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Shogun : ウィキペディア英語版
Shogun

A was a hereditary military dictator in Japan during the period from 1192 to 1867, with some caveats. In this period, the shoguns were the ''de facto'' rulers of the country, although nominally they were appointed by the Emperor as a formality.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Shogun )〕 The Shogun held almost absolute power over territories through military means, in contrast to the concept of a colonial ''governor'' in Western culture who was appointed by a king. Nevertheless, an unusual situation occurred during the Kamakura period (1199-1333) upon the death of the first shogun, whereby the Hōjō clan's hereditary titles of Shikken and Tokuso (1256-1333) monopolized the shogunate, collectively deemed as the ''Regent Rule'' (執権政治).〔「執権 (一)」(『国史大辞典 6』(吉川弘文館1985年) ISBN 978-4-642-00506-7)〕 The actual shogun during this period met the same fate as the Emperor and was reduced to a figurehead until a coup in 1333, in which retainers restored power to the shogun.〔
The modern rank of shogun is roughly equivalent to a generalissimo. The title is the short form of ; the individual governing the country at various times in the history of Japan, ending when Tokugawa Yoshinobu relinquished the office to the Meiji Emperor in 1867.
A shogun's office or administration is the shogunate, known in Japanese as the , which originally referred to house of the general and later also suggested a private government under a shogun. The tent symbolized the field commander but also denoted that such an office was meant to be temporary. The shogun's officials were as a collective the ''bakufu'', and were those who carried out the actual duties of administration while the imperial court retained only nominal authority.〔Beasley, William G. (1955). ''Select Documents on Japanese Foreign Policy, 1853–1868,'' p. 321.〕 In this context, the office of the shōgun had a status equivalent to that of a viceroy or governor-general, but in reality shōguns dictated orders to everyone including the reigning Emperor.
==Heian period (794–1185)==

(詳細はEmishi, who resisted the governance of the Kyoto-based imperial court. Ōtomo no Otomaro was the first ''Sei-i Taishōgun''. The most famous of these shoguns was Sakanoue no Tamuramaro, who conquered the Emishi in the name of Emperor Kanmu. Eventually, the title was abandoned in the later Heian period after the Ainu had been either subjugated or driven to Hokkaidō.
In the later Heian, one more shogun was appointed. Minamoto no Yoshinaka was named ''sei-i taishōgun'' during the Gempei War, only to be killed shortly thereafter by Minamoto no Yoshitsune.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Shogun」の詳細全文を読む



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