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*''Japanese'': 南都焼討 (''Nanto yakiuchi''; lit. "Burning of the Southern Capital")
*[[Taira clan]] (40,000?) vs. [[sohei|warrior monks]] of [[Kofukuji|Kôfukuji]] and [[Todaiji|Tôdaiji]] (7000?)
**''Date: [[1180]]/12/28''<ref>The battle actually took place in [[1181]]. Though most of the imperial year Jishô 4 corresponds to 1180, the last several weeks of Jishô 4 coincide with January 1181 on the Western calendar.</ref>
**''Location: [[Nara]]''
**''Siege''

The Siege of Nara took place as part of the [[Genpei War]] of 1180-[[1185]]. [[Taira clan|Taira]] forces led by [[Taira no Shigehira]], and possibly numbering as many as 40,000 horsemen, according to the ''[[Heike monogatari]]''<ref name=morse>Morse, Samuel C. "Revealing the Unseen: The Master Sculptor Unkei and the Meaning of Dedicatory Objects in Kamakura-Period Sculpture." ''Impressions'' 31 (2010). p25.</ref>, marched on the former imperial capital of [[Nara]], aiming to subdue the temples of [[Kofukuji|Kôfukuji]] and [[Todaiji|Tôdaiji]] which had opposed the Taira both militarily and politically. The warrior monks who fought to defend the temples are cited by the war tale as numbering around 7,000, none on horseback<ref name=varley>Varley, Paul. ''Warriors of Japan as Portrayed in the War Tales''. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1994. pp112-113.</ref>.

==Background==

The Taira had gained power in the 1150s at the expense of the [[Minamoto clan|Minamoto]] and [[Fujiwara clan]]s; since the latter still maintained associations with the major temples of Nara, and therefore some considerable political power in the area, tensions between the Taira and Fujiwara simmered for over 20 years until the Taira finally made this move in the final days of Jishô 4 (Jan 1181). Kôfukuji was the tutelary temple of the Fujiwara clan, and furthermore, Kôfukuji and Tôdaiji had supported the Minamoto clan choice for imperial heir, [[Prince Mochihito]], over that of the Taira, the young [[Emperor Antoku|Antoku]],<ref name=sansom>Sansom, George. ''A History of Japan, to 1334''. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1958. p315.</ref> a conflict which broke out into outright battle at [[First Battle of Uji|Uji]] several months earlier, marking the beginning of the Genpei War.

According to the ''Heike monogatari'', [[Taira no Kiyomori]] sent a force of fifty mounted samurai, with no armor or bows & arrows, to seek a resolution to the conflict with the temples in a non-violent manner, ''[[akuso|akusô]]'' warrior monks sent by the temples captured and decapitated sixty of the riders, leading Kiyomori to order Shigehira to attack<ref name=varley/>.

==The Siege==

The battle itself is said to have begun at eight in the morning<ref name=varley/>. Though the monks had prepared various physical defenses, presumably in the form of wooden stockades or earthworks, the battle soon becomes a more disorganized general melee, the fighting continuing until nightfall<ref name=varley/>.

Sources seem to disagree on whether the city was set ablaze on the first night of fighting (according to Varley) or the second night (according to Morse). In any case, as night fell, Shigehira ordered houses in the northeast corner of the city to be set aflame, possibly in large part simply in order to illuminate the battlefield, a not uncommon practice, it would seem, at this time<ref name=varley/>. The blaze quickly spread, aided by the wind, and eventually consumed Kôfukuji, Tôdaiji, and [[Gangoji|Gangôji]]<ref name=morse/>, killing over 35,000 people, many of whom had sought refuge in the temples from the battle<ref name=varley/>.

The deaths and destruction were met with shock and dismay by the court, and though destroying the temples themselves may not have been intentional on Shigehira's part, he came to be reviled for it.

This and other battles of the Genpei War brought widespread destruction to major religious centers and objects. Following the end of the war, in the early [[Kamakura period]], many of the chief religious treasures of Nara and Kyoto were replaced or restored by the sculptors of the [[Kei school]], including [[Unkei]], [[Kaikei]], [[Tankei]]<ref name=morse/>.

==References==
*McCullough, Helen Craig (trans.). ''The Tale of the Heike''. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988. pp194-196.
<references/>

[[Category:Battles|Nara]]
[[Category:Heian Period]]
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