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Topic: Hojo Tokiyori


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  Wikipedia: Shikken
Hojo Tokimasa, who was the son-in-law of first shogun Minamoto no Yoritomo, assumed shikken for the first time in 1203.
At first shikken was occupied by tokuso, the head of the Hojo clan, but Hojo Tokiyori separated the two posts.
He installed Hojo Nagatoki as shikken while he made his son Tokimune succeed tokuso.
www.factbook.org /wikipedia/en/s/sh/shikken.html   (179 words)

  
 Hojo Tokiyori - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hojo Tokiyori (北条 時頼 Hōjō Tokiyori; 1227-1263, r.
He was born to Hojo Tokiuji and a daughter of Adachi Kagemori.
In 1256 when he became a Buddhist priest, he transferred the position of shikken to Hojo Nagatoki, a son of Shigetoki while Tokiyori's infant son Tokimune succeeded Tokuso, the head of the Hojo clan.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hojo_Tokiyori   (295 words)

  
 Hojo Tokimune - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hojo Tokimune (北条 時宗, 1251 - 1284) was the eighth shikken (regent) of the Kamakura shogunate (reigned 1268 - 84), best known for leading the Japanese forces against the invasion of the Mongols.
Born as the eldest son of the regent Tokiyori, Tokimune became a shikken at age 18.
It is due to him that Zen Buddhism became firmly established in Kamakura, then later in Kyoto, and in the whole of Japan, especially among the warrior class.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hojo_Tokimune   (297 words)

  
 Tokuso - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tokuso (得宗 Tokusō) was the head of the main line Hojo clan, who monopolized the position of shikken (regents) of the Kamakura shogunate in Japan.
Tokiyori often worked out policies at private meetings (寄合 yoriai) at his residence instead of discussing at Hyōjō (評定), the council of the shogunate.
Because of illness, he installed his infant son Tokimune as the tokuso while Nagatoki, a collateral relative, was appointed as the shikken to assist Tokimune.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tokuso   (204 words)

  
 [No title]
Hojo Tokiyori, along with the rest of the statesmen of the Kamakura Government, were intoxicated with the deceptive wine of slander against the True Law of Buddhism and desired to protect their own personal interest and social standings.
Ryokan's temple, Gokurakuji, was constructed by Hojo Shigetoki, the assistant to Regent Hojo Tokiyori.
Shigetoki of Gokurakuji Temple: Denotes Hojo Shigetoki (1198- 1261), assistant to Regent Hojo Tokiyori.
www.nst.org /articles/nd8.txt   (847 words)

  
 Shikken: Encyclopedia topic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The post was monopolized by the Hojo clan (Hojo clan: the hojo clan () in history of japan is a family of regents...
Hojo Tokiyori (Hojo Tokiyori: hojo tokiyori (hj tokiyori; 1227-1263,...
Hojo Tokimune (Hojo Tokimune: hojo tokimune (, 1251 - 1284) was the eighth shikken...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /reference/shikken   (378 words)

  
 Hojo Tokimune
In order to strengthen its power base, the Hojo clan allies itself with the Mori and plans are made for Tokiyori to wed Akirako, the daughter of Mori Suemitsu.
In the aftermath of the war, Akirako is adopted by Hojo Shigetoki and given to Tokiyori in marriage.
Tokiyori and Adachi Yasumori arrange Tokimune's marriage to Noriko.
www.kikutv.com /shows/Japanese_Programs/Inactive/hojo_tokimune   (3227 words)

  
 Hojo clan: Encyclopedia topic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
8 Hojo Tokimune (Hojo Tokimune: hojo tokimune (, 1251 - 1284) was the eighth shikken...
Hojo Masako (Hojo Masako: hojo masako (hj masako, 1157-1225)...
See the late Hojo clan for the Hojo clan in Sengoku Period (Sengoku Period: the sengoku period (sengoku jidai) or "warring-states"...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /reference/hojo_clan   (320 words)

  
 kenchoji
Tokiyori Hojo (1227-1263), the Fifth Hojo Regent and the founder of the Temple, was an ardent devotee of Zen.
Eighth Hojo Regent Tokimune {toh-key-moo-neh} Hojo (1251-1284), son of Tokiyori, invited Sogen Mugaku {soh-ghen moo-gah-koo} (1226-1286), another Chinese priest, in 1279 from China as the Priest Rankei's successor.
Situated on the left-hand slope of the Hojo Hall, this sub-temple was initially built in 1307 by Sadatoki Hojo, the Ninth Hojo Regent, in memory of Priest Tokken Yakuo {tok-ken yah-koo-o} (1244-1320), the 15th chief priest.
www.asahi-net.or.jp /~QM9T-KNDU/kenchoji.htm   (6723 words)

  
 Hojo clan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The Hojo clan (北条氏) in History of Japan is a family of regents of the Kamakura Shogunate.
Hojo Tokimasa helped Minamoto no Yoritomo, a son-in-law and after the death of Yoritomo, became a regent, gaining a real power in the Shogunate.
See the late Hojo clan for the Hojo clan in Sengoku Period.
www.teachtime.com /en/wikipedia/h/ho/hojo_clan.html   (137 words)

  
 Wikipedia: Hikitsuke
The Hikitsuke was established by fifth shikken Hojo Tokiyori in 1249 to expedite an increasing number of lawsuits.
The Hikitsukeshu were mostly occupied by the Hojo clan.
In addition, the Hikitsukeshu and Hyojoshu lost effective power to the yoriai, which was held at tokuso's residence.
www.factbook.org /wikipedia/en/h/hi/hikitsuke.html   (210 words)

  
 SGI-USA-STUDY
The work was originally written in classical Chinese and submitted to Hojo Tokiyori through the offices of high-ranking government official Yadoya Mitsunori on the sixteenth day of the seventh month in the first year of Bunno (1260).
Tokiyori, the former Regent, was then living in retirement, but still effectively held the reins of power as the most influential member of the ruling Hojo clan.
It was with that intent and conviction that he penned this treatise and submitted it to Hojo Tokiyori, the retired regent and effective head of state.
www.sgi-usa-study.org /rissholb.htm   (4049 words)

  
 TOKUSO   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Tokuso was the head of the Hojo clan, who monopolized the position of shikken of the Kamakura shogunate in Japan.
The name tokuso is said to have come from Tokushū, the Buddhist name of Hojo Yoshitoki, but Hojo Tokimasa is usually regarded as the first tokuso.
Tokiyori often worked out policies at private meetings at his residence instead of discussing at Hyōjō, the council of the shogunate.
www.yotor.org /wiki/en/to/Tokuso.htm   (177 words)

  
 ja #24471 #23447 Tokuso #24471 #23447 Tokus #333 was the...
ja:得宗 "Tokuso" (得宗; Tokusō) was the head of the Hojo clan Hojo clan, who monopolized the position of shikken shikken (regents) of the Kamakura shogunate Kamakura shogunate in Japan Japan.
The name tokuso is said to have come from Tokushū (徳崇), the Buddhist name of Hojo Yoshitoki Hojo Yoshitoki, but Hojo Tokimasa Hojo Tokimasa is usually regarded as the first tokuso.
Because of illness, he installed his infant son Tokimune as the tokuso while Nagatoki Nagatoki, a collateral relative, was appointed as the shikken to assist Tokimune.
www.biodatabase.de /Tokuso   (214 words)

  
 Untitled   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
After trying to settle it peacefully and seeing that the Miura were arming themselves, Tokiyori attacks and Yasumura's entire family is killed.
1249 Tokiyori establishes a standing committee (the Hikitsuke-shû) which investigates all suits and appeals brought to the Council of State.
Tokiyori uses this as an excuse to remove Yoritsugu from the Shôgunate.
www.wilton.k12.ct.us /whs/fac/g/gilberts2/cc/kamakura.htm   (4285 words)

  
 Hojo Tokiyori - TheBestLinks.com - Coup, Japan, 1227, 1256, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Hojo Tokiyori - TheBestLinks.com - Coup, Japan, 1227, 1256,...
Hojo Tokiyori, Coup, Japan, 1227, 1256, 1246, 1263, Kamakura shogunate, Kujo...
There remain various legends that Tokiyori traveled incognito throughout Japan to inspect actual conditions and relieve people.
www.thebestlinks.com /Hojo_Tokiyori.html   (314 words)

  
 Hojo Tokimune: Encyclopedia topic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Hojo Tokimune (北条 時宗;, 1251 - 1284) was the eighth shikken (shikken: shikken () was the regent of the shogun in the kamakura shogunate...
Born as the eldest son of the regent Tokiyori (Tokiyori: hojo tokiyori (hj tokiyori; 1227-1263,...
When Tokimune died, Bukko said he had been a bodhisattva (bodhisattva: Buddhist worthy of nirvana who postpones it to help others), looked at people's welfare, betrayed no signs of joy or anger and studied Zen so that he reached enlightenment (enlightenment: Education that results in understanding and the spread of knowledge).
www.absoluteastronomy.com /reference/hojo_tokimune   (345 words)

  
 Tokuso   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Tokuso (得宗; Tokusō) was the head of the Hojo clan, who monopolized the position of shikken (regents) of the Kamakura shogunate in Japan.
In the late Kamakura period, tokuso became more powerful than shikken.
Tokuso came to held overwhelming power over gokenin and the rest of the Hojo clan.
www.teachtime.com /en/wikipedia/t/to/tokuso.html   (202 words)

  
 Intermediate Level Study - Rissho Ankoku Ron
This was the "Rissho Ankoku Ron." The Daishonin presented it to Hojo Tokiyori, the retired regent who was most influential at that time, through the offices of the government official Yadoya Mitsunori.
Though Tokiyori had at this time officially renounced the world and was living at a temple called Saimyo-ji, he was only in his early 30s and in fact continued to wield the actual authority of government.
Hojo Tokiyori never deigned to reply directly, but a month later, a mob attacked the Daishonin's dwelling at Matsubagayatsu, and the Daishonin had to flee for his life.
sgi-usa.org /buddhism/library/SokaGakkai/Study/Intermediate/Text2.htm   (12998 words)

  
 Kamakura bakufu - Metaweb   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The Japanese provinces became semi-autonomous under the daimyo, although in theory they were still obligated to the central government through their allegiance to the shogun.
The Minamoto remained the titular shoguns, with the Hojo holding the real power - thus ruling through a puppet shogun and a titular emperor.
The Kamakura bakufu came to an end in 1333 with the defeat and destruction of the Hojo clan.
www.metaweb.com /wiki/wiki.phtml?title=Japan   (900 words)

  
 Life of Nichiren
The most powerful man in the country was Hojo Tokiyori, a former regent of the Kamakura shogunate who had retired to Saimyo-ji, a Zen temple.
Tokiyori and the government officials appear to have taken no notice of the treatise.
The regent at the time was Hojo Nagatoki, whose father was Shigetoki, a lay priest at Gokuraku-ji temple and a confirmed enemy of the Daishonin.
www.nbaa.tv /Nichiren/lifeofnich.html   (3233 words)

  
 [No title]
Hojo Tokiyori's ambition in regard to the national culture which had resulted from the older forms of Buddhism, was to create a powerful military and cultural city.
He was entrusted with one of the Daishonin's most important writings, the Kamoku sho, or "Opening of the Eyes." Shijo Kingo was heavily pressured by his lord to renounce his faith and as a result suffered great hardship, but after having cured his lord from illness, received an estate three times the size originally possessed.
Ema Mitsutoki was a grandson of the second regent of the Kamakura Shogunate, Hojo Yoshitoki and son of Hojo Tomotoki, a member of the Supreme Court of the Shogunate.
www.nst.org /articles/nd6.txt   (1891 words)

  
 Hachi-No-Ki, A Perspective
The play is apparently based on a 1383 folktale, and that story tells of a supposed incident during the life of the historical Tokiyori Hojo (1226-1263).
Tokiyori, at age twenty, succeeded his brother as regent or governor to the Minamoto-clan shogun, the supreme military general.
Tokiyori held his post for ten years, consolidating the regent’s power until his health began failing.
www.phoenixbonsai.com /HachiNoKi.html   (1824 words)

  
 Ancient Japan - 4
In 1203 Hojo Tokimasa, Masako's father, assumed the position of regent (shikken) for the shogun, an office that was held until 1333 by nine successive members of the Hojo family.
Instead, the Hojo family dispatched a bakufu army that occupied Kyoto, and Go-Toba was arrested and banished to the island of Oki.
The bond between the Hojo and the Kamakura vassals was strained to the breaking point.
www.crystalinks.com /japan4.html   (4136 words)

  
 On the Buddha's Behaviour
That night of the twelfth, I was placed under the custody of Hojo Nobutoki, lord of the province of Musashi, and around midnight was taken away to be executed.
Emperor Gotoba was the sovereign of the nation and Hojo Yoshitoki was his subject, and yet the latter attacked and defeated the emperor.
Hojo Tokimune, the lord of the province of Sagami, was said to have been so deeply impressed that he presented Hoin with thirty ryo in gold, a horse and other gifts as a reward.
www.ebonicy.org /amafrosho/buddhasbehavior.htm   (9372 words)

  
 [No title]
It is said that Hojo Tokiyori washed his money with the water here and prayed for his family's prosperity.
On the temple grounds, there are also the main building, a cave, and the tomb of Hojo Tokiyori, etc.
Built by Hojo Tokiyori in 1253, Kencho-ji Temple is one of the "Kamakura Gozan (top 5 temples)," and the first Zen temple in Japan.
www.tourism.metro.tokyo.jp /german/access/ac017kamakura/map.html   (375 words)

  
 A Chronology of Japanese History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Tokiyori establishes a standing committee (the Hikitsuke-shû) which investigates all suits and appeals brought to the Council of State.
A plot against the Bakufu is discovered and (correctly or not isn't known) attributed to the ex-Shôgun Yoritsune.
Tokiyori retires on grounds of ill health and retires to a monastery (but he continues to rule until his death in 1263).
users.lac.uic.edu /~dturk/japanhistory/kamakurahistory.html   (4719 words)

  
 Torii Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Meigetsu-in, which literally means “bright moon temple,” was originally built by Hojo, Tokiyori as a Buddhist temple called Saimyoji Temple in 1256.
The temple was built by Kakuzanni, a wife of Hojo, Tokimune in 1285.
Kakuzanni created a law for women to be able to ask for a divorce from their side by visiting the temple.
www.usarj.army.mil /archives/archives/2002/jun/21/cultural/story01.htm   (379 words)

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