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Emperor Temmu

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Emperor Temmu
40th Emperor of Japan
Reign The 27th Day of the 2nd Month of Temmu's era 1 (673) - The 9th Day of the 9th Month of Syuchō 1 (October 1, 686)
Born  ?
Died The 9th Day of the 9th Month of Syuchō 1 (October 1, 686)
Buried Hinokuma-no-ōuchi no Misasagi
Predecessor Emperor Kōbun
Successor Empress Jitō
Consort Princess Uno-no-sarara (Empress Jitō)
Issue Princess Tōchi by Princess Nukata
Prince Takechi by Amako-no-iratsume
Prince Kusakabe by Empress Jitō
Princess Oku and Prince Ōtsu by Princess Ōta
Prince Naga and Prince Yuge by Princess Ōe
Prince Toneri by Princess Niitabe
Princess Tajima by Higami-no-iratsume
Prince Niitabe by Ioe-no-iratsume
Prince Osakabe, Prince Shigi, Princess Hatsusebe and Princess Taki by Kajihime-no-iratsume
Prince Hozumi, Princess Ki and Princess Takata by Ōnu-no-iratsume
Royal House Asuka Kiyomihara Palace
Father Emperor Jomei
Mother Empress Kōgyoku

Emperor Temmu (天武天皇 Tenmu-tennō) (c. 631 - October 1, 686) was the 40th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. He ruled from 672 until his death in 686.[1]

Contents

Genealogy

He was the youngest son of Emperor Jomei and Empress Saimei, and the younger brother of the Emperor Tenji. His name at birth was Prince Ōama (大海人皇子:Ōama no ōji). He was succeeded by Empress Jitō, who was both his niece and his wife. During the reign of his elder brother, Emperor Tenji, Temmu was forced to marry several of Tenji's daughters because Tenji thought those marriages would help to strengthen political ties between the two brothers. The nieces he married included Princess Unonosarara, today known as the Empress Jitō, and Princess Ōta. Temmu also had other consorts whose fathers were influential courtiers.

Temmu had many children, including his crown prince Kusakabe by Princess Unonosarara; Princess Tōchi; Prince Ōtsu and Princess Ōku by Princess Ōta (whose father also was Tenji); and Prince Toneri, the editor of Nihonshoki and father of Emperor Junnin. Through Prince Kusakabe, Temmu had two emperors and two empresses among his descendents. Empress Shōtoku was the last of these imperial rulers from his lineage.

Events of Temmu's life

Emperor Temmu is the first monarch of Japan, to whom the title tenno was assigned contemporaneously -- not only by later generations.

The first and only document on his life was Nihonshoki. However, it was edited by his son, Prince Toneri, and the work was written during the reigns of his wife and children, causing one to suspect its accuracy and impartiality.

Temmu's father died while he was young, and he grew up mainly under the guidance of Empress Saimei. He was not expected to gain the throne, because his brother Tenji was the crown prince, being the older son of their mother, the reigning empress.

After Tenji ascended to the throne, Temmu was appointed crown prince. This was because Tenji had no appropriate heir among his sons at that time, as none of their mothers was of a rank high enough to give the necessary political support. Tenji was suspicious that Temmu might be so ambitious as to attempt to take the throne, and felt the necessity to strengthen his position through politically advantageous marriages.

Tenji was particularly active in improving the military institutions which had been established during the Taika reforms.[2]

In his old age, Tenji had a son, Prince Ōtomo, by a low-ranking consort. Since Ōtomo had weak political support from his maternal relatives, the general wisdom of the time held that it was not a good idea for him to ascend to the throne, yet Tenji was obsessed with the idea.

In 671 Temmu felt himself to be in danger and volunteered to resign the office of crown prince to become a monk. He moved to the mountains in Yoshino, Yamato province (now in Yoshino, Nara), officially for reasons of seclusion. He took with him his sons and one of his wives, Princess Unonosarara, a daughter of Tenji. However, he left all his other consorts at the capital, Omikyō in Ōmi Province (today in Otsu, Shiga).

A year later, (in 672) Tenji died and Prince Ōtomo ascended to the throne as Emperor Kōbun. Temmu assembled an army and marched from Yoshino to the east, to attack Omikyō in a counterclockwise movement. They marched through Yamato, Iga and Mino provinces to threaten Omikyō in the adjacent province. The army of Temmu and the army of the young Emperor Kōbun fought in the northwestern part of Mino (nowadays Sekigahara, Gifu). Temmu's army won and Kōbun committed suicide (Jinshin incident).

Post-Meiji chronology
  • In the 10th year of Tenji, in the 11th month (671): Emperor Tenji, in the 10th year of his reign (天智天皇10年), designated his son as his heir; and modern scholars construe this as meaning that the son would have received the succession (‘‘senso’’) after his father's death. Shortly thereafter, Emperor Kōbun is said to have acceded to the throne (‘‘sokui’’).[3] If this understanding were valid, then it would it would follow:
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