Oda Nobunaga

Oda Nobunaga
born 1534, Owari province, Japan
died June 21, 1582, Kyōto

With Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu, one of the three unifiers of premodern Japan.

He brought the domain of his birth, Owari, under his control and followed that success by defeating the huge forces of a neighbouring daimyo. In 1562 he formed an alliance with Ieyasu, and together they captured Kyōto, which Nobunaga controlled from 1573, thereby ending the Ashikaga shogunate (see Muromachi period). He then turned his attention to crushing the militant Tendai Buddhist monks of Enryaku temple, destroying their headquarters in 1571. He spent the next decade fighting the fanatically religious Ikkō sect, defeating their fortress-monastery in Ōsaka in 1580. His efforts to weaken the strength of the Buddhist temples extended to permitting Jesuit missionaries to build a church in Kyōto; his own interest in Christianity was purely political. In 1582 he had conquered central Japan and was attempting to extend his control over western Japan when he was wounded by a discontented general and committed suicide.

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▪ Japanese warrior
original name  Kichihōshi , later  Saburō 
born 1534, Owari Province, Japan
died June 21, 1582, Kyōto

      Japanese warrior, member of the Fujiwara family, who overthrew the Ashikaga shogunate and ended a long period of feudal wars by unifying half of Japan's provinces under his rule. As virtual dictator, Nobunaga restored stable government and established the conditions that led to the unification of the country.

      Nobunaga was the son of a government official who had amassed wealth and a respectable force of military retainers. In 1549 Nobunaga succeeded to his father's estate and soon overpowered his relatives and the principal family of the province. By 1560 he had proved his brilliant strategic gifts by bringing all of Owari under his sway; and in the same year he astonished all of Japan by defeating the huge forces of Imagawa Yoshimoto, one of the overlords of his neighbourhood provinces. This was his first step toward unification of the country.

      Stout-hearted, audacious, and autocratic, Nobunaga was quick to seize on any promising new invention. He was the first of the daimyo (feudal barons) to organize units equipped with muskets. He also brought under his control the agricultural production of the fertile Owari plain, as well as the rising merchant class of the city of Nagoya in the centre of the plain. With an economic base thus assured, he planned to advance on the Kinki district, the prosperous area surrounding Kyōto, long the centre of Japanese power.

      In 1562 he entered into an alliance with Tokugawa Ieyasu, a capable feudal lord of the neighbouring province of Mikawa, and in 1567 Nobunaga, feeling that he had secured his rear flank, moved his base of operations north to the city of Gifu. In the following year he supported Ashikaga Yoshiaki, who hoped to become shogun after the assassination of his elder brother, the former shogun Ashikaga Yoshiteru. Nobunaga marched on Kyōto, the capital, and made Yoshiaki shogun. Soon, however, he fell out with Yoshiaki, and at last in 1573 he deposed him. This marked the end of the Ashikaga shogunate, even though it nominally lasted until Yoshiaki's death in 1597. In 1576, in order to consolidate his hold on the area, Nobunaga built for his headquarters a magnificent castle at Azuchi on the shore of Lake Biwa near the capital.

      Meanwhile, Nobunaga promoted a new economic policy by abolishing the collection of tolls on the roads and from the guilds, both of which had been privileged sources of income for the local daimyo. He also strengthened his military forces, and in 1571 he destroyed the monastaries of the Enryaku-ji, the headquarters of the Tendai sect of Japanese Buddhism; the sect had been a traditional power in politics and religion since the beginning of the Heian period in the 8th century. In the meantime, the fanatically religious Ikkō sect held out against Nobunaga's attempts to unify the country by retaining the loyalty of minor local lords, extending its secular power, by aiding Yoshiaki, and by allying its members with the powerful daimyo of many provinces. In all, Nobunaga fought the Ikkō sect directly and indirectly for more than 10 years. It was only through the mediation of the Imperial court that Nobunaga in 1580 finally achieved the surrender of the fortress-monastery of Hongan-ji at Ōsaka, the most important political and military centre of the Ikkō. After capturing a great number of manors and temple estates, Nobunaga established his hold on the samurai and the wealthier farmers by investing them with the newly won estates. He thus gained a firm political and economic basis, which he strengthened by reducing even further the traditional influence of the Buddhist temples.

      Once established in Kyōto, he extended his protection to the Jesuit missionaries (mission) and assisted them in building a church in the capital and a seminary in Azuchi. He did so not only because of his interest in European culture but because he regarded the encouragement of Christianity as a further means of restraining the influence of the Buddhist temples. Nobunaga was a non-believer; his attitude toward Christianity was frankly political.

      By the spring of 1582 he had conquered central Japan and was attempting to extend his hegemony over western Japan. In June of that year, however, he was wounded during the rebellion of a discontented vassal and committed suicide. By the time of his death Nobunaga had succeeded in bringing nearly half of the provinces of Japan under his control. He had overthrown the old order of fractionized power held by the daimyo and had paved the way for the political and economic unification of the country.

Arimichi Ebisawa

Additional Reading
Tadachika Kuwata, Oda Nobunaga (1964); and Ryoichi Suzuki, Oda Nobunaga (1967), are the standard biographies (both in Japanese). George B. Sansom, The Western World and Japan (1950) and A History of Japan, 1334–1615, 3 vol. (1961); and Michael Cooper (ed.), The Southern Barbarians: The First Europeans in Japan (1971), provide useful information on Nobunaga's period.

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Universalium. 2010.

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