Read A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower Online
Authors: Kenneth Henshall
The H
j
sh
gunal regents became particularly dominant after 1221, when they survived a challenge to their power from the retired emperor Go-Toba (1180–1239, r.1183–98). Go-Toba had memories of the Genpei War when he had been installed as an infant emperor after Antoku’s death, and had long opposed the Minamoto and H
j
. Following his unsuccessful challenge the sh
gunate based a sh
gunal deputy in the capital to help keep a check on the court. Go-Toba himself was banished to remote Oki Island, off present-day Shimane Prefecture, and was eventually to die there. He is yet another well-known tragic figure of Japanese history.
The political and military power wielded by Masako raises the often asked question of whether there were female warriors. There were indeed a number of them, right through until the late 1860s, though in some cases it is difficult to separate legend from fact. They were certainly not as numerous as, for example, Celtic female warriors. Among the better-known female warriors, one of Yoritomo’s relatives, his cousin Yoshinaka (1154–84, whom Yoritomo had killed), had a concubine Tomoe Gozen (ca.1160–1247) who is credited with taking a number of heads during the Genpei War, and in modern history Nakano Takako (1847–68) was killed fighting in the Boshin War of 1868–69. However, female warriors were not formally recognised as samurai. The term applied to them was
onna bugeisha
, meaning literally ‘women skilled in martial arts’.
Though clearly much was happening at home, two of the most important events during the period of H
j
supremacy were of external origin. These were the attempted Mongol invasions of 1274 and 1281. These foreign threats probably helped the H
j
to retain power nationally, for,
together with periods of national alert before and after, they created a state of national emergency that over-rode any internal dissent for some thirty years.
When Genghis Khan’s grandson Kublai (1215–94) came to power as Emperor of Great Mongolia in 1260, the Mongol Empire already covered Korea, northern China, and indeed much of Eurasia. Kublai’s next main target was southern China, the base of the Sung (Song) forces. However, he also turned his attention to Japan. In 1268 he sent a letter to the ‘King of Japan’ threatening invasion if the Japanese did not recognise Mongol overlordship and agree to submit tribute to him.
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The Japanese authorities – court and sh
gunate alike – ignored this and subsequent letters, but nevertheless the sh
gunate put the coast of northwestern Ky
sh
, where any attack was expected to occur, on military alert.