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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 11851185 - Wikipedia

    April 15 – 1185 East Midlands earthquake occurs. It is the first earthquake in England for which there are reliable reports indicating the damage, which includes destruction of Lincoln Cathedral .

    • Lead-Up to The War
    • War Breaks Out
    • Yoritomo Takes Over
    • Minamoto In-Fighting
    • End of The War and Aftermath
    • Sources

    The Taira and Minamoto clans were rival powers behind the throne. They sought to control the emperors by having their own favorite candidates take the throne. In the Hogen Disturbance of 1156 and the Heiji Disturbance of 1160, though, it was the Taira who came out on top. Both families had daughters who had married into the imperial line. However, ...

    On May 5, 1180, Minamoto Yoritomo and his favored candidate for the throne, Prince Mochihito, sent out a call to war. They rallied samurai families related to or allied with the Minamoto, as well as warrior monks from various Buddhist monasteries. By June 15, Minister Kiyomori had issued a warrant for his arrest, so Prince Mochihito was forced to f...

    The leadership of the Minamoto clan passed to the 33-year-old Minamoto no Yoritomo, who was living as a hostage in the home of a Taira-allied family. Yoritomo soon learned that there was a bounty on his head. He organized some local Minamoto allies, and escaped from the Taira, but lost most of his small army in the Battle of Ishibashiyama on Septem...

    Kyoto erupted in panic at the news of the Taira defeat in Kurikara. On August 14, 1183, the Taira fled the capital. They took along most of the imperial family, including the child emperor, and the crown jewels. Three days later, Yoshinaka's branch of the Minamoto army marched into Kyoto, accompanied by the former Emperor Go-Shirakawa. Yoritomo was...

    What remained of the Taira loyalist army retreated into their heartland. It took the Minamoto some time to mop them up. Almost a year after Yoshitsune ousted his cousin from Kyoto, in February of 1185, the Minamoto seized the Taira fortress and make-shift capital at Yashima. On March 24, 1185, the final major battle of the Genpei War took place. It...

    Arnn, Barbara L. "Local Legends of the Genpei War: Reflections of Medieval Japanese History," Asian Folklore Studies, 38:2 (1979), pp. 1-10. Conlan, Thomas. "The Nature of Warfare in Fourteenth-Century Japan: The Record of Nomoto Tomoyuki," Journal for Japanese Studies, 25:2 (1999), pp. 299-330. Hall, John W. The Cambridge History of Japan, Vol. 3,...

  2. May 2, 2024 · Heian period, in Japanese history, the period between 794 and 1185, named for the location of the imperial capital, which was moved from Nara to Heian-kyō (Kyōto) in 794. The Chinese pattern of centralized government that was first adopted in the Nara period (710–784) gradually changed as the.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The Kamakura period (鎌倉時代, Kamakura jidai) is a time in the Japanese history from 1185 through 1333 in the history of Japan. [1] . This grouping of years is named after city of Kamakura which was the center of power of the Kamakura shogunate. [2] The government of shoguns which was functionally established in 1192 by Minamoto no Yoritomo. [3]

  4. Apr 11, 2017 · The Genpei War (1180-1185 CE), also known as the Taira-Minamoto War, was a conflict in Japan principally between two rival clans: the Minamoto and Taira, for control of the imperial throne.

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