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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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186 Japan<br />

<strong>The</strong> third war was more accurately a one-night armed conflict known<br />

as the Hôgen Conflict (1156), usually characterized as a factional dispute<br />

at court. <strong>The</strong> emperor and one Fujiwara faction, backed by factions of the<br />

Taira and Minamoto, fought the retired emperor and another faction of the<br />

Fujiwara, backed by yet other factions of the Taira and Minamoto families.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fourth war, the Heiji Conflict (1159–1160), was, like the Hôgen Conflict,<br />

a matter of political rivalries within the court. However, the main difference<br />

was that Taira and Minamoto were clearly fighting each other. By<br />

the end of the conflict, Minamoto no Yoshitomo had lost to Taira no Kiyomori,<br />

who then became a dominant figure with unprecedented influence<br />

at court. At any rate, the most striking features of these armed conflicts are<br />

the small forces, numbering only a few hundred, and the use of a single<br />

mounted warrior as the basic fighting unit. In addition, night attacks and<br />

setting fires have become effective tactics, given the smaller number of warriors<br />

participating in fighting. <strong>The</strong>se characteristics remained common until<br />

the next great conflict between the Minamoto and the Taira.<br />

Between 1180 and 1185 Japan experienced its first countrywide civil<br />

war, the Genpei War, between Minamoto supporters led by Minamoto no<br />

Yoritomo, and Taira supporters led by Taira no Kiyomori and his successors.<br />

<strong>The</strong> war erupted as a result of a succession dispute at court. A disgruntled<br />

Prince Mochihito, who was passed over for the title of emperor,<br />

issued a call to arms to Minamoto warriors to rise against the Taira, who<br />

supported and protected the court. Although the two competing forces are<br />

usually identified as Taira (also Heike) and Minamoto (also Genji), there<br />

were Taira warriors in the Minamoto camp and vice versa. For Minamoto<br />

no Yoritomo, the war against the Taira was for the sake of reviving his lineage<br />

of the Minamoto and establishing an independent coalition of warriors<br />

in the eastern provinces led by him and his descendants. For warriors<br />

supporting Yoritomo, more than anything else it was a war for benefits that<br />

came in the form of land rewards. <strong>The</strong> Genpei War, therefore, could be labeled<br />

as a political and economic war, of which the originally unplanned<br />

result was the formation of a distinct self-governed society of professional<br />

warriors. Leading this society of warriors was the bakufu, its shôgun (military<br />

general), and regents.<br />

Although a new political institution, the Kamakura bakufu did not introduce<br />

any major innovations in methods of warfare, even when threatened<br />

by foreign invaders. Japan’s refusal to become a tributary state to the<br />

Chinese court and the decapitation of Chinese messengers who came to<br />

convince the Japanese to submit to the Chinese court led to two massive invasions<br />

by Mongol forces in 1274 and 1281. <strong>The</strong> Japanese forces were able<br />

to defeat the Mongols, who, according to Chinese sources, ran short on arrows<br />

and lacked effective coordination. <strong>The</strong> well-known tales of divine

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