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*''Sect: [[Jodo Shinshu|Jôdo Shinshû]]''
*''Established: [[1478]]-[[1483]]''
*''Destroyed: [[1532]]''
*''Japanese:'' 山科本願寺 ''(Yamashina Honganji)''

Yamashina Mido, also known as Yamashina Hongan-ji, was a [[Buddhist temple]] in [[Kyoto]] which was used as a fortress by the [[Ikko-ikki|Ikkô-ikki]], a organization of warrior monks and lay zealots who opposed [[samurai]] rule.

==History==
The temple was originally founded by [[Rennyo]], abbot of the [[Jodo Shinshu|Jôdo Shinshû]] sect whose preachings spurred the creation of the Ikkô-ikki. Following the [[1465]] destruction of the chief Jôdo Shinshû temple, the [[Hongan-ji]] in Kyoto, Rennyo spent roughly a decade in the provinces.

He returned to Kyoto in 1478; the construction of the Yamashina Mido was completed in 1483, becoming the center of the Jôdo Shinshû sect. Rennyo remained there for over a decade, leaving in 1496 and traveling to the area now known as [[Osaka]], where he would found the [[Ishiyama Honganji]].

Over the next several decades, the Yamashina Mido remained the central headquarters of the sect, even as the Ishiyama Honganji and the city of Osaka grew in size and prominence. In the 1530s, the Ikkô-ikki began to undertake attacks on major religious centers in the cities as other bands of Ikkô mobs had done against samurai rulers in the provices. The mobs attacked the Nichiren [[Kenpon-ji]] in [[Sakai]], the [[Kofuku-ji|Kôfuku-ji]] and [[Kasuga shrine]]s in [[Nara]], among other sites, and incurred the ire of both clergy and lay adherents to [[Nichiren]] and other sects.

Kyoto, meanwhile, had been in the process, for decades, of being rebuilt following the extensive destruction of the city in the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] of 1467-1477. The rising urban merchant class consisted largely of adherents to the Nichiren sect of Buddhism, and tensions soon led to attacks on the Ikkô-ikki in the city. In 1532, [[Hosokawa Harumoto]] and [[Rokkaku Sadayori]] led a combination of samurai and townspeople in attacking and destroying the Yamashina Mido.

[[Shonyo]], abbot of Yamashina, fled along with many of his followers, taking refuge in the Ishiyama Honganji. He successfully resisted another attack by Hosokawa there, and the Ishiyama Honganji remained the headquarters of the sect for almost fifty years.

==References==
*Turnbull, Stephen (2005). 'Japanese Fortified Temples and Monasteries AD 710-1602.' Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp9-10.

[[Category:Temples]]
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