A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower (15 page)

BOOK: A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower
6.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

What was also new was that the core of the government was now a single lord-vassal group, spread rather thinly throughout the nation.
38
Yoritomo rewarded his loyal vassals with estates and offices such as
jit
(steward) and
shugo
(protector or constable). They administered the provinces under their charge on the basis of local custom and military house laws, rather than the centrally imposed legal codes of the previous
ritsury
system. They also collected dues for the
bakufu
, and were entitled
to retain a portion of the produce of the land for themselves. Through this system Yoritomo exercised a relatively direct control over much of Japan, and also further eroded the revenue of the noble court families and central government.

It was a feudal system, and in that regard Japan shared common ground with the medieval western world.
39
However, feudalism in Japan was distinctive in that it operated through the traditional central civil administration. The lord-vassal relationship was also far more personal than in the west, where the contractual type of relationship was more common. In Japan it was of a paternalistic and almost familial nature, and some of the terms for ‘lord’ and ‘vassal’ used ‘parent’ (
oya
) and ‘child’ (
ko
) respectively. At the same time, and rather paradoxically, family bonds do not seem to have counted for much in the warrior’s world, and so it is perhaps more accurate to see this personalisation simply as an expression of dislike for the abstract. The strength of the family was to be greatly exaggerated by later propaganda.

Personal loyalty was a major factor in Yoritomo’s control over his own men. He may not have had a particularly endearing personality, but he nevertheless seems to have had a strong personal charisma that drew men to him. However, reliance on personal loyalty as a means of control is not very successful. It is inconsistent, hard to institutionalise, and fades with time.

Partly because he realised this, and partly because he was highly suspicious by nature, Yoritomo was ever alert to any remote suggestion that his power might be challenged. This led him to suspect the worst even of close friends and family, and to take decisive steps against them. His treatment of his younger half-brother Yoshitsune is a good example. Fuelled by jealousy over Yoshitsune’s popularity and widely acknowledged military prowess,
40
and suspecting him of plotting, Yoritomo gave orders for Yoshitsune’s assassination. Finally, after four years as a fugitive, in 1189 Yoshitsune was surrounded by Yoritomo’s forces and killed himself, along with his wife and infant children. He was to become immortalised in Japanese literature and legend as the archetypical tragic hero.

For good measure those who hunted Yoshitsune down were themselves attacked and killed by Yoritomo shortly afterwards. More of Yoritomo’s own relatives and associates were also ‘terminally eliminated’ as potential threats.

Stating the obvious, Yoritomo’s elimination of relatives may not have been in the best interests of the family. When he was killed in 1199 by a fall from his horse – not in battle, but in rather suspicious circumstances
41
– there was no really suitable Minamoto successor. He left two sons, Yoriie (1182–1204) and Sanetomo (1192–1219), and each nominally became sh
gun. However, neither of them was strong enough or mature enough to achieve real control in the chaos of murder and intrigue that followed Yoritomo’s death.

It was no time or place for the faint-hearted or those swayed by sentimental concerns such as family ties. Both Yoriie and Sanetomo were controlled and eventually murdered by their own family. Behind many of the intrigues was their mother, Yoritomo’s widow H
j
Masako (1157–1225). In effect, she controlled the government, and became popularly known as the ‘nun-sh
gun’ (
ama sh
gun
, a reference to her having taking nun’s vows on Yoritomo’s death).

One of the devices used by Masako was the institution of a sh
gunal regent. This reduced the position of sh
gun to a nominal one, with manipulable court nobles generally being appointed as sh
gun and real control being exercised by the H
j
.

BOOK: A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower
6.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Money in the Bank by P G Wodehouse
Crossing Purgatory by Gary Schanbacher
La tierra olvidada por el tiempo by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Late for the Wedding by Amanda Quick
Cowboy & the Captive by Lora Leigh
Secret Night by Anita Mills
The Incorruptibles by John Hornor Jacobs