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- Q1432624 subject Q15258499.
- Q1432624 subject Q6316475.
- Q1432624 subject Q6989972.
- Q1432624 subject Q7330001.
- Q1432624 subject Q8090604.
- Q1432624 subject Q8090616.
- Q1432624 subject Q8409855.
- Q1432624 subject Q8409859.
- Q1432624 subject Q9534559.
- Q1432624 abstract "The Genkō War (元弘の乱, Genkō no Ran) (1331–1333) also known as the Genkō Incident (元弘の変, Genkō no Hen) was a civil war in Japan which marked the fall of the Kamakura shogunate and end of the power of the Hōjō clan. The war thus preceded the Nanboku-chō period and the rise of the Ashikaga shogunate. Genkō is the name of the Japanese era corresponding to the period 1331-1334.Throughout much of the Kamakura period, the shogunate was controlled by the Hōjō clan, whose members held the title of shikken (regent for the shogun), and passed it on within the clan. The Emperor was little more than a figurehead, holding no real administrative power.In 1331, Emperor Go-Daigo plotted to seize power and overthrow the shogunate in Kamakura. However, he was betrayed by a trusted adviser Fujiwara Sadafusa. The Emperor fled Kyoto with the Sacred Treasures and sought refuge in a secluded monastery overlooking the Kizu River, called Kasagi. The monastery was attacked by Bakufu troops in the Siege of Kasagi. The emperor managed to escape, but only temporarily, and was subsequently banished to the Oki Islands. The shogunate then enthroned Emperor Kōgon.The Emperor's son Prince Morinaga continued to fight, leading his father's supporters alongside Kusunoki Masashige.Emperor Go-Daigo escaped Oki in the spring of 1333, two years after his exile, with the help of Nawa Nagatoshi (名和長年) and his family, raising an army at Funagami Mountain in Hōki Province (the modern town of Kotoura in Tōhaku District, Tottori Prefecture).Meanwhile, Ashikaga Takauji, the chief general of the Hōjō family, turned against the Hōjō and fought for the Emperor in the hopes of being named shogun. Takauji entered Kyoto on 19 June and Go-Daigo entered the Palace at the end of July 1333. Simultaneously, Nitta Yoshisada led his army on a campaign through Kōzuke and Musashi provinces culminating in the siege of Kamakura, setting fire to the city, and destroying the Kamakura shogunate.The city aflame, the shogunate fell, and the power of the Hōjō with it. Emperor Go-Daigo returned to Kyoto, and claimed power in what came to be known as the Kemmu Restoration. This would only last a few years, though. In 1336 Ashikaga Takauji named himself Shogun and seized power from Go-Daigo, beginning the Nanboku-chō Wars and the Ashikaga shogunate.".
- Q1432624 combatant "Emperor Go-Daigo".
- Q1432624 combatant "Forces of Kamakura shogunate".
- Q1432624 combatant "Imperial forces loyal to".
- Q1432624 commander Q1328796.
- Q1432624 commander Q2355334.
- Q1432624 commander Q2490704.
- Q1432624 commander Q297107.
- Q1432624 commander Q382234.
- Q1432624 place Q17.
- Q1432624 place Q200267.
- Q1432624 result "Imperialvictory;Kamakura shogunatefalls".
- Q1432624 thumbnail Kusunoki_Masashige_statue.jpg?width=300.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1045904.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1053703.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1131949.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q11415325.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1154406.
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- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1194556.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1203404.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q131767.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1328796.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q133935.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q1490.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q15258499.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q17.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q200267.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q208233.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q2288858.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q2355334.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q236205.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q24706.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q2490704.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q264012.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q297107.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q313942.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q327465.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q34600.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q382234.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q471885.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q483146.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q500681.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q6316475.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q6455351.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q6989972.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q7330001.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q736839.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q7510143.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q8090604.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q8090616.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q826021.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q834364.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q8409855.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q8409859.
- Q1432624 wikiPageWikiLink Q9534559.
- Q1432624 combatant Q313942.
- Q1432624 combatant "Forces of Kamakura shogunate".
- Q1432624 combatant "Imperial forces loyal to".
- Q1432624 commander Q1328796.
- Q1432624 commander Q2355334.
- Q1432624 commander Q2490704.
- Q1432624 commander Q297107.
- Q1432624 commander Q382234.
- Q1432624 conflict "Genkō War".
- Q1432624 place Q17.
- Q1432624 place Q200267.
- Q1432624 result "Imperial victory; Kamakura shogunate falls".
- Q1432624 type Event.
- Q1432624 type Event.
- Q1432624 type MilitaryConflict.
- Q1432624 type SocietalEvent.
- Q1432624 type Event.
- Q1432624 type Thing.
- Q1432624 type Q1656682.
- Q1432624 comment "The Genkō War (元弘の乱, Genkō no Ran) (1331–1333) also known as the Genkō Incident (元弘の変, Genkō no Hen) was a civil war in Japan which marked the fall of the Kamakura shogunate and end of the power of the Hōjō clan. The war thus preceded the Nanboku-chō period and the rise of the Ashikaga shogunate.".
- Q1432624 label "Genkō War".
- Q1432624 depiction Kusunoki_Masashige_statue.jpg.
- Q1432624 name "Genkō War".