| The Taira clan was one of the four most prominent families of court aristocracy in the [[Heian period]], along with the [[Minamoto clan|Minamoto]], [[Tachibana clan|Tachibana]], and [[Fujiwara clan]]s; in the 1150s-1180s, under [[Taira no Kiyomori]], they became the most powerful clan in the realm. The Taira were defeated by the Minamoto, however, in the [[Genpei War]] of [[1180]]-[[1185]], and all but destroyed. The Taira would never achieve prominence again, but many prominent [[samurai]] clans claimed descent from the Taira, whether legitimately, or in order to claim more elite ancestry, and legitimacy as rulers. | | The Taira clan was one of the four most prominent families of court aristocracy in the [[Heian period]], along with the [[Minamoto clan|Minamoto]], [[Tachibana clan|Tachibana]], and [[Fujiwara clan]]s; in the 1150s-1180s, under [[Taira no Kiyomori]], they became the most powerful clan in the realm. The Taira were defeated by the Minamoto, however, in the [[Genpei War]] of [[1180]]-[[1185]], and all but destroyed. The Taira would never achieve prominence again, but many prominent [[samurai]] clans claimed descent from the Taira, whether legitimately, or in order to claim more elite ancestry, and legitimacy as rulers. |
− | The most prominent and powerful lineage or family within the broader clan was the ''Kammu Heishi'', who claimed descent from [[Emperor Kammu]], through four of the eight sons of Takamochi, son of Takami, who in turn was the son of [[Prince Kazurahara]], eldest son of Emperor Kammu.<ref>Karl Friday, ''Samurai Warfare and the State in Early Medieval Japan'', Routledge (2004), 9. </ref> | + | The most prominent and powerful lineage or family within the broader clan was the ''Kammu Heishi'', who claimed descent from [[Emperor Kammu]], through four of the eight sons of Takamochi, son of Takami, who in turn was the son of [[Prince Kazurahara]], eldest son of Emperor Kammu.<ref>Karl Friday, ''Samurai Warfare and the State in Early Medieval Japan'', Routledge (2004), 9. </ref> The Kammu Heishi, at that time based chiefly in [[Ise province]], rose to prominence in the 11th century as warriors in the service of certain retired emperors, just at the same time that the [[Seiwa Genji]], the most prominent lineage of the Minamoto clan, similarly rose to prominence defeating enemies of the Court in [[Tohoku|Tôhoku]]. The Kammu Heishi, led by Taira no Kiyomori, gained further power in the [[Hogen Rebellion|Hôgen Rebellion]] of [[1156]], and the following [[Heiji Rebellion]] of [[1159]], as he led forces in the service of Retired [[Emperor Go-Shirakawa]], alongside some Minamoto leaders, to victory against other Taira and Minamoto forces.<ref>William de Bary, ''Sources of Japanese Tradition'', vol 1, Columbia University Press (2001), 270.</ref> |
| The story of the fall of the Taira is related in the eponymous romantic / fictionalized epic, ''[[The Tale of the Heike]]''. | | The story of the fall of the Taira is related in the eponymous romantic / fictionalized epic, ''[[The Tale of the Heike]]''. |