The Siege of the Sanjō Palace was the primary battle of the 1159 Heiji Rebellion. In early January of 1160, after Taira no Kiyomori left Kyoto on a family pilgrimage, Fujiwara no Nobuyori and Minamoto no Yoshitomo saw an opportunity to effect changes they sought in the government. With a force of roughly five hundred men, they attacked in the night, kidnapping former emperor Emperor Go-Shirakawa, and setting fire to the Palace.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:Event/date
  • 1160-02-05 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/combatant
  • Minamoto Clan, with Fujiwara no Nobuyori
  • Taira Clan, with Fujiwara no Michinori
dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/commander
dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/partOf
dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/place
dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/result
  • Taira clan victory; Palace destroyed
dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/strength
  • 500?
  • Unknown
dbpedia-owl:combatant
  • Minamoto Clan, with Fujiwara no Nobuyori
  • Taira Clan, with Fujiwara no Michinori
dbpedia-owl:commander
dbpedia-owl:date
  • 1160-02-05 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:partOf
dbpedia-owl:place
dbpedia-owl:result
  • Taira clan victory; Palace destroyed
dbpedia-owl:strength
  • 500?
  • Unknown
dbpedia-owl:thumbnail
dbpprop:abstract
  • The Siege of the Sanjō Palace was the primary battle of the 1159 Heiji Rebellion. In early January of 1160, after Taira no Kiyomori left Kyoto on a family pilgrimage, Fujiwara no Nobuyori and Minamoto no Yoshitomo saw an opportunity to effect changes they sought in the government. With a force of roughly five hundred men, they attacked in the night, kidnapping former emperor Emperor Go-Shirakawa, and setting fire to the Palace. They also abducted and imprisoned then current emperor, Emperor Nijō, who supported their enemies, the Taira clan and Fujiwara no Michinori. They next attacked the manor house of Michinori, setting it too aflame and killing all those inside, with the exception of Michinori himself, who was captured later and decapitated. Nobuyori forced Emperor Nijō to name him imperial chancellor, completing one of the first important steps towards gaining power over his rivals. However, Taira no Kiyomori returned soon afterwards, with his son Taira no Shigemori and a small force. The Minamoto, reinforced with men from Kamakura led by Yoshitomo's eldest son Minamoto no Yoshihira, were the larger force but were unprepared, and hesitated at Kiyomori's return. The Taira were thus allowed to return to their family's mansion in the Rokuhara district, where they would plan tactics and strategies, and gain many more warriors. At the end of January, the Taira smuggled the Emperor Nijō and his empress consort out of the Sanjō Palace and into the Rokuhara mansion, disguised as a lady in waiting. Meanwhile, the Taira also helped the former emperor Emperor Go-Shirakawa escape from the Minamoto as well. On the morning of February 5th, Minamoto no Yoshitomo and his men prepared to defend the Palace against the inevitable Taira assault. The defense held out for a time, until a portion of the Taira feigned a retreat, luring Minamoto warriors out of the Palace, and giving the rest of their force an opportunity to rush the Gates and, soon afterwards, drive the Minamoto out. Yoshitomo's men were then obliged to attack the Rokuhara mansion, but failed in their assault, and fled Kyoto, meeting resistance along the way from the warrior monks of Mount Hiei who they had attacked in decades past.
  • Die Belagerung des Sanjō-Palastes in Kyoto vom 19. Januar bis 5. Februar 1160 war die wichtigste militärische Auseinandersetzung der Heiji-Rebellion von 1159/1160. Zu Beginn des Januar 1160, nachdem der am Kaiserhof einflussreiche Taira no Kiyomori Kyoto mit seiner Familie zu einer Pilgerreise verließ, sahen Fujiwara no Nobuyori und Minamoto no Yoshitomo die Gelegenheit gekommen, die ihnen genehmen Änderungen in der Regierung vorzunehmen. Mit etwa 500 Mann griffen sie bei Nacht den Sanjō-Palast an, in dem der zurückgetretene Kaiser Go-Shirakawa lebte. Anschließend zündeten sie den Palast an. Go-Shirakawa wurde in den Kaiserpalast gebracht und dort zusammen mit dem regierenden Kaiser Nijō, der ebenfalls ihre Feinde, die Taira und Fujiwara no Michinori, unterstützte, gefangen gehalten.
dbpprop:caption
  • Night Attack on the Sanjo Palace (handscroll detail)
dbpprop:casus
  • Dynastic and clan disputes
dbpprop:combatant
dbpprop:commander
dbpprop:conflict
  • Siege of the Sanjō Palace
dbpprop:date
  • January 19 - February 5, 1160
dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
dbpprop:partof
dbpprop:place
  • Sanjo Palace, Kyoto, Japan
dbpprop:result
  • Taira clan victory; Palace destroyed
dbpprop:strength
  • 500?
  • Unknown
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbpprop:wordnet_type
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • The Siege of the Sanjō Palace was the primary battle of the 1159 Heiji Rebellion. In early January of 1160, after Taira no Kiyomori left Kyoto on a family pilgrimage, Fujiwara no Nobuyori and Minamoto no Yoshitomo saw an opportunity to effect changes they sought in the government. With a force of roughly five hundred men, they attacked in the night, kidnapping former emperor Emperor Go-Shirakawa, and setting fire to the Palace.
  • Die Belagerung des Sanjō-Palastes in Kyoto vom 19. Januar bis 5. Februar 1160 war die wichtigste militärische Auseinandersetzung der Heiji-Rebellion von 1159/1160. Zu Beginn des Januar 1160, nachdem der am Kaiserhof einflussreiche Taira no Kiyomori Kyoto mit seiner Familie zu einer Pilgerreise verließ, sahen Fujiwara no Nobuyori und Minamoto no Yoshitomo die Gelegenheit gekommen, die ihnen genehmen Änderungen in der Regierung vorzunehmen.
rdfs:label
  • Siege of Sanjō Palace
  • Belagerung des Sanjō-Palastes
owl:sameAs
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foaf:name
  • Siege of the Sanjō Palace
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