Ikkō-ikki

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Template:Nihongo were armed military leagues that formed in several regions of Japan in the 15th–16th centuries, composed entirely of members of the Jōdo Shinshū sect of Buddhism. In the early phases, these ikki leagues opposed the rule of local governors or daimyō, but over time as their power consolidated and grew, they courted alliances with powerful figures in the waning Ashikaga shogunate until they were crushed by Oda Nobunaga in the 1580s.

The Ikkō-ikki mainly consisted of priests, peasants, merchants and local military rulers who followed the sect, but they sometimes associated with non-followers of the sect. They were at first organized to only a small degree. However, during the reforms of the monshu Jitsunyo, and further under his grandson Shōnyo, the temple network enabled more efficient and effective mobilization of troops when needed. The relationship between Hongan-ji and its monshu was complicated: some monshu, such as Rennyo, condemned the violence, others, such as Shōnyo and Kennyo, channelled it to further political aims.

With improvements in matchlock firearms at the time, the Ikkō-ikki movement could rise suddenly as a menacing force, presenting a credible threat to the government. A peasant or merchant could transform himself into a capable mobile cannoneer in mere days.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Terminology

An Template:Nihongo3 in medieval Japan could be formed by any group that had a single goal in mind and vowed to stay together to achieve it. Carol Tsang lists two general categories of ikki:<ref name="tsang">Template:Cite book</ref>

  1. Warrior-class leagues, which could be further subdivided into:
    • Template:Nihongo3 – Formed by extended samurai clans for mutual aid and defense. Members of such leagues were forbidden from attacking one another, and obligated to come to each other's aid.
    • Alternatively, Template:Nihongo3 – Formed by local provincial authorities (shugo) with other clans for mutual defense and administration.
  2. Villager leagues, which could be further subdivided into:

By contrast, the Ikkō-ikki defies easy categorization. The term Template:Nihongo3 refers to the exclusive emphasis of the Jōdo Shinshū sect of striving for rebirth in the Pure Land of Amitabha. For this reason, Jodo Shinshu was often pejoratively called the ikkō-shū sect. In any case, in contrast to other ikki leagues, the Ikkō-ikki were defined not by political, familial or economic association, but by a sense of community through their association with Jōdo Shinshū.<ref name="tsang" /> Adherents of Nichiren Buddhism also formed Hokke-ikki leagues in opposition to the Ikkō-ikki as well as mutual aid and defense.

History

Origins

The first recorded instances of an ikki league date as far back as the 14th century in Bingo Province.Template:Clarify However, with the waning years of the Muromachi period and the subsequent Sengoku period was characterized by weakening central power, and frequent conflicts between rival forces, the number of ikki proliferated. The first large-scale peasant uprising occurred in 1428 when a tokusei-ikki from Ōmi and Yamashiro provinces marched on Kyoto, the capital.<ref name="tsang" />

According to George Sansom, "The Ikko (Single-Minded) sect of Nenbutsu, or Buddha-calling ... is a branch of the worship of Amida developed from the teaching of Shinran into an aggressive doctrine of salvation by faith." In the 13th century, the jizamurai, a new class of small landowners, "formed leagues (ikki) for mutual defence", since they came from "good warrior families, long established in their own districts, and they were determined to protect their interests, both economic and social, against newcomers", according to Sansom. The Shirahata-Ikki, "White Flag Uprising", and Mikazuki-Ikki, "Crescent Uprising", were examples of the numerous risings against the Ashikaga shogunate. An uprising involving an entire province was called a kuni-Ikki. Uprisings took place in 1351, 1353, 1369, 1377, 1384–1386, and 1366–1369. The risings in the 15th century, Tsuchi-Ikki or Do-Ikki, were better organized, and the peasants appear to have played a more prominent part. At the conclusion of the Ōnin War, in 1477, "many of the members of the numerous ikki" occupied the monasteries and shrines, and "would ring the warning bells day and night, hoping to terrify the rich citizens", according to Sansom.<ref name="Sansom2">Template:Cite book</ref>

Early Ikko-Ikki uprisings

The Ikkō-ikki were initially disparate and disorganized followers of Rennyo's teachings. His missionary work and his appointment to the position of abbot of Kyoto's Hongan-ji in 1457 allowed him to "express in words and deeds" his unorthodox views.

The first instances of the Ikkō-ikki as a defensive league were formed in Ōmi to defend against the threats and violence from sōhei armies of Enryaku-ji. The eighth monshu, Rennyo, proselytized in this area, and the growing influence threatened Enryaku-ji's interests in this area.<ref name="tsang" /> Despite some efforts at a peaceful negotiation, including payments to cover any tax revenue shortfalls, the sōhei of Enryaku-ji attacked local communities at Katata in 1465. Jōdo Shinshū communities attempted to fortify their temples and villages, but failed to withstand the assaults by Enryaku-ji. The attacks continued again in 1468, resulting in the destruction of Hongan-ji, and by 1471, Rennyo and his family fled to the village of Yoshizaki in Echizen Province.

Yoshizaki and Kaga Province

A new temple community was established at Yoshizaki-gobō in 1471. It was at this temple that Rennyo began to attract a significant following through extensive letter writing, clarifying orthodox Jodo Shinshu doctrine, and refuting teaches of rival subsects (in particular the Takada sect). The village of Yoshizaki grew to a large, fortified community by 1473, and a network of temples across grew to accommodate increasing numbers of followers. Rennyo assigned family members to head new temples, or to manage existing temples, further strengthening the network. Disruptions by local Ikkō-ikki leagues forced Rennyo to draft a series of rules for proper conduct in 1475, that Jodo Shinshu adherents were expected to follow, with limited effect.

An ongoing dispute between members local governorships forced the Honganji sect to become involved in 1473 leading to a series of skirmishes and alliances in the 1470s and 1480s. By 1486 the conflict culminated in the Kaga Rebellion overthrew governor of Kaga Province and took control of it for themselves; this represented the first time in Japanese history that a group of commoners ruled a province.<ref name=Sansom2 />Template:Rp<ref name=Turnbull />Template:Rp

Rennyo, who was in a separate province at the time, was compelled by the authorities to admonish the Ikko-ikki rebellions, to little effect, and stepped down as the Patriarch in 1489, before dying of illness in 1499. After stepping down, his second son, Jitsunyo became the 9th monshu, and initially followed a conservative, cautious administration at first.<ref name="tsang" />

Dynastic entanglement and growing power

A complex dynastic dispute within the Ashikaga shogunate in 1493, with the forced deposition of Ashikaga Yoshitane by his former deputy shogun, Hosokawa Masamoto, led to a conflict between Yoshitane's faction led by the Hatakeyama clan and their opponents, the Hosokawa clan. Masamoto forcefully enlisted military aid from the 9th monshu, Jitsunyo, in particular to help with a stalled assault on Hatakeyama Yoshihide at Konda castle in late 1505. According to the account, Jitsunyo initially fled from Masamoto's approach, and retreated to Ōtsu, but Masamoto pursued him, reportedly cornering him until he relented.<ref name="tsang" /> Jitsunyo had enjoyed the patronage of Masamoto, including protection from prosecution from the 1488 rebellions, but initially refused, citing his role as a priest and not a warrior. Eventually, Jitsunyo relented.

While most Honganji temples heeded the call to arms, some factions in Settsu and Kawachi provinces supported Yoshitane's faction, and refused to fight under the Honganji banner. Nonetheless, in 1506, the Ikko-ikki armies helped defeat Konda castle, defeating Asakura Norikage in the Template:Illm of 1506, and triggering further uprisings in neighboring Etchu, Echizen, and Noto provinces, followed later by Mikawa Province. By 1507, Masamoto had been assassinated and fighting amongst the Hosokawa clan successors led to a stalemate.

During this time, Jitsunyo reformed the hierarchy of the Honganji and its network of temples into either Template:Nihongo3 temples staffed by family members, or Template:Nihongo3 temples with more autonomy, but subordinate to the Honganji. This increased centralization was intended to help with administration, but also meant that Ikko-ikki forces could be more effectively mobilized. In addition to these reforms, the letters of Rennyo were collected and a subset were selected as a core party of Jodo Shinshu doctrine, known as the Template:Nihongo3 or alternatively Template:Nihongo3 leading to increased uniformity.

Escalating military conflicts

Following Jitsunyo's death in 1525, Jodo Shinshu temples in the provinces increasingly formed into Template:Nihongo3: fortified temple communities that did not permit military officials to enter, while also managing their own tax collection. Meanwhile, the Ikko-ikki also established a fortress complex at Ishiyama Honganji, just outside Osaka in 1496, and in Nagashima, on the borders of Owari and Ise Provinces and in a series of temples in Mikawa Province as well.

By the 1530s the Honganji was directly involved in a series of conflicts, starting with the Template:Nihongo3 conflict in Kaga Province, pitting the 10th monshu, Shōnyo, against rebellious temples, followed soon after by military assistance to Hosokawa Harumoto in the Template:Nihongo of 1532–1536. The Ikko-ikki defeated Nagao Tamekage in the 1536 Battle of Sendanno. By July 17th of that year, local Ikko-ikki forces marched into Nara and sacked it, looting Kasuga Shrine. Unlike his predecessors Shōnyo did not hesitate to mobilize forces, or discipline temples that were non-compliant.<ref name="tsang" />

The Ikko-ikki also fought Asakura Norikage again in the 1555 Battle of Daishoji-omote.<ref name=Turnbull2>Template:Cite book</ref>

Apex of power and downfall

Towards the end of the 16th century, however, their growing numbers and strength caught the attention and concern of the great samurai leaders of the time. Tokugawa Ieyasu worried that Ikko-ikki of Mikawa Province would rise up and seize the province. In 1564, his forces, with the help of Jōdo-shū forces, defeated the Mikawa Ikkō-ikki in the Battle of Azukizaka.

The Battle of Azukizaka was the climactic clash between Ieyasu and the Ikko-ikki.

By this point, Ishiyama Honganji and other strongholds of the Ikko-ikki lay across major trade routes and occupied the same areas that Nobunaga saw as his primary territorial objectives. Nearly every road to the capital from this western part of the country was controlled by the Ikko-ikki or their allies, and their populist roots gave them significant economic power as well. Nobunaga in particular sought the destruction of the Ikkō-ikki for these reasons, and because they allied themselves with nearly every one of his major enemies or rivals. Ashikaga Yoshiaki was once strongly supported in his claim to become Shōgun by Nobunaga, but turned to the Ikko-ikki when their relationship soured. The Ikko-ikki also had powerful allies in the Mōri, Azai, and Asakura clans. In the Asakura stronghold of Echizen province, today's Fukui-prefecture, Nobunaga ordered his generals to kill the people in Ajimano village in August 1575 as noted in The Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga. The Ishiyama Honganji was besieged several times by the forces of Oda Nobunaga in the Ishiyama Honganji War, as was the Nagashima fortress. After several failed attempts at seizing each emplacement, Oda successfully defeated Nagashima by 1574 after a four-year siege, and Ishiyama Honganji in 1580 after an 11-year siege.<ref name="Sansom2" />Template:Rp<ref name="tsang" /> The majority of the Honganji forces, including the 11th monshu, Kennyo (Shōnyo's son) submitted to Nobunaga's authority, relinquishing much of their independence in the process, though a few holdouts resisted as late as 1585.

In the 1580s, the last of the Ikkō-ikki courted Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and fought alongside his forces against warrior monks and priests of other sects.

Weapons, training, and lifestyle

The Ikkō-ikki bands of the 16th century, due largely to their origins as countryside mobs, used quite varied armour and armament. Many wore the more traditional priest robes, with varying degrees and types of armour. Some wore various sorts of helmets, while others opted for the straw hat and cloak of a peasant. Naginata remained very common, along with a variety of swords and daggers, and a limited number of arquebuses. Finally, while not truly armour nor armament, a very common item wielded by the mobs of Ikkō-ikki priest warriors was a banner with a Buddhist slogan written upon it. Some of the more common slogans included the nenbutsu chant "Hail to Buddha Amida!" (Namu Amida Butsu; 南無阿弥陀仏) and "He who advances is sure of salvation, but he who retreats will go to hell".<ref name=Turnbull>Template:Cite book</ref>

Jodo Shinshu Buddhism was persecuted in response to the Ikkō-ikki, which caused the formation of kakure nenbutsu secret societies.

References

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Further reading

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