Difference between revisions of "Ashikaga shogunate"

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===Notes & References===
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*[[Albert M. Craig]], ''The Heritage of Japanese Civilization'', Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 41.
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===Notes===
 
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[[Category:Muromachi Period]][[Category:Political Institutions]]
 
[[Category:Muromachi Period]][[Category:Political Institutions]]
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Revision as of 01:00, 27 January 2014

Stele marking the southwestern corner of the former site of the chief governmental offices of the Muromachi bakufu at Muromachi-Imadegawa.
  • Dates: 1336-1573
  • Japanese: 室町幕府 (Muromachi bakufu)

The Muromachi shogunate, ruled by members of the Ashikaga clan, was the second of Japan's three shogunates. Based in the Muromachi district of Kyoto, it was stronger than the preceding Kamakura shogunate, wielding more direct power over more of the archipelago, but was still considerably weaker than the Tokugawa shogunate which would follow.

The Ashikaga were descended from Minamoto no Yoshiie, whose son Yoshikuni settled in the Ashikaga district of Shimotsuke province. Yoshikuni's first son took the name Nitta while his second took Ashikaga. The Ashikaga became very wealthy under the Hôjô Regents and their defection to the Imperial cause in 1333 sealed the Hôjô's fate. Ashikaga Takauji then turned against Emperor Go-Daigo and in 1336 was named the first Ashikaga shôgun.

The shogunate's bureaucracy was divided into four offices - one more than the Kamakura shogunate. These included an office overseeing police and military matters, one for financial affairs, one for judicial affairs, and one which maintained records, especially records related to land and taxation. The Ashikaga appointed shugo, or military governors, to govern the provinces. His most trusted vassals were granted positions within the bureaucracy, and simultaneously held shugo positions in the areas immediately surrounding Kyoto. All the shugo throughout the archipelago were nominally vassals of the shogun, but enjoyed considerable autonomy, and would eventually (beginning around the time of the Ônin War in 1467-1477) transform into the Sengoku daimyo, claiming supreme local authority in their respective territories.

The Ashikaga were seriously weakened after the Ônin War (1467-77) and eventually eclipsed by Oda Nobunaga in 1573, who banished the last Ashikaga shôgun, Ashikaga Yoshiaki, from Kyoto.

List of Ashikaga shoguns

Name Life Reign
1305-1358 1338-1358
1330-1367 1359-1367
1358-1408 1368-1394
1386-1428 1394-1423
1407-1429 1423-1425
1425-1428
1394-1441 1429-1441
1434-1443 1441-1443
1436-1490 1443-1473
1465-1489 1473-1489
1466-1523 1490-1493
1480-1511 1493-1508
1508-1521
1511-1550 1521-1546
1536-1565 1546-1565
1564-1568 1568
1537-1597 1568-1573

Notes & References

  • Albert M. Craig, The Heritage of Japanese Civilization, Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 41.
  1. Repeat reign
  2. Repeat reign
Preceded by:
Kemmu Restoration
Kamakura Shogunate
1336-1573
Succeeded by:
Azuchi-Momoyama Period