-
Jōkyū War (承久の乱,
jōkyū no ran), also
known as the
Jōkyū Disturbance or the
Jōkyū Rebellion, was
fought in ****an
between the
forces of
Retired Emperor Go-Toba...
-
Jōkyū (承久), also
called Shōkyū, was a ****anese era name (年号, nengō, lit. year name)
after Kempō and
before Jōō. This
period spanned the
years from April...
-
figurehead himself,
strains emerged between Kyoto and Kamakura, and in 1221 the
Jōkyū War
broke out
between the
cloistered Emperor Go-Toba and the
second regent...
-
shikken (regent) of the shōgun from 1203. The
Kamakura shogunate saw the
Jōkyū War in 1221 and the
Mongol invasions of ****an
under Kublai Khan in 1274...
-
political and
military struggle was
called the
Jōkyū War or the
Jōkyū Incident (
Jōkyū-no ran).
After the
Jōkyū-no ran,
Juntoku was sent into
exile on Sado...
- the
Jōkyū Incident, an
unsuccessful attempt by Juntoku's father, the
Retired Emperor Go-Toba, to
overthrow the
Kamakura Bakufu. 13 May 1221 (
Jōkyū 3, 20th...
- daughter:
Imperial Princess Akiko (昱子内親王; 1231-1246) In 1221,
because of the
Jōkyū Incident, an
unsuccessful attempt by
Emperor Go-Toba to
seize real power...
- and the
stimulus for a
reorganization of the
warrior monks.
Unlike the
Jōkyū War and
Mongol invasions of the 13th century, the Ōnin War was
fought primarily...
- of
secret police and
widely feared.
Rokuhara Tandai was set up
after the
Jōkyū Incident in 1221. The two
chiefs were
called Kitakata (北方) and Minamikata...
- ****anese era name (年号, nengō, lit. year name)
after Kenryaku and
before Jōkyū. This
period spanned the
years from
December 1213
through April 1219. The...