Emperor Kōnin Explained

Emperor Kōnin
Succession:Emperor of Japan
Reign:770–781
Coronation:October 23, 770
Cor-Type:japan
Predecessor:Shōtoku
Successor:Kanmu
Posthumous Name:Chinese-style shigō


Emperor Kōnin (Japanese: 光仁天皇)

Japanese-style shigō:
Ametsumune-takatsugi no Sumeramikoto (Japanese: 天宗高紹天皇)

Spouse:Inoe
Issue:
Royal House:Imperial House of Japan
Father:Prince Shiki
Mother:Ki no Tochihime
Birth Name:Shirakabe (Japanese: 白壁)
Birth Date:July 18, 708
Death Place:Heijō-kyō (Nara)
Burial Place:Tahara no higashi no misasagi (田原東陵) (Nara)

was the 49th emperor of Japan,[1] according to the traditional order of succession.[2] Kōnin's reign lasted from 770 to 781.[3]

Traditional narrative

The personal name of Emperor Kōnin (imina) was .[4] As a son of Imperial Prince Shiki and a grandson of Emperor Tenji,[5] his formal style was Prince Shirakabe. Initially, he was not in line for succession, as Emperor Tenmu and his branch held the throne.

He married Imperial Princess Inoe, a daughter of Emperor Shōmu, producing a daughter and a son. After his sister-in-law Empress Shōtoku died, he was named her heir. The high courtiers claimed the empress had left her will in a letter in which she had appointed him as her successor. Prior to this, he had been considered a gentle man without political ambition.

Kōnin had five wives and seven Imperial sons and daughters.[6]

Emperor Kōnin is traditionally venerated at his tomb; the Imperial Household Agency designates, in Nara, Nara, as the location of Kōnin's mausoleum.

Events of Kōnin's life

Eras of Kōnin's reign

The years of Kammu's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name (nengō).[12]

Legacy

Kōnin attempted to reconstruct the state finance and administrative organizations, which had been corrupted under the reign of Empress Kōken.

Political conflict around his successors

Soon after his enthronement in 770 (Hōki 1), he promoted his wife Imperial Princess Inoe (or Inoue or Ikami, the exact pronunciation of her name is unknown) to the empress and appointed her son Imperial Prince Osabe to the crown prince in the next year. As a grandson of Emperor Shōmu by his mother, Osabe was one of few descendants of Emperor Tenmu, the line of Tenmu however didn't succeed to the throne finally. In 772 Osabe was deprived of his crown prince rank and Imperial Prince Yamabe, an issue by another woman, later Emperor Kanmu was named heir. According to the, the replacement happened as follows: in the third month of Hōki 3 (772), Inoe was accused of cursing her husband and Emperor Kōnin stripped her of the rank of Empress. In the fifth month of this year his son Osabe was deprived his crown prince status. In Hōki 4 (773), both were alleged to have murdered Imperial Princess Naniwa, a sister of Kōnin by cursing. This allegation made those two stripped of the rank of royals. Those two were together enclosed in a house in Yamato Province and died two years later in the same day, on the 27th day of the fourth month of Hōki 6 (on the Julian Calendar, on May 29, 775).

In 772, soon after Osabe's deprivation of heir right, Prince Yamabe was named heir. His mother Takano no Niigasa, née Yamato no Niigasa, was a descendant of King Muryeong of Baekje. Since her clan had then no political power, his appointment had not been likely to happen without the deprivation of Osabe, the noblest male issue of Konin as the son of an Imperial Princess and Empress.

Today it is pointed out the accusations to Inoe and Osabe were likely to be plotted for depriving her son of the throne, and they were likely to be assassinated, by Fujiwara no Momokawa.

The late years of Kōnin's reign and the early years of Kanmu's reign suffered disasters. The people took those disasters as vengeance of noble victims of political conflicts, including late Inoe and Osabe. In 800 during the reign of Kanmu, Princess Inoe who had deceased in 775 was restored to the rank of Empress of Kōnin. Several shrines and temples were also founded for redemption, including Kamigoryō Shrine . He favored Kim Am a man from the Kingdom of Silla.

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.

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 Kōnin's reign, this apex of the Daijō-kan included:

Consorts and children

Empress (deposed in 772): Imperial Princess Inoe/Ikami (井上内親王), Emperor Shōmu’s daughter

Hi: Princess Owari (尾張女王, d. 804), Prince Yuhara’s daughter (son of Prince Shiki)

Bunin: Takano no Niigasa (高野新笠), Yamato no Ototsugu’s daughter

Bunin: Fujiwara no Sōshi (藤原曹子), Fujiwara no Nagate’s daughter

Bunin: Ki no Miyako (紀宮子), Ki no Ineko’s daughter

Bunin: Fujiwara no Nariko (藤原産子), Fujiwara no Momokawa’s daughter

Court lady: Agatanushi no Shimahime (県主嶋姫), Agatanushi no Emishi’s daughter

Court lady (Nyoju): Agatainukai no Isamimi (Omimi) (県犬養勇耳/男耳)

Unknown Woman:

Ancestry

[13]

References

See also

Notes and References

  1. [#Kunaichō|Emperor Kōnin, Tahara no Higashi Imperial Mausoleum]
  2. Ponsonby-Fane, Richard. (1959). The Imperial House of Japan, p. 60.
  3. [#Brown-Ishida|Brown and Ishida]
  4. [#Brown-Ishida|Brown and Ishida]
  5. Varley, p. 147.
  6. [#Brown-Ishida|Brown and Ishida]
  7. [#Brown-Ishida|Brown and Ishida]
  8. Julian dates derived from NengoCalc
  9. [#Brown-Ishida|Brown and Ishida]
  10. Titsingh, p. 81; Brown and Ishida, p. 277; Varley, p. 44, 148.
  11. [#Brown-Ishida|Brown and Ishida]
  12. Titsingh, p. 81; Brown and Ishida, p. 277.
  13. Web site: Genealogy. Reichsarchiv. April 30, 2010 . 27 January 2018. ja.