Kantō kubō (関東公方) (also called Kantō gosho (関東御所), Kamakura kubō (鎌倉公方), or Kamakura gosho (鎌倉御所)) was a title equivalent to shōgun assumed by Ashikaga...
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control of the Kantō region of Japan in the 15th century. The conflict began in 1454 with the assassination of Uesugi Noritada by Kantō kubō Ashikaga Shigeuji...
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Kubo or KUBO may refer to: Kubo (surname) Kubo gap, the average spacing between consecutive energy levels Kantō kubō, the ruler of the Kantō region during...
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in charge of the Kanto region, killed Uesugi Noritada of Kantō kanrei (関東管領), Kantō kubō's assistant. The various forces in the Kanto region divided and...
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Kantō Kanrei, the shōgun's deputy in the Kantō region by Ashikaga Haruuji, the Kantō kubō in Koga, and by a host of anti-Hōjō daimyō from the Kantō region...
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as Kantō kanrei, now controlled the Kantō in the absence of a Kantō kubō; from then on, the kanrei would be the shōgun's direct deputy, the kubō serving...
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it the equivalent to today's Kanto, plus the Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Kamakura's ruler was called kantō kubō, a title equivalent to shōgun...
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Ashikaga Motouji (category Kantō kubō)
Kantō kubō, Kamakura-based representatives in the vital Kamakura-fu of Kyoto's Ashikaga regime. Meant to stabilize a volatile situation in the Kantō,...
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Ashikaga Ujinohime (category Kantō kubō)
Ujihime, Ashikaga Ujinohime was the de facto Koga kubō in Sengoku period. She was the daughter of 5th Koga kubō Ashikaga Yoshiuji and Jōkō-in (a daughter of...
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Ashikaga Shigeuji became Kantō kubō. While the period between 1450 and 1455 experienced disturbances in Kamakura between Kantō kubō Ashikaga Shigeuji and...
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Ashikaga Shigeuji (category Kantō kubō)
period warrior and the Kamakura-fu's fifth and last Kantō kubō (Shōgun Deputy). Fourth son of fourth Kubō Ashikaga Mochiuji, he succeeded his father only...
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rulers of Kamakura (the Kantō kubō): four of the five kubō are buried there in a private cemetery closed to the public and first kubō Ashikaga Motouji's is...
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comes into his own as a shōgun. The next year Ashikaga Mochiuji becomes Kantō kubō. In 1411, Yoshimochi breaks off relations with China. Emperor Go-Komatsu...
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the Kamakura shogunate in 1333, the Kantō region was high unstable due to incessant conflict between the Kantō kubō under Ashikaga Shigeuji based in Kamakura...
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Mochiuji, an enemy of the central Ashikaga shogunate and the Kantō kubō governor-general of the Kantō region. Mochiuji, lord of the Uesugi clan, made a reprisal...
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Ashikaga Mochiuji (category Kantō kubō)
Ashikaga Mochiuji (足利持氏, 1398–1439) was the Kamakura-fu's fourth Kantō kubō during the Muromachi period (15th century) in Japan. During his long and troubled...
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Ashikaga Tadatsuna Ashikaga Ujimitsu Ashikaga Yoshimi Muromachi period Kantō Kubō Ashikaga clan (Fujiwara) "...Ashikaga (1333-1572)" Warrior Rule in Japan...
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Prefecture, Japan. During the Muromachi period, Koga was the seat of the Kantō kubō, under the Ashikaga clan. At the end of the Edo period, Koga Castle was...
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Ashikaga Yoshihide, r. 1568 Ashikaga Yoshiaki, r. 1568–1573 History of Japan Kantō kubō Ashikaga clan Japanese missions to Imperial China Ōban (Great Watch) With...
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Ashikaga Ujimitsu (category Kantō kubō)
Nanboku-chō period warrior and the Kamakura-fu's second Kantō kubō, or Shōgun Deputy. Son of first Kantō Kubō Ashikaga Motouji, he succeeded his father in 1367...
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occurring in 1433; and the Eikyō Rebellion occurred under the leadership of Kantō kubō Ashikaga Mochiuji in 1438. Yoshinori strengthened the power of the shogunate...
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Mochiuji's 1439 rebellion against the Ashikaga shogunate. See also the article Kantō kubō. fudai daimyō (譜代) – a daimyō who was a hereditary vassal of the Tokugawa...
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in Kamakura (Muromachi period), bodaiji of the five Ashikaga Kantō kubō, rulers of Kantō during the early Muromachi period The Tokugawa's Kan'ei-ji and...
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Uesugi held the post of Kantō Kanrei, theoretically as the deputy to the Kantō kubō, a member of the Ashikaga clan who ruled the Kantō region as viceroy for...
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Kamakura-fu (redirect from Kantō-fu)
dynasty of Ashikaga rulers called Kamakura Kubō (or Kantō Kubō). They were assisted by deputies called Kantō Kanrei traditionally chosen among the members...
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Kōkokuji Castle. In 1491, he was able to take Horigoye after the death of Kantō kubō Ashikaga Masatomo, gaining control of Izu Province. He then adopted the...
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politician Ichirō Ozawa. Commander-in-chief General Caudillo Feudalism Kantō kubō History of Japan List of shoguns Wells, John (3 April 2008). Longman Pronunciation...
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the Kamakura shogunate in 1333, the Kantō region was high unstable due to incessant conflict between the Kantō kubō under Ashikaga Shigeuji based in Kamakura...
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Kaneyoshi (also known as Kanenaga) gains control of Kyūshū. 1367 (Jōji 6): Kantō Kubō Ashikaga Motouji dies; Yoshiakira falls ill and cedes his position to...
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Kanrei (section Kantō Kanrei)
Shogun or Kamakura/Kantō Gosho, an equivalent title. When later the habit of calling kubō the shogun spread from Kyoto to the Kantō, the ruler of Kamakura...
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