Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Ashikaga shogunate (1338–1573)

View through CrossRef
Abstract The Ashikaga shogunate (bakufu) is named after the surname of the fifteen shoguns who exercised authority from 1338 until 1573. Also known as the Muromachi bakufu, after the street in Kyoto where some shoguns resided, this regime was largely based in the capital of Japan. Unlike the earlier Kamakura shogunate (1185–1333), which was a judicial regime located in eastern Japan, the Ashikaga shogunate was located in Kyoto, and was amalgamated with the imperial court. The Ashikaga strove not to amass land, but rather to give it away, and through largesse secure support. Perhaps their greatest gift, and a cause of most of the ensuing decentralization, was the 1351 promulgation of the hanzei, whereby half of a province's revenue was used for military supplies, and they had to rule or overawe these shugo in order to govern effectively.
Title: Ashikaga shogunate (1338–1573)
Description:
Abstract The Ashikaga shogunate (bakufu) is named after the surname of the fifteen shoguns who exercised authority from 1338 until 1573.
Also known as the Muromachi bakufu, after the street in Kyoto where some shoguns resided, this regime was largely based in the capital of Japan.
Unlike the earlier Kamakura shogunate (1185–1333), which was a judicial regime located in eastern Japan, the Ashikaga shogunate was located in Kyoto, and was amalgamated with the imperial court.
The Ashikaga strove not to amass land, but rather to give it away, and through largesse secure support.
Perhaps their greatest gift, and a cause of most of the ensuing decentralization, was the 1351 promulgation of the hanzei, whereby half of a province's revenue was used for military supplies, and they had to rule or overawe these shugo in order to govern effectively.

Related Results

The Influence of Mongol Invasion in the Kamakura Period on the Recession of the Kamakura Shogunate
The Influence of Mongol Invasion in the Kamakura Period on the Recession of the Kamakura Shogunate
This paper takes the two attempted invasions by the Yuan Dynasty (Mongol) during the Kamakura period as an example to analyze the influence of the invasion on the Kamakura Shogunat...
The Founder Ōuchi Hiroyo
The Founder Ōuchi Hiroyo
Abstract This chapter recounts how Ōuchi regional authority was established by Ōuchi Hiroyo, who destroyed his rivals during Japan’s civil wars of the fourteenth cen...
The Poet Who Challenged the Shogun: Asukai Masayo and Shinshoku Kokin Wakashū
The Poet Who Challenged the Shogun: Asukai Masayo and Shinshoku Kokin Wakashū
Abstract: During Japan's late medieval era, the Ashikaga shoguns wished to merge the imperial and warrior governments and establish a feudal monarchy. Shogun Ashikaga Yoshinori mad...
Literature and Buddhism in the Kamakura period
Literature and Buddhism in the Kamakura period
The Kamakura period (1185–1333) was a period of great change in the political, cultural, and social life of Japan, beginning with the establishment of the Kamakura shogunate by Min...
The State of Women and Women’s Education at the Beginning of Tokugawa Shogunate (1603-1651)
The State of Women and Women’s Education at the Beginning of Tokugawa Shogunate (1603-1651)
This study attempted to draw a more critical analysis of women and their education at the beginning of the Tokugawa period. Tokugawa, or the Edo period in Japan, was a warrior soci...
PELAKSANAAN PRINSIP KETERBUKAAN DALAM JUAL BELI TANAH BERDASARKAN KUHPERDATA
PELAKSANAAN PRINSIP KETERBUKAAN DALAM JUAL BELI TANAH BERDASARKAN KUHPERDATA
AbstrakAdanya ketidak seimbangan antara persediaan tanah yang terbatas dengan kebutuhan akan tanah sangat besar berakibat pada timbulnya masalah-masalah yang terkait dengan tanah, ...

Back to Top