Emperor Seinei

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Template:Nihongo (444 – 484) was the 22nd (possibly legendaryTemplate:Efn) emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession.<ref name="Titsingh">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="kunaicho">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He is best known for events that took place before and after his reign with a void in between. These include a rebellion which was quickly put down, and a succession crisis as the Emperor had no children. Because Seinei had such a low profile, historians have questioned his existence and whether he ever ascended to the throne.

No firm dates can be assigned to this emperor's life or reign, but he is conventionally considered to have reigned from 480 to 484.<ref name="Fane1">Template:Cite web</ref> Dates confirmed as "traditional" did not appear until the reign of Emperor Kanmu (the 50th emperor). Modern historians have come to the conclusion that the title of "Emperor" and the name "Seinei" were used by later generations to describe him.

Narrative

The Japanese have traditionally accepted this sovereign's historical existence, and a mausoleum (misasagi) for Seinei is currently maintained. The following information available is taken from the pseudo-historical Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, which are collectively known as Template:Nihongo or Japanese chronicles. These chronicles include legends and myths, as well as potential historical facts that have since been exaggerated and/or distorted over time. It is recorded in the Nihon ShokiTemplate:Efn that Seinei was born to Template:Nihongo sometime in 444 AD, and was given the name Template:Nihongo.<ref name="Longford"/> Prince Shiraka was the third and favorite son of Emperor Yūryaku, and was made heir apparent a year before his father's death.<ref name="Aston1">Template:Cite web</ref> Yūryaku had taken notice at how Shiraka was born with white hair as meaning something significant.<ref name="Brown"/>

During the transition period, Yūryaku's other consort Template:Nihongo convinced her younger son Prince Hoshikawa to assert his claim to the throne.<ref name="Brinkley">Template:Cite book</ref> While Hoshikawa was Prince Shiraka's older brother, the eldest sibling in the household (Template:Nihongo) advised against it.<ref name="Fane1"/> In the rebellion that followed Hoshikawa and his followers sieged the Imperial treasury. They were then surrounded by court troops who burned the building to the ground, roasting to death all but one surviving minor official (who was given mercy).<ref name="Brinkley"/> With the rebellion put down, Prince Shiraka assumed the throne as Emperor Seinei in 480 AD.<ref name="Aston1"/> Although the Emperor appointed a woman named Katsuraki Kara-hime as "Grand Consort", she was never made an Empress.<ref name="Aston1"/>

Seinei grew distressed in the second year of his reign as he had no children to succeed him. His father Emperor Yūryaku had done away with all of his male relations in his obsessive conquest for the throne, his older brother Prince Hoshikawa had been burnt to death, and Prince Iwaki died sometime in 481 AD.<ref name="Fane1"/><ref name="Aston1"/> Seinei lucked out when two grandsons (Woke and Oke) of Emperor Richū were discovered by chance while the governor of Harima was out for an inspection.<ref name="Fane1"/> The two princes had fled to the countryside after their father, Ichinobe no Oshiwa was killed by Emperor Yūryaku.<ref name="Brown"/><ref name="Brinkley"/> These events regarding succession were also later recorded in the Kojiki.<ref name="Kojiki1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Kojiki2">Template:Cite web</ref>

When word got to the Emperor about the two Princes, he was delighted and formerly adopted them as his heirs.<ref name="Aston1"/> Sometime in 482 AD, Prince Oke was appointed as Crown Prince.<ref name="Brinkley"/> Seinei's death sometime in 484 AD (possibly January) came with a problem as his two adopted sons were very courteous towards each other.<ref name="Kojiki2"/> Although Prince Oke had been appointed heir, he ceded the throne to his brother Prince Woke, who in turn ceded it back.<ref name="Brinkley"/><ref name="Kojiki3">Template:Cite web</ref> The two debated the issue for about a year while Princess Iitoyo, a daughter of Emperor Richū was allegedly made regent.<ref name="Fane1"/><ref name="Aston1"/><ref name="Brinkley"/> Her death in late 484 AD resolved the debate and Prince Woke ascended to the throne as Emperor Kenzō in the following year.<ref name="Fane1"/>

Historical assessment

Emperor Seinei's Mausoleum in Habikino

The actual existence of Emperor Seinei is debated among historians due to a lack of available information.<ref name="existence"/>British academic and author Richard Ponsonby-Fane notes that the Kojiki gives no details about Seinei and some lists omit his name altogether.<ref name="Fane1"/> Scholar Francis Brinkley though, still lists Emperor Seinei under "Protohistoric sovereigns".<ref name="Brinkley"/> He mentioned there that Emperor Yūryaku's "evil act" of stealing Tasa's wife (Kibi no Wakahime) led to serious consequences. While Wakahime and her companions conspired to place her own son on the throne, Brinkley stated that they underestimated the power of the Katsuragi family.<ref name="Brinkley"/>Template:Efn In regard to the Emperor's hair, Dutch historian and Japanologist Isaac Titsingh mentioned that "there is speculation that this [Seisei's] unusual hair color suggests albinism.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

There is no evidence to suggest that the title tennō (meaning "emperor") was used during the time to which Seinei's reign has been assigned. Instead, his title could have possibly been Template:Nihongo, meaning "the great king who rules all under heaven", or Template:Nihongo2 "Great King of Yamato". The name Seinei-tennō was more than likely assigned to him posthumously by later generations.<ref name="name">Template:Cite book</ref> His name might have been regularized centuries after the lifetime ascribed to Seinei, possibly during the time in which legends about the origins of the imperial dynasty were compiled as the chronicles known today as the Kojiki.<ref name="aston109 & 217-223">Template:Cite book</ref>

Outside of the Kiki, the reign of Emperor KinmeiTemplate:Efn (Template:Circa – 571 AD) is the first for which contemporary historiography has been able to assign verifiable dates.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The conventionally accepted names and dates of the early Emperors were not confirmed as "traditional" though, until the reign of Emperor KanmuTemplate:Efn between 737 and 806 AD.<ref name="aston109 & 217-223"/>

While the actual site of Seinei's grave is not known, this regent is traditionally venerated at a kofun-type Imperial tomb in Habikino, Osaka.<ref name="kunaicho"/> The Imperial Household Agency designates this location as Seinei's mausoleum and is formally named Template:Nihongo. Seinei is also enshrined at the Tokyo Imperial Palace in the Three Palace Sanctuaries.

See also

Notes

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References

Japanese Imperial kamon — a stylized chrysanthemum blossom

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Further reading

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Template:Emperors of Japan