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Encyclopedia > Emperor Kimmei

Emperor Kimmei (欽明天皇 Kinmei Tennō) (509-571) was the 29th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession, and the first to whom contemporary historiography assigns clear dates. His father was Emperor Keitai and his mother was Emperor Ninken's daughter, Princess Tashiraka (手白香皇女). In his lifetime, he was known by the name Amehara Oshiharaki Hironiwa (天国排開広庭尊) or Amekuni Oshiharaki Hironiwa. His title at his own time was certainly not tenno, but presumably sumeramikoto (治天下大王 - amenoshita shiroshimesu ōkimi, or sumera no mikoto, Great King who rules all under heaven), and/or ヤマト大王/大君 - yamato ōkimi, Great King of Yamato. Events Births Emperor Kimmei of Japan († 571) Adi Sankara Deaths Categories: 509 ... Events The Monophysites again reject the Council of Chalcedon, causing another schism. ... ... Emperor Ninken (仁賢天皇 Ninken Tennō, or rather Ninken okimi) (-c. ...


According to the traditional account, only upon the death of his older brother Emperor Senka in 539, Emperor Kimmei acceded to the throne. Scholars have opined that quite possibly he however was a rival ruler during reigns of his two elder half-brothers (misfits and gaps in chronology in the legends themselves support that theory), and remained supreme when both of them had deceased. He established or moved his court to Shikishima no Kanazashi Palace (磯城嶋金刺宮) in Yamato. Mononobe no Okoshi and Nakatomi no Kanamura were both appointed Ōmuraji, and Soga no Iname was appointed Ōomi. Although the imperial court did not move to the Asuka region of Japan until 592, Emperor Kimmei's rule is considered by some to be the beginning of the Asuka period of Yamato Japan, particularly those who associate the Asuka period primarily with the introduction of Buddhism to Japan. ... Events November 29 - Antioch struck by an earthquake. ... Yamato (大和) was a province of Japan. ... Muraji (連). Muraji was an ancient Japanese hereditary title denoting rank and political standing (a kabane) that was reserved for the most powerful among the Tomo no Miyatsuko clans, which were clans associated with particular occupations. ... Soga no Iname (蘇我稲目, died 570). ... Categories: Japan geography stubs | Old provinces of Japan ... Ishibutai Kofun, believed to be burial site of Soga no Umako Asuka (明日香村; -mura) is a village located in Takaichi District, Nara, Japan. ... Events After the great slaughter at Woddesbeorg, Ceawlin is deposed as both king of Wessex and Bretwalda. ... The following text needs to be harmonized with text in the article History of Japan#Yamato period. ... The following text needs to be harmonized with text in the article History of Japan#Yamato period. ... A replica of an ancient statue of Gautama Buddha, found in Sarnath, near Varanasi. ...


According to the Nihon Shoki, Emperor Kimmei received a bronze statue of Buddha as a gift from the king of Paekche Song Myong Wang (聖明王, Seimei Ō) in 552. (However, according to the Jōgū Shōtoku Hōō Teisetsu, Buddhism was introduced in 538.) Although Buddhism was already practiced in Japan by many Korean immigrants by this time, this episode is widely regarded as the official introduction of Buddhism to the country. Nihonshoki (日本書紀) is the second oldest history book about the ancient history of Japan. ... A large Buddha image in Yangon, Myanmar In Buddhism, a buddha (Sanskrit बुद्ध) is any being who has become fully awakened (enlightened), has permanently overcome greed, hate, and ignorance, and has achieved complete liberation from suffering. ... Baekje (18 BC (legendary) – AD 660) was one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, together with Goguryeo and Silla. ... Events July - Battle of Taginae: The Byzantine general Narses defeats and kills Totila, king of the Ostrogoths. ... Events End of the Kofun era and beginning of the Asuka period, the second part of the Yamato period in Japan. ...


With the introduction of a new religion to the court, a deep rift developed between the Mononobe clan, who supported the worship of Japan's traditional deities, and the Soga clan, who supported the adoption of Buddhism. According to one famous episode, shortly after the Soga's began worshipping the new Buddha statue, a plague broke out, which the Mononobe's promptly attributed to a curse by Japan's traditional deities as punishment for worshipping the foreign god. Mononobe no Okoshi and his men promptly threw the statue into a river in Naniwa and burned the temple that the Soga's had built to hold it. Mononobe clan (物部氏; mononobe-shi) was an old Japanese clan of Yamato period. ... Naniwa is an old name of Osaka, Osaka prefecture, Japan. ...


Because of several temporal discrepancies in the account of Emperor Kimmei in the Nihon Shoki, some believe that his was actually a rival court to that of Emperors Ankan and Senka. According to the Nihon Shoki, Emperor Kimmei ruled until his death in 571 and was buried in the Hinokuma no Sakai Burial Mound (桧隈坂合陵) but a stronger theory holds that he was actually buried in the Misemaruyama Tumulus (見瀬丸山古墳) located in Kashihara City (橿原市). Emperor Ankan (安閑天皇 Ankan Tennō) was the 27th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. ... ... Events The Monophysites again reject the Council of Chalcedon, causing another schism. ...

Preceded by:
Emperor Senka
Emperor of Japan
539-571
Succeeded by:
Emperor Bidatsu

  Results from FactBites:
 
Emperor Yōmei at AllExperts (373 words)
Emperor Yōmei (ç"¨æ˜Žå¤©çš‡ Yōmei Tennnō) (died 587) was the 31st emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession.
Emperor Yōmei was the fourth prince of Emperor Kimmei and his mother was Soga no Kitashihime, a daughter of Soga no Iname.
Although Emperor Yōmei is reported to have died from illness, this incident and the brevity of his reign have led some to speculate that he was actually assassinated by Moriya and Prince Anahobe.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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