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词条 Prince Moriyoshi
释义

  1. Family

  2. See also

  3. References

  4. Further reading

{{nihongo|Prince Moriyoshi|護良親王|Moriyoshi Shinnō|also called Prince Morinaga or Prince Daitō}} (1308 – August 12, 1335) was a Japanese prince and monk.[1]

He was the son of Emperor Go-Daigo and his consort Minamoto no Chikako.

Moriyoshi was named by his father as the head abbot of the Enryaku-ji temple on Mount Hiei.[2]

Go-Daigo attempted to seize power in 1331 during the Genkō War. Prince Moriyoshi joined forces with Kusunoki Masashige. Moriyoshi tenaciously defended Mount Yoshino. Masashige's heroics defending Chihaya, together with Moriyoshi's efforts to rally troops, brought a large number of warriors to the loyalist cause. By 1333, the rival warlords Ashikaga Takauji and Nitta Yoshisada had both joined the cause; Yoshisada would lay siege to Kamakura in the same year. When the city finally fell, Regent Hōjō Takatoki fled to Tōshō temple, where he and his entire family committed suicide. This marked the end of Hōjō power.[1]{{rp|173–174, 180–181}}

Restored to the throne, Go-Daigo started the Kenmu Restoration. After refusing to appoint Ashikaga Takauji to the post of sei-i taishōgun, Daigo gave it to Prince Morinaga instead.[3] Go-Daigo made the double mistake of giving the title to his sons Moriyoshi and Norinaga, two civilians, thus alienating Takauji and the warrior class, who felt he, as a military man and a descendant of the Minamoto clan, should have been shōgun instead.

Takauji seized Moriyoshi in Yoshino "on imperial warrant", after rumors attributed to Go-Daigo's consort Renshi, that he was preparing an attack. Moriyoshi was then sent to Takauji's brother Tadayoshi in Kamakura. Tadayoshi had Moriyoshi beheaded in late August 1335.[2]{{rp|34}}

A Shinto shrine, Kamakura-gū, was built around the cave where Prince Moriyoshi was imprisoned. It was dedicated to him by Emperor Meiji in 1869.

Family

  • Father: Emperor Go-Daigo
  • Mother: Minamoto no Chikako
  • Wife: daughter of Kitabatake Moronaga
  • Child: Prince Okinaga (b. 1326)

See also

  • Kamakura-gū
  • Myōhō–ji

References

1. ^{{Cite book |last=Sato |first=Hiroaki |title=Legends of the Samurai |publisher=Overlook Duckworth |year=1995 |ISBN=9781590207307 |page=173}}
2. ^{{Cite book |last=Sansom |first=George |title=A History of Japan, 1334–1615 |publisher=Stanford University Press |year=1961 |ISBN=0804705259 |pages=8, 10}}
3. ^{{Cite book |last=Morris |first=Ivan |title=The Nobility of Failure |publisher=Holt, Rinehart and Winston |year=1975 |ISBN=9780030108112 |pages=126}}

Further reading

  • A Guide to Kamakura, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110514105526/http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~QM9T-KNDU/kamakugu.htm Kamakura-gū], retrieved on June 21, 2008
  • {{cite book

|last=Shirai
|first=Eiji
|title=Kamakura Jiten
|publisher=Tōkyōdō Shuppan
|year=1976
|isbn=4-490-10303-4
|language=Japanese
}}
  • {{cite book

|last=John Whitney Hall
|first=Peter Duus
|title=The Cambridge History of Japan
|editor=Yamamura Kozo
|publisher=Cambridge University Press
|location=Cambridge
|year=1990
|isbn=978-0-521-22354-6
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nT9CI5YQF_4C{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Moriyoshi }}

9 : 1308 births|1335 deaths|14th-century Japanese people|14th-century shōguns|Japanese princes|Shōguns|Genkō War|14th-century executions|People executed by Japan by decapitation

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