ieyasu 1596 1603 Hashiba Toyotomi Hideyori 1603 1605 Shōgun Tokugawa Minamoto Hidetada 1605 1606 Takatsukasa Fujiwara Nobufusa 1606 Takatsukasa Fujiwara Nobuhisa 1611 1612 Eras of Go Yōzei s reign editThe years of Go Yōzei s reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengō Tenshō 1573 1592 Bunroku 1592 1596 and Keichō 1596 1615 3 Ancestry editAncestors of Emperor Go Yōzei8 Emperor Go Nara 1495 1557 4 Emperor Ōgimachi 1517 1593 9 Madenokōji Eiko 1494 1522 2 Prince Masahito 1552 1586 10 Madenokōji Hidefusa 1492 1563 5 Madenokōji Fusako d 1581 11 Hatakeyama1 Emperor Go Yōzei12 Kanshuji Tadatoyo 1503 1594 6 Kanshuji Haruhide 1523 1577 13 Ise3 Kanshuji Haruko 1553 1620 14 Awaya Mototaka7 Awaya Motoko15 KanshujiSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Emperor Go Yōzei Emperor of Japan List of Emperors of Japan Imperial cult nbsp Japanese Imperial kamon a stylized chrysanthemum blossomReferences edit 後陽成天皇 107 in Japanese Imperial Household Agency n d Retrieved 2022 08 03 a b c d e f g h i j Ponsonby Fane Richard 1959 The Imperial House of Japan a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Titsingh Isaac 1834 von Klaproth Julius ed Nipon o dai itsi ran ou Annales des empereurs du Japon pp 402 409 first Takamatsu no miya Died young Kitabatake Chikafusa 1980 A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns Jinnō Shōtōki of Kitabatake Chikafusa Translated by Varley H Paul p 44 a b c d Meyer Eva Marie 1999 Japans Kaiserhof in der Edo Zeit p 186 Ponsonby Fane Richard A B 1956 Kyoto the Old Capital of Japan 794 1869 pp 340 341 Hirai Kiyoshi 1950 A Short History of the Retired Emperor s Palace in the Edo Era Architectural Institute of Japan The Japanese Construction Society Academic Dissertation Report Collection 61 143 150 doi 10 3130 aijsaxx 61 0 143 Retrieved 2022 08 04 Regnal titlesPreceded byEmperor Ōgimachi Emperor of Japan Go Yōzei1586 1611 Succeeded byEmperor Go Mizunoo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emperor Go Yōzei amp oldid 1190425029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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