Battle of Uji (1180)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

First Battle of Uji
Part of the Genpei War

The Phoenix Hall of the Byodoin, in front of which the battle took place.
Date June 23, 1180
Location Uji, just outside Kyoto
Result Taira victory; Minamoto commander and Prince Mochihito killed
Casus
belli
Prince Mochihito chased by Taira warriors to Byodoin
Combatants
Minamoto clan Taira clan
Commanders
Minamoto no Yorimasa Taira no Tomomori, Taira no Shigehira
Genpei War
1st UjiNaraIshibashiyamaFujigawaSunomataYahagigawaHiuchiKurikaraShinoharaMizushimaFukuryūjiMuroyamaHōjūjidono2nd UjiAwazuIchi-no-TaniKojimaYashimaDan-no-ura

The first battle of Uji is famous and important for having opened the Genpei War. In early 1180, Prince Mochihito, the Minamoto Clan's favored claimant to the Imperial Throne, was chased by Taira forces to the Mii-dera, a temple just outside Kyoto. Due to the interference of a Mii-dera monk with Taira sympathies, the Minamoto army arrived too late to help defend the temple. Minamoto no Yorimasa led Prince Mochihito, along with the Minamoto army and a number of warrior monks from Mii-dera, south towards Nara. They crossed the Uji River, just outside the Byodoin, and tore up the planks of the bridge behind them to prevent the Taira following them. Three warrior monks in particular are named in the Heike Monogatari: Gochin no Tajima, Tsutsui Jomyo Meishu, and Ichirai Hoshi. These three, along with the other monks of Mii-dera, fought with bow and arrow, a variety of swords and daggers, and naginata. However, the Taira forces began to ford the river, and caught up with the Minamoto band. Yorimasa tried to help the Prince get away, but was struck with an arrow. He committed seppuku, setting a ritual precedent of committing suicide rather than surrendering, which would be honored up into World War II. This is the first known historical incident of this form of seppuku. The Prince was killed shortly afterwards, by the Taira warriors.

[edit] References

  • Sansom, George (1958). A History of Japan to 1334. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
  • Turnbull, Stephen (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook. London: Cassell & Co.
  • Turnbull, Stephen (2003). Japanese Warrior Monks AD 949-1603. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.


In other languages