Abe no Yoritoki

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Abe no Yoritoki
安倍 頼時
AllegianceAbe clan
RankChinjufu Shogun
RelationsSon: Abe no Sadato

Abe no Yoritoki (安倍 頼時, dead August 28, 1057) was the head of the Abe clan of Emishi who were allowed to rule the six Emishi districts (Iwate, Hienuki, Shiwa, Isawa, Esashi and Waga) in the Kitakami Basin from Morioka to Hiraizumi in what is now Iwate Prefecture. The clan emerged from the Appi River basin in what is now Hachimantai City, Iwate Prefecture, early in the 9th century. They provided a number of generals and governors throughout the 9th and 10th centuries. By monopolizing the gold, iron and horse trade in northern Honshū the family became enormously wealthy. They were also innovative in designing a new type of stockade which could withstand a long siege.

The 9th and 10th centuries saw a weakening of central power as a new land management system of tax-immune estates, or shoen, took hold. Yoritoki and the Abes came into conflict with the Minamoto clan as the Minamotos began to expand their holdings north into Abe territory and the Abes began to raid territories south of their border. In 1051 Yoritoki led an army of Emishi into northern Miyagi and trounced a government army at Onikiribe that had been sent to stop such practices. This is the event which triggered the Former Nine Years War Zenkunen War.

Minamoto no Yoriyoshi, was then deputized as the new Chinjufu Shogun and sent to chastise Yoritoki in 1053. In 1056 Yoritoki's eldest son, Sadato, began skirmishing with the Minamotos. All out war erupted in 1057 and Yoritoki was killed in battle by a stray arrow.[1]

Yoritoki's sons continued fighting for a time but were finally overwhelmed by combined Minamoto and Kiyohara armies in 1062.

Yoritoki was the father of -

Yoritoki is also one of the distant forefathers of Shinzō Abe, the prime minister of Japan, through Muneto.

Notes

  1. ^ Ackroyd, Joyce. (1982). Lessons from History: the Tokushi Yoron, p. 120.

References

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