Emperor Shirakawa
Emperor Shirakawa was the 72nd emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession.
Shirakawa's reign lasted from 1073 to 1087.
Biography
Before his ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne, his personal name was Sadahito-shinnō.He was the eldest son of Emperor Go-Sanjō and Fujiwara Shigeko.
Shirakawa had one Empress and one Imperial Consort and nine Imperial sons and daughters.
- Empress : Fujiwara no Kenshi —Minamoto Akifusa‘s daughter, adopted by Fujiwara Morozane
- * First Son: Imperial Prince Atsufumi
- * First Daughter: Imperial Princess Yasuko later Ikuhomon’in
- * Third Daughter: Imperial Princess Reishi saigū
- * Third Son: Imperial Prince Taruhito later Emperor Horikawa
- * Fourth Daughter: Imperial Princess Shinshi —Tsuchimikado Saiin
- Consort : Fujiwara Michiko, Fujiwara no Yoshinaga‘s daughter
- * Second Daughter: Imperial Princess Yoshiko Rokkaku >saigū at the Grand Shrine of Ise
- Lady-in-Waiting: Fujiwara Tsuneko, Fujiwara no Tsunehira's daughter
- * Second Son: Imperial Prince Priest Kakugyō
- Court Lady: Minamoto Raishi, Minamoto Akifusa's daughter
- * Fourth Son: Imperial Prince Priest Kakuhō
- Minamoto Yoriko, Minamoto Yoritsune's daughter
- * Fifth Daughter: Imperial Princess Kanshi —Saiin
- Fujiwara Suesane's daughter
- * Sixth Daughter: Imperial Princess Junko
- Kasuga-dono, Fujiwara Morokane's daughter
- * Fifth Son: Imperial Prince Priest Shōe
- Minamoto Masanaga's daughter
- * Gyōkei
- Bizen-dono, Minamoto Arimune's daughter
- *Engyō
- Minamoto Akifusa's daughter
- * Josho
- Gion Nyōgo
- Gion Nyōgo‘s younger sister
- Rō-no-Kata, Fujiwara Michisue's daughter
- Kamo Nyōgo (賀茂女御, 1070 - 1148), Kamo Shigesuke's daughter
- Kamo Nyōgo‘s younger sister, Kamo Shigesuke's daughter
Events of Shirakawa's life
When he was very young, his relations with his father were very cold, but in 1068, when his father was enthroned, he was proclaimed a shinnō, becoming Imperial Prince Sadahito. In 1069, he became Crown Prince and in due course, he became emperor at the age of 19.
- January 18, 1073 : In the 5th year of Emperor Go-Sanjō-tennō 's reign, the emperor abdicated; and the succession was received by his son. Shortly thereafter, Emperor Shirakawa is said to have acceded to the throne.
- 1074 : Dianagon Minamoto- no Takakune asked to be relieved of his duties because of his age. He was 71, and he wanted to retire to Uji. In his retirement, he was visited by many friends with whom he pursued research into the history of Japan. He brought this work together in a book.
- 1074 : The former kampaku Fujiwara Yorimichi died at the age of 83. In this same period, his sister, the widow of Emperor Ichijo, died at the age of 87.
- 1074 : Empress Jōtō-mon In died at the age of 87.
- 1077 : Shirakawa went to the Kamo Shrines; and he visited Kiyomizu-dera and other Buddhist temples.
- 1077 : Udaijin Minamoto no Morofusa died at of an ulcer at the age of 70.
- 1077 : The emperor caused Hosshō-ji to be built at Shirakawa in fulfillment of a sacred vow. This temple became only the first of a series of "sacred vow" temples to be created by Imperial decree. Hosshō-ji's nine-storied pagoda would become the most elaborate Imperial-sponsored temple structure ever erected up to this time.
- 1079 : The emperor visited the Fushimi Inari-taisha at the foot of Mount Fushimi and the Yasaka Shrine.
- May 26, 1081 : The Buddhist Temple of Miidera was set on fire by the monks of a rival sect on Mt. Hiei.
- 1081 : Miidera was burned again by monks from Mt. Hiei.
- 1083 : At Hosshō-ji, construction begins on a nine-story pagoda.
- 1084 : The empress Kenshi, the emperor's principal consort, died. Shirakawa was afflicted with great grief, and for a time, he turned over the administration of the government to his ministers.
- 1087 : Shirakawa announced his intention to abdicate in favor of his son.
- January 3, 1087 : Shirakawa formally abdicated, and he took the title Daijō-tennō. Shirakawa had personally occupied the throne for 14 years; and for the next 43 years, he would exercise broad powers in what will come to be known as cloistered rule.
On the same day that Taruhito was proclaimed as his heir, Shirakawa abdicated;, and Taruhito became Emperor Horikawa. The now-retired Emperor Shirakawa was the first to attempt what became customary cloistered rule. He exercised power, ruling indirectly from the Shirakawa-in ; nevertheless, nominal sesshō and kampaku offices continued to exist for a long time.
- 1087 : Daijō-tennō Shirakawa retired himself to Uji.
- 1088 : The emperor paid a visit to his father's home.
- 1088 : Shirakawa visited the temples at Mt. Hiei.
- 1088 : The sesshō Fujiwara Morozane was given additional honors with the further title of daijō-daijin. In this context, it matters a great deal that the mother of Emperor Horikowa, formerly the daughter of udaijin Minamoto no Akifusa, was also formerly the adopted child of Morozane.
- 1089 : Shirakawa made a second visit to Mt. Hiei; and this time, he stayed seven days.
- 1090 : Fujiwara Morozane was relieved of his responsibilities as sesshō and he was simultaneously named kampaku.
- 1094 : Morozane resigned from his position as kampaku.
- 1095 : Emperor Horikawa paid visits to the Shinto Iwashimizu Shrine and to the Shinto Kamo Shrines.
- 1095 : The emperor was stricken with intermittent fevers; and he ordered prayers to be offered for his return to good health. After Horikawa recovered his health, he was generous and appreciative to the Buddhist priests who had prayed for his recovery.
- 1095 : The Buddhist priests of Mt. Hiei came down from their mountain to protest a dispute with Minamoto Yoshitsuna and other government officials which had led to military action and bloodshed. The priests carried a portable shrine as far as the central hall of Enryaku-ji, where a curse was laid on daijō-daijin Fujiwara Moromichi.
- 1096 : Former-Emperor Shirakawa entered the Buddhist priesthood at the age of 44 and received the Dharma name Yūkan.
After the death of Emperor Horikawa, Shirakawa's grandson became Emperor Toba. Shirakawa was still alive when Toba abdicated in turn to his son, who became Emperor Sutoku. By the time of his death in 1129, he had ruled as cloistered Emperor for 41 years and through the reigns of three emperors who were effectively little more than figureheads.
This emperor's posthumous name comes from Shirakawa-in, the name of the residence from which he conducted his cloistered rule after abdicating the throne. Another name was Rokujō no Mikado.
Kugyō
Kugyō is a collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras. Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.In general, this elite group included only three to four men at a time. These were hereditary courtiers whose experience and background would have brought them to the pinnacle of a life's career. During Shirakawa's reign, this apex of the Daijō-kan included:
Eras of Shirakawa's reign
The years of Shirakawa's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengō.- Enkyū
- Jōhō
- Jōryaku
- Eihō
- Ōtoku
Ancestry