Ashikaga Takauji
1305 - 1358
Ashikaga Takauji Few figures in Japanese history
are as controversial as Ashikaga Takauji, a man whose actions brought down
the Hojo Shikken, made the dream of Imperial restoration a reality
and then tore down that dream in a war that would leave the Court divided
and the country in the hands of a new warrior government.
In 1331, as Go-Daigo was preparing to throw off the yoke of Kamakura
rule, Takauji was a powerful landholder in the Kanto region. His clan, the
Ashikaga, was of Seiwa Genji stock, the same branch of the Minamoto family
that had produced Yoritomo. Minamoto Yoriyasu (? -1157), grandson of
Minamoto Yoshiie, had settled in Shimotsuke
and taken the name of his holding: Ashikaga-no-sho. Yoshiyasu's son
Ashikaga Yoshikane (? -1199) had joined Minamoto Yoritomo in 1180 and
served him in the Gempei War. Yoshikane also happened to be married to a
daughter of Hojo Tokimasa, and so the Ashikaga thrived in the years
following Yoritomo's death in1199. In fact, five of the next seven
generations of Ashikaga leaders would marry Hojo ladies, to include
Takauji (Takauji, however, was not of Hojo blood-his mother
had Respected by the Hojo, Takauji was among those men quickly dispatched east
after the news of Go-Daigo's rebellion reached Kamakura. In October Takauji
joined in the Bakufu's assault on Kasagi, which led to the apprehension of
Go-Daigo.
In Spring 1333 Go-Daigo escaped exile on Oki Island and returned to the
mainland, buoyed by the activities of Kusunoki Masashige,
who presently holding off Bakufu troops at Chihaya fort, on Mt. Kongo.
Determined to end this attempt at Imperial restoration once and for all, the
Hojo Shikken, Takatoki ordered two powerful armies to join in the war.
One of these hosts was under the control of Ashikaga Takauji, which departed
from Kamakura, the other being led by a certain Nagaoshi Takaie. Loyalist
samurai of the Akamatsu clan ambushed Nagaoshi's force and Nagaoshi himself was
killed. This reverse left Takauji the most powerful Bakufu commander now
operating in the field. Gathering up allies as he moved, Takauji arrived in Tamba, a province
controlled by Takauji's relatives the Uesugi, at the beginning of June. At this
point, Takauji probably could have added his men to those already pressing the
loyalists and ended Go-Daigo's rebellion. Instead, Takauji declared for the
Imperial cause and in mid-June attacked Kyoto.
In all probability, Takauji had planned on changing sides as soon as he
received his orders to march west, in part due to perceived slights by the Hojo.
His army was largely composed of warriors whose chiefs had familial ties to the
Ashikaga and his decision to march straight to Tamba first was no doubt
significant. The reasons Takauji had for rebellion ranged from personal ambition
to a growing dislike of the Hojo: he came from a family with stronger blood then
the Hojo and resented being treated like a vassal.
Even before he had reached Tamba, Takauji had received a letter from Go-Daigo
expressing the hope that the Ashikaga would turn on the Hojo. This letter, in
effect, legitimized any treasonous thoughts Takauji may have had, coming as it
did from an Imperial hand. Takauji had therefore bypassed Kyoto and sent out
secret messages to his allies alerting them to his intentions.
Takauji's forces easily secured Kyoto, allowing Go-Daigo to return to the
capital in July. At the same time, Nitta Yoshisada of Kozuke rose up
and attacked Kamakura, bringing an end to the Hojo Shikken as the city burned
and Hojo Takatoki committed suicide. To the delight of the Court, power had been
restored to the throne.
Go-Daigo, however, owed his success to the efforts of those military men who
had supported him. At the same time, the Court demanded it's share of the spoils
and this led to a precarious balancing act that revealed the weaknesses of
Go-Daigo's new government. Chief among these failings was an apparent naiveté as
regards the samurai class, that even though they had been supreme in Japan for
centuries, they might be expected to take back seat to the nobility. While the
average samurai revered the emperor (a fact generally ignored in western
histories), this sense of obligation and filial respect by no means translated
to include the rest of the court.
Following the destruction of the Hojo's political institutions in Kyoto,
Takauji created an office in the capital, the Buygo-sho (or, roughly,
Commissioner's Office). The Buygo-sho was responsible for the governing of the
city, and through it's offices Takauji assumed the right to dole out rewards and
appointments to his men. Go-Daigo must have chafed at Takauji's noticeable
presence in Kyoto, but initially the two men worked together with some modicum
of mutual respect. Takauji was in fact amply rewarded by the emperor for his
services, and was named the shugo of Musashi and given
considerable influence in two other provinces, was granted the courtly title of
the Fourth Rank, Junior Grade, and the position Chinjufu Shôgun. The
last, which translates as 'general of the northern pacification command' was
actually a consolation prize-Takauji had asked for the title of Shôgun, in
effect an official acknowledgment that he was the realm's foremost soldier.
Go-Daigo might have been wise to give him what he wanted, but this he did not
do, perhaps fearing (not without cause) that Takauji would become a new Taira
Kiyomori. In addition, there can be no doubt that Go-Daigo's other prominent
general, Nitta Yoshisada, made very effort to hinder Takauji's ambitions. The
Nitta, a hither-to relatively obscure family that had suffered by not joining
Minamoto Yoritomo in the Gempei War, were now famous throughout the realm.
Yoshisada, already a rival of Takauji, had no intention of coming under the
Ashikaga's thumb.
Tension began to grow as Go-Daigo attempted to juggle the wants of the
samurai with the suddenly unchained desires of the nobility. No doubt to
Takauji's chagrin, the coveted rank of Shôgun was given to Prince Morinaga (and
later Prince Norinaga), and the Hojo's now vacant lands were handed out almost
capriciously. It would appear that Go-Daigo's earliest rewards were on the
inordinate side, and after assigning considerable chunks of land to the
nobility, many deserving warriors were rewarded either inadequately or not at
all. Go-Daigo faced the same dangerous predicament the Hojo had found itself in
after the Mongol Invasions, with similar results.
1334 was largely taken up by reorganization, although Takauji was careful to
stay in step with the emperor. To this end he was ably assisted by his brother
Tadayoshi, a gifted
and unscrupulous political schemer. When Go-Daigo announced that Prince Norinaga
was being sent to Kamakura, Takauji arranged for Tadayoshi to go along as his
military guardian. Later in the year, Prince Morinaga, who had been residing in
Yoshino up until now, returned to Kyoto and soon rumors began flying that he was
plotting against Takauji. Takauji confronted Go-Daigo about the matter, and
after the latter protested his own innocence, Morinaga was arrested. The action
was certainly a controversial one-it had been Morinaga's letters that had drawn
many warriors onto Go-Daigo's side in the first place, and the Prince was well
liked. perhaps fearing that Morinaga's imprisonment would stir up trouble in the
capital, the Prince was sent to Kamakura.
In 1335 Hojo Tokiyuki, a son of Takatoki, rose up and attacked Kamakura. The
event created a considerable panic, and Go-Daigo's administrators Kamakura was
abandoned and in the course of the chaotic flight, Tadayoshi saw to it that
Morinaga was murdered. A better back-room dealer than a warrior, Tadayoshi was
quite unable to contain Tokiyuki, and the event looked to the first real crisis
of Go-Daigo's restoration.
Takauji hastily gathered an army, apparently without the consent of the
emperor, and marched along the Tokaido Road, absorbing Tadayoshi's forces into
his own. Takauji briskly defeated Tokiyuki in a number of engagements in Totomi and Suruga and on 8
September 1335 retook Kamakura. Tokiyuki was killed and order restored to the
Kanto-albeit, no doubt, in such a way as to provoke the consternation of
Go-Daigo and Nitta Yoshisada. Declaring that he felt more secure in Kamakura
than in Kyoto, Takauji had himself a headquarters at Eifukuji temple. Go-Daigo
made some effort to recall him, but to no avail. Almost as provocatively,
Takauji began rewarding those warriors who supported him with lands, securing
their personal loyalty and throwing the Court's lackluster rewards record in
sharp contrast.
It may be that Takauji attempted to lure Nitta Yoshisada away from the Court
during this period, for he was the most powerful warrior in Go-Daigo's service
and losing him to Takauji would leave the emperor isolated. At the same time, a
war with Yoshisada that resulted in the destruction of the Nitta could only
benefit the Ashikaga in the long run, so Takauji was essentially in a win-win
situation as far as that went. When it became obvious that Yoshisada had no
intention of abandoning Go-Daigo, Takauji issued what amounted to an act of war:
he announced that Kozuke, Nitta's home province, was now under the governorship
of the Uesugi.
Go-Daigo, after some waffling, made the decision to brand Takauji a traitor
and called for his destruction. Takauji, meanwhile, was careful to avoid
involving the emperor in his own call to arms and directed his hostilities
towards Nitta Yoshisada. He received a certain amount of legitimacy from the
signature of retired emperor Kogon-in (whom the Hojo had appointed emperor after
Go-Daigo's first bid for power in 1331).
In December 1335 a punitive expedition led by the Emperor's son Takanaga and
Nitta Yoshisada marched out from Kyoto and defeated an advance force commanded
by Tadayoshi in Mikawa province. The Imperialists pressed eastward, only to be
mauled by Takauji himself in the Ashigara pass of the Hakone Mountains. A
following battle in Suruga sent Go-Daigo's army fleeing westward, pursued by the
Ashikaga. On 23 February Takauji's army fought its way into Kyoto but failed to
capture Go-Daigo, who had taken up with the warrior monks of the Enryakuji. Takauji
himself arrived two days later and began what would prove to be an extremely
short-lived occupation of Kyoto. At the same time, the loyalist general
Kitabatake Akiie had gathered an army and drove on the capital, gratefully
accepting the full assistance of the Enryakuji. Within days of entering the
capital, Takauji found himself forced to defend it against Kitabatake, and after
four days retreated to Settsu. Takauji eventually made his way to Kyushu, on the
way making various promises and appointments to drum up a considerable amount of
support from the western families. Once on Kyushu, a brief campaign was required
to defeat the sole source of notable opposition to the Ashikaga on the island,
the Kikuchi. The Kikuchi were defeated at the Battle of Tadara no hama on 14
April 1336, and Takauji now had a secure base of operations and the support of
the Kyushu warrior families, including the Shimazu, Matsuura, Otomo, and Shoni.
Adding these clans to those already in the Ashikaga camp (the Hosokawa,
Akamatsu, Imagawa, Isshiki, Nikki, Uesugi, Ko, and Ouchi) rounded out a
formidable coalition that was far more formidable then the army Takauji had
marched to Kyoto with. Nonetheless, Takauji could not afford to dally on Kyushu
for long: at other points throughout the country Go-Daigo's forces were pressing
those Ashikaga bastions left behind, including those in the Kanto and the
eastern Chugoku provinces. In June Takauji headed back towards Kyoto, setting
part of his army on the march through western Honshu and the other slowly
advancing via ship.
Faced with Takauji's inexorable movement towards Kyoto, Go-Daigo was pressed
by Nitta and the court for immediate action, with Nitta advocating an all-out
battle with Takauji's army to end the war decisively. Kusunoki Masashige was
against a direct approach due to the disparity in numbers but in the end
Go-Daigo decided to fight. Often presented as foolishness on his part
(especially to highlight the tragedy of Masashige's resulting death), Go-Daigo's
decision may simply have been realistic. Taking to the hills again (as Kusunoki
suggested) would probably have only delayed the inevitable. Most of the
country's important samurai families were either already on Takauji's side or
leaning that way-Go-Daigo's Kemmu Restoration was in fact already over.
Nitta Yoshisada commanded the army that deployed around and near the
Minatogawa in Harima province. Aware that at least part of Ashikaga's army would
be approaching by boat, Yoshisada was forced to position part of his army along
the coast from the mouth of the Minatogawa east some miles to the mouth of the
Ikutagawa. 700 men under Kusunoki were forward deployed beyond the Minato (which
may well have been dry at this time) while Nitta covered an area to his south.
Yoshisada's rear was covered by is relatives the Wakiya and his southern flank
by the Otachi Ujiakira.
By 4 July Takauji's land force, under the command of Tadayoshi, and his own
naval contingent had paused at points in Harima and exchanged messages.
Tadayoshi's group was at Ichi-no-tani while Takauji rested his warriors and
sailors at Akashi. Meanwhile, another ship-borne contingent under Hosokawa Jozen
was regrouping off the coast of Shikkoku and would set out while the sky was
still dark the next morning.
On the morning of 5 July, a day that promised to be hot and humid, Takauji
gave the order to move to contact. Tadayoshi advanced eastward, his main body
flanked to the south by Shoni Yorihisa and to the north by the warriors of the
Shiba clan. While Takauji sailed around and prepared for a landing just east of
the Minatogawa's mouth, Tadayoshi clashed with Kusunoki's picked men and soon
became heavily engaged. Wakiya Sagisuke had repulsed a landing by Hosokawa and
now Jozen moved to make another try further up the coast. Meanwhile, the Shoni
had moved around Kusunoki's hard-pressed troops and clashed with Nitta's forward
ranks. To the north, Shiba outflanked Kusunoki and advanced on Nitta's right. By
this point, Takauji had landed and after regrouping struck Nitta's front. At
this critical stage in the battle, Nitta received word that Hosokawa had landed
behind the Imperialist army near the Ikutagawa. Nitta realized that the
possibility now existed that Takauji might trap the defending army and defeat it
in detail. Panicking and pressed from all sides, Yoshisada sounded a general
retreat, which, unfortunately, left Kusunoki isolated. That redoubtable warrior
fought against hopeless odds until he took his own life, by which time the
battle was more or les decided. Go-Daigo's one hope for securing a continuation
of his restoration had ended in complete defeat, and while Nitta and other
surviving loyalists would fight on elsewhere, Takauji was triumphant.
Nitta managed to hold off the oncoming Ashikaga samurai long enough for
Go-Daigo to flee Kyoto for the relative safety of the Enryakuji on Mt. Hiei.
Takauji entered Kyoto a month or so after Minatogawa and received retired
emperor Kogon-in, whom he rewarded generously. Anxious to put an end to the war
while he was so far ahead, Takauji launched an attack on Mt. Hiei that made
little progress. A loyalist counter-attack on 7 August caused some damage to
Kyoto but resulted in the death of the force's commander, Nawa Nagatoshi. A
virtual stalemate settled over the area, not broken until October, when Nitta
Yoshisada failed in an attempt to drive Takauji from Kyoto. Continued resistance
from Mt. Hiei was becoming more and more pointless, and perhaps to buy time
Go-Daigo agreed to a cease-fire. He handed over the Imperial Regalia to the
Ashikaga and fled to Yoshino while Nitta Yoshisada went with Prince Takanaga and
holed up in southern Echizen. Takauji invested the Regalia on Prince Yakuhito,
retired emperor Kogon-in's brother, who reigned as the Emperor Komyo. Knowing
that there was likely to be much fighting left to be done, Takauji made
immediate rewards to those who had followed him to Kyoto and any who responded
to subsequent calls to arms.
Perhaps to the frustration of Takauji, Go-Daigo would not go away. From
Yoshino he loudly declared that the Imperial Regalia in Komyo's possession were
in fact forgeries. Since the originals were necessary to have a legitimate
succession, that meant that Go-Daigo was still the real emperor. He gained
enough support to make his claim at least feasible, and the Period of the
Southern and Northern Courts began.
Takauji responded to this new threat by bearing down on Nitta Yoshisada.
Repeated attacks were launched against Nitta's stronghold of Kanagasaki in
Echizen and in April 1337 it was brought down. Yoshisada himself escaped, but
his son and Prince Takanaga were forced to commit suicide. The next year
Ashikaga forces engaged Nitta in the Battle of Fujishima (August 1338) and in
the course of the fighting Yoshisada was killed. Two months previously, another
notable supporter of Go-Daigo, Kitabatake Akiie, was killed at the Battle of
Ishizu (Izumi).
The Southern Court not withstanding, the deaths of Nitta and Kitabatake
effectively sealed Takauji's hold on the country. In 1338 emperor Komyo gave
Takauji the title he had long sought: Shôgun.
The government Takauji established was very much influenced by the political
situation of the time. The threat the Southern Court posed his fledgling
government compelled Takauji to place especially loyal retainers in the
provinces he controlled, and in this virtual wartime environment the authority
of the Shugo was much enhanced. Rather then essentially acting as go-betweens
with the jito and other landowners and the Bakufu, the Shugo became military
governors, of whom those with a history of loyalty to the Ashikaga (the Hosokawa
and Akamatsu, for instance) became the strongest. Takauji kept his headquarters
in Kyoto to stay close to Yoshino and in a centralized position, though he did
maintain a political institution in Kamakura.
With the feud with Southern Court on going, Takauji had been content to hand
over most political tasks to his brother Tadayoshi. By 1349, however, conflict
had arisen between the two and Takauji dismissed Tadayoshi on the suspicion of
treachery.1 Takauji's son Tadafuyu, whom Tadayoshi had adopted,
protested the move and in 1350 came to blows with his natural father. The realm
seemed to teeter on the brink of a three way civil war between Takauji,
Tadayoshi, and the Southern Court, with the latter gaining support as a result
of the rift between the brothers. Takayoshi was captured by Takauji's men in
1352 in Izu and poisoned, presumably on Takauji's orders. Tadafuyu responded by
joining the Southern Court, whose cause was alive in the Kanto as the Nitta
family joined with Tadayoshi's surviving followers and took to the field against
Takauji. Takauji managed to defeat this group but learned of startling
developments back in the capital. The new emperor of the Southern Court
Go-Murakami (Prince Norinaga, whose father Go-Daigo had died in 1338) had taken
advantage of Takauji's distraction to recapture Kyoto on 5 April 1352. The
operation had been finely executed and hard fighting and considerable blood was
required to dislodge Go-Murakami's adherents. Heavy fighting continued in the
Kinai for the next three years, culminating in the January 1355 recapture of
Kyoto by Go-Murakami's army. Takauji rallied his forces in Omi province and
launched a counterattack that produced a string of fiercely contested struggles
in March and a fight for the capital itself that occupied the better part of
April.
Ashikaga Tadafuyu, present on the Southern side, fought tenaciously but by 25
April was driven out. Takauji's forces had been badly blooded in the last weeks
of the fighting, and the future Ashikaga deputy Shôgun Hosokawa Yoriyuki was
wounded, but Kyoto was secured. The Southern Court had expended its greatest
efforts in the previous three years, and would never again pose so great a
threat to the Ashikaga.
Takauji himself spent the next three years reorganizing his administration
and was considering the idea of personally leading a campaign to Kyushu against
the Shibuya family when he fell ill and died on 8 June 1358. Takauji was
succeded by his son Yoshiakira, who kept the Ashikaga government in Kyoto. The
Southern Court would continue to resist until December 1392, though never as
fiercely as had during Takauji's time. Takauji's new Bakufu, built out of the
ashes of the Hojo and the failure of the Kemmu Restoration, would survive for a
total of 15 generations but would in many ways be the weakest of Japan's
military governments. Much had been sacrificed to the Shugo in the early years
for the sake of necessity, and this would later come back to haunt the Bakufu. A
few of the great houses could trace common cause with Takauji back to the
earliest stages of his career (such as the Uesugi) and a number could claim
strong familial bonds (including the Hosokawa and Imagawa) but many had been
raised up out of necessity or expediency. This was in contrast to both the
Minamoto and later Tokugawa models, and would prove fatal after the Onin War
(1467-77). At the same time, Go-Daigo's failure and the subsequent fall of the
Southern Court eliminated any chance of a return to Imperial rule for nearly 500
years.
A great soldier and a charismatic leader, the first of the Ashikaga Shôguns
etched out a place in Japanese history by giving free rein to his own ambitions
and those of the warrior class. Perhaps, given how unwilling the samurai were to
relinquish political authority, Takauji was an inevitable figure, and he is
often seen as a traitor, opportunist, and even (usually when connected to
Kusunoki Masashige) a villain. Like so many of Japan's great samurai figures,
just who Ashikaga Takauji was is really a matter of perspective.
1Tadayoshi comes across as an entirely unsavory
character, and even allowing for the biases of the Taiheki he does not
appear to have been at all popular in his day. In particular, his murder of
Prince Morinaga and the poisoning of Prince Tsunenaga, another of Go-Daigo's
son, was considered villainous.
Return to The Kamakura Period or The Muromachi Period
happened to be of the Uesugi house). By 1331
the Ashikaga had grown and branched out, with Ashikaga lines to be found in Mutsu,
Shimotsuke, Kozuke, Sagami, Mikawa, Mimasaka, and the Kinai region, under such later familiar names
as Imagawa, Hosokawa, Hatakeyama, and Shiba.