{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"The People of the North, Part 2","description":"This is the second of two episodes talking about the people in the north of the Japanese archipelago:&amp;nbsp; The Emishi and the Mishihase.&amp;nbsp; Last episode we covered things from an archaeological overview, looking at the traces of the Epi-Jomon, Satsumon, and Okhotsk Sea cultures.&amp;nbsp; This episode focuses more on what was actually written in the Nihon Shoki, including a journey to introduce Emishi to the Tang Emperor himself! For more information, check out our podcast blog at: https:\/\/sengokudaimyo.com\/podcast\/episode-117 &amp;nbsp; Rough Transcript Welcome to Sengoku Daimyo\u2019s Chronicles of Japan.&amp;nbsp; My name is Joshua and this is episode 117: The People of the North, Part 2 Abe no Hirafu gazed out at the sea, waiting for his opponents to appear.&amp;nbsp; He had traveled with a fleet to the far north, into a land that was unlike anything that most of his men had ever seen.&amp;nbsp; They were far away from the rice fields of their home villages.&amp;nbsp; Up here, the people made their way by hunting and fishing, and the land was much more wild.&amp;nbsp; Besides the people, the land was also home to giant bears, much larger than anything back in the Home Provinces.&amp;nbsp; Giant beasts with paws the size of a man\u2019s head.&amp;nbsp; They were truly incredible, but they were not his target this time. As he watched the waves, he saw his prey emerge.&amp;nbsp; They rowed their ships around the cape, coming out from the defensive position they had previously established.&amp;nbsp; Where Hirafu\u2019s men flew banners made of silk, his opponents had created flags made of feathers, which they hoisted high in their boats.&amp;nbsp; They were small in number, but they knew this land and these waters.&amp;nbsp; They were comfortable traveling in the cold and unforgiving seas, and they no doubt had reinforcements.&amp;nbsp; Hirafu may have had the upper hand, but he knew he couldn\u2019t get too cocky. It was probably too much to hope for that the size of his fleet alone would cause them to submit.&amp;nbsp; If they could be bought off, then perhaps that was best, but Hirafu knew that was probably unlikely.&amp;nbsp; This was going to be a fight, and Hirafu and his men were ready for it. Before we jump into the episode proper, a quick thank you to Hakucho for donating to support Sengoku Daimyo.&amp;nbsp; We always appreciate any support, and there is information at the end of each episode on how to help out if you would like to join them. Last episode we introduced the Emishi and the Mishihase and talked about them and their connections to the Yamato and Japanese state, as well as to the modern Ainu people.&amp;nbsp; We went over a lot of the archaeological findings, and talked about how the Jomon period, uninterrupted in northern Honshu and Hokkaido, eventually gave way to the Epi-Jomon and Satsumon cultures, while the Ohokotsk Sea Culture is observed from around the 5th to 9th centuries, and we talked about how these existed in the lands we know as being connected to the Emishi and the Mishihase people mentioned in the Chronicles. This episode we are going to rely a lot more on the narrative found in the Nihon Shoki, but I wanted to make sure that we had that discussion about the archaeology, first, so that people would have a background.&amp;nbsp; If you haven\u2019t already done so, I highly recommend going back and giving Part 1 a listen. So let\u2019s back up a bit, and let\u2019s set the scene on the peninsula and the archipelago, and see what led up to this moment. In 654, the sovereign of Yamato, Karu, aka Kotoku Tennou, had passed away in his palace in Naniwa.&amp;nbsp; His sister, Takara Hime, and other members of the royal family had gathered once more in Naniwa when they caught word of his illness, but their visit was brief.&amp;nbsp; Karu passed away on the 1st day of the 10th month, and a little over two months later he was buried.&amp;nbsp; After that, rather than taking up residence again in Naniwa, the court moved back to the old capital of Asuka, where Takara Hime re-ascended the throne.&amp;nbsp; It was now the year 655, almost a decade since Crown Prince Naka no Oe had orchestrated the murderous coup that had seen the powerful scions of the Soga family cut down in front of Takara Hime and others, causing her to abdicate.&amp;nbsp; And now, well, perhaps Naka no Oe was comfortable controlling things from behind the scenes, because Takara Hime was once again the one in power\u2014or at least the one sitting on the throne.&amp;nbsp; And there\u2019s a LOT that would go on during this reign according to the chronicles. On the peninsula at this point, the Tang-Goguryeo war was in full swing, with the Tang dynasty regularly harassing Goguryeo.&amp;nbsp; Goguryeo was at least nominally allied with Baekje, whose ruling family also claimed descent from a shared Buyeo ancestor, and Baekje was, of course, a long time ally of Yamato.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, Silla had thrown their lot in with the Tang dynasty, though as alliances went it was not exactly an alliance of equals \u2013 and most alliances came and went as the political winds changed throughout the peninsula. Over time, we\u2019ll see some resolution coming to the situation on the peninsula.&amp;nbsp; But overall, one of the biggest trends is that during Takara Hime\u2019s second reign, Yamato was reaching out to a much wider world than it had in the past.&amp;nbsp; This included connections to the south\u2014to those on the Ryukyu islands, and possibly beyond.&amp;nbsp; And there were continued efforts to reach out to the Tang empire, with varying degrees of success.&amp;nbsp; Those that did go would sit and learn at the feet of some of the most famous scholars in the world, including the Buddhist priest, scholar, and traveler, Xuanzang, someone I cannot wait to get into in a future episode, as he really demonstrates just how connected the world had become at this time in a way that is often hard for us to comprehend, today. But there is also plenty happening in the archipelago, and even just in Asuka.&amp;nbsp; In fact, regardless of what the Chronicles say, there are a lot of ancient monuments and archaeological finds in the Asuka region that aren\u2019t directly mentioned in any historical record, but can be generally traced to this era - reminders of this period that are literally carved in stone.&amp;nbsp; We still have plenty of questions as to just what was going on, but we\u2019re starting to see more and more lasting physical traces. Our first relevant entry in the Nihon Shoki for the topic of this episode comes from the 7th month of 655, the year that Takara Hime had taken the throne.&amp;nbsp; We are told that 99 Northern Emishi and 99 Eastern Emishi were entertained at the court of Naniwa\u2014presumably using the government facilities built during Karu\u2019s time.&amp;nbsp; At the same time, there were 150 envoys from Baekje who were likewise feted.&amp;nbsp; Caps of honor, of two grades in each case, were bestowed on nine Emishi of Kikafu and six Emishi of Tsugaru.&amp;nbsp; This is an interesting record, and let\u2019s explore what it means for Yamato\u2019s view of itself and its own authority.&amp;nbsp; First, the Baekje and the Emishi are being streated similarly\u2014they both appear to be groups that are from *outside* Yamato conducting some kind of diplomacy with the court.&amp;nbsp; That said, it is quite clear from the way that the Chronicles deal with them that Yamato viewed each group as distinctly different.&amp;nbsp; Baekje was Yamato\u2019s continental ally, and their primary means through which they could access the continent and all that it had to offer.&amp;nbsp; They had helped bring Buddhism to the archipelago, and were clearly seen as a civilized country.&amp;nbsp; The Emishi, on the other hand, were Yamato\u2019s own \u201cbarbarians\u201d.&amp;nbsp; They were outside and Yamato clearly saw them as less civilized.&amp;nbsp; In many ways Yamato viewed the Emishi similar to how the Tang court likely viewed Yamato.&amp;nbsp; After all, just as Tang literature talked about the differences between the quote-unquote \u201ccivilized\u201d center of the empire and the so-called \u201cbarbaric\u201d lands beyond their borders, Yamato could place itself in a similar position, simply by placing the Nara Basin at the \u201cCenter\u201d and with the Emishi helping define that which was outside.&amp;nbsp; So in an odd way, this may have been uplifting for Yamato\u2019s own self-image. And just as the Tang court enticed border states into their sphere of influence with the promise of imperial titles, the Yamato court similarly was bestowing rank upon the Emishi, making themselves the granter of prestige and recognition.&amp;nbsp; By being a part of the system, you were rewarded with recognition of your status, something that likely appealed to many. As to the places referenced \u2013 Kikafu and Tsugaru \u2013 Aston isn\u2019t certain about Kikafu, but Tsugaru seems quite obvious as the northernmost tip of Honshu, in modern Aomori prefecture, where the islands of Honshu and Hokkaido are separated by none other than the Tsugaru strait. The fact that the Chroniclers differentiated between the Eastern and Northern Emishi likewise suggests that this was not a monolithic state.&amp;nbsp; Yamato saw a difference between the Emishi in one part of the archipelago versus the other. Three years later, in the 4th month of 658, Yamato sent one of the largest expeditions against the northeast.&amp;nbsp; Abe no Omi\u2014other entries name him as Abe no Omi no Hirafu\u2014took 180 ships up north on an expedition to the Emishi.&amp;nbsp; We are told that he met with the Emishi in the districts of Aita and Nushiro, believed to be in modern Akita prefecture.&amp;nbsp; Akita prefecture is on the western side of Tohoku, towards the very northern tip.&amp;nbsp; It is opposite Iwate prefecture on the east, and just below Aomori prefecture, which, at the time, was known as Tsugaru.&amp;nbsp; This was on the extreme end of Honshu. Both Aita and Nushiro quickly submitted to the Yamato mission.&amp;nbsp; Still, Abe drew up his ships in order of battle in the bay of Aita, where an envoy from the Emishi named Omuka came forward and made an oath.&amp;nbsp; He swore that they had no ill-intentions.&amp;nbsp; The fact that the Emishi were armed with bows and arrows was not because they were at war, but because up in that area of Tohoku, they were all hunters, and so it was their regular tool.&amp;nbsp; They swore to the gods of Aita bay that they had not raised arms against Yamato, but they were willing to submit to Yamato rule. For his part, Omuka was granted court rank, and local governors were established at Nushiro and Tsugaru\u2014likely meaning they recognized local chieftains and made them responsible for representing the others.&amp;nbsp; Finally, they summoned the Emishi of Watari no Shima to the shores of Arima, and a great feast was provided.&amp;nbsp; After that, they all returned home. The&amp;nbsp; term \u201cWatari no Shima\u201d seems to almost undoubtedly refer to the island of Hokkaido.&amp;nbsp; \u201cWatari\u201d means to cross, so referring to the \u201cEmishi of Watari no Shima\u201d likely referred to the Emishi on Hokkaido vice those in the Tohoku region. The entire entry seems a bit suspect.&amp;nbsp; Abe no Hirafu takes an armed party up north and then they all\u2026 just sit down and have tea together?&amp;nbsp; There seems to be a lot of missing context.&amp;nbsp; Of course, from Yamato\u2019s perspective, they were the civilized center.&amp;nbsp; Does that mean that any violence they committed was simply swept under the rug of history?&amp;nbsp; Or did they truly meet with such quick submission that only a show of force was necessary? There is one other entry for 658, relative to all of this. It isn\u2019t given a specific date, so it is unclear when, exactly it occurred, but it may shed some light.&amp;nbsp; That entry states that Abe no Hikida no Omi no Hirafu, warden of the land of Koshi, went on an expedition not against the Emishi, but against the Mishihase, or Su-shen.&amp;nbsp; He is said to have brought back from this trip two live \u201cwhite bears\u201d, or \u201cshiguma\u201d. So was his expedition really against the Emishi, or was his actual goal to fight the Mishihase, which means he didn\u2019t just stop at the end of Honshu, but he continued on to Hokkaido\u2014Watari no Shima\u2014and up at least to Central Hokkaido, where he would have met with the people of the Okhotsk Sea culture\u2014likely the Mishihase of the Chronicle?&amp;nbsp; Or was he sailing against both? This also leads to numerous other theories as to just what was going on.&amp;nbsp; While Yamato was pushing on the Emishi from the south, were these Mishihase likewise encroaching on the Emishi in the north?&amp;nbsp; Were they pushing them south or absorbing those in the farthest north?&amp;nbsp; There seems to have clearly been a difference and some conflict between them, as evidenced by later entries, which we\u2019ll cover in a bit. Quickly, though, I do want to touch on the idea that they brought back two \u201cwhite bears\u201d.&amp;nbsp; \u201cShiguma\u201d appears to refer to a \u201cwhite bear\u201d, and at its most simplistic understanding, this would seem to refer to a polar bear, but that seems quite a stretch.&amp;nbsp; Today, polar bears largely live in the arctic regions, out on the permanent sea ice, where they are able to hunt.&amp;nbsp; They are considered an aquatic animal, living mainly in the ocean, though they will come ashore to hunt, on occasion.&amp;nbsp; Still, they are mostly adapted to life on the sea ice. While the climate of the 700s was different, I don\u2019t know that the sea ice extended that far south.&amp;nbsp; It is possible that polar bears had been captured much further north, and then sold to people further south, through the extensive trade networks that ran up through Kamchatka, Siberia, and even across the Aleutian chain, but as far as I can tell, polar bears would not have been living in Hokkaido or even in the Kuril or Sakhalin islands at that time. It is much more likely that the \u201cShiguma\u201d was one of the Hokkaido brown bears.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; They may have been albino, but more likely it was simply an easy designation to distinguish them from the bears of the rest of the archipelago\u2014the Asian black bear.&amp;nbsp; These are clearly black bears, though their fur can appear lighter in some instances.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, although brown bears can be a very dark brown, their fur can vary to almost a blond, and if you look at many photos you can see how they might be considered \u201cwhite\u201d, especially compared to the black bear that was the norm in Yamato.&amp;nbsp; I suspect that this is actually the species that Hirafu brought back, and which would be referenced in later entries, where \u201cshiguma\u201d furs appear to be have been quite plentiful, suggesting it wasn\u2019t just a rare mutation. In addition, I can\u2019t help but note that the presence of bears, here, seems to also further connect with modern traditions of the Ainu of Hokkaido.&amp;nbsp; Most notably in their reverence for bears, including the traditional Iyomante ceremony.&amp;nbsp; There is also evidence of the importance of bears in what we see of the Okhotsk Sea Culture.&amp;nbsp; It is hard to tell if there is more from this interaction, but it still raises some questions. But I digress.&amp;nbsp; While there are still a lot of gaps, we can see that the Emishi were being brought into the fold, as it were, while the Mishihase were apparently the threat that Yamato would be fighting.&amp;nbsp; In fact, I can\u2019t help but wonder if the threat posed by the Mishihase didn\u2019t help encourage the Emishi to ally themselves with Yamato in an attempt to protect themselves. Whatever happened, the relationship with the Emishi, from that point, seems to place them as subjects of Yamato.&amp;nbsp; We are told that three months later, over 200 Emishi visited the Yamato court, bringing presents for the sovereign.&amp;nbsp; These were not just the Emishi of the far reaches of Tohoku, but seems to have included Emishi from several different regions.&amp;nbsp; We are also told that the entertainment and largess provided by the court was even greater than any time before, no doubt presenting the carrot in contrast to Abe no Hirafu\u2019s stick. One of the carrots handed out was court rank,&amp;nbsp; We are told that two Emishi of the enigmatic Kikafu region each received one grade of rank while Saniguma, the Senior governor of Nushiro, was granted two steps in rank, making him Lower Shou-otsu in the rank system of the time, and he was given the superintendence of the population register\u2014likely meaning he had a charge similar to the other governors dispatched to take a census and let the court know just how many people there were in the region.&amp;nbsp; His junior governor, Ubasa, received the rank of Kembu, the lowest rank in the system. Meanwhile, Mamu, the Senior governor of Tsugaru was granted the rank of Upper Dai-otsu and Awohiru, the Junior governor of Tsugaru, was granted the rank of Lower Shou-out. At the same time, two ranks were granted on the Miyatsuko of the Tsukisara Barrier and one rank was granted to Inadzumi Ohotomo no Kimi, Miyatsuko of the Nutari Barrier.&amp;nbsp; These last two appear to have been members of Yamato rather than Emishi, but clearly all related to the issue of the borders and beyond. And so we are given three different locations.&amp;nbsp; We are not told the names of the Emishi from Kikafu, but we are given the names of the senior and junior governors\u2014likely local chieftains co-opted into the Yamato polity\u2014of Nushiro and Tsugaru.&amp;nbsp; Together with the name \u201cOmuka\u201d we have some of our earliest attestations to possible Emishi names\u2014though whether these were names, titles, or something else I could not say.&amp;nbsp; We have Saniguma, Ubasa, Mamu, and Awohiru.&amp;nbsp; None of these are given with family names, which seems to track with the fact that formal \u201cfamily\u201d names appear to have been an innovation of the Kofun culture, rather than an indigenous phenomenon. I would also note that I am not sure if these ranks came with any kind of stipend: after all, much of that region wasn\u2019t exactly suited to rice-land, so where would the stipend come from?&amp;nbsp; That said, there were certainly more practical gifts that were laid out for them as well.&amp;nbsp; The governors of Nushiro and the governors of Tsugaru were each given 20 cuttle-fish flags\u2014likely a banner similar to the koi nobori, or carp banners, in use today\u2014as well as two drums, two sets of bows and arrows, and two suits of armor.&amp;nbsp; This seems to be one for the Senior and one for the Junior governor.&amp;nbsp; In addition, Saniguma was commanded to \u201cinvestigate\u201d the Emishi population as well as what Aston translates as the \u201ccaptive\u201d population\u2014by which I suspect they mean those living in bondage within the Emishi communities.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It is interesting to me that even though the senior governor of Tsugaru was given a higher rank, this last duty was only given to the governor of Nushiro. And there you have it.&amp;nbsp; With all of that the Emishi were at least nominally subject to the Yamato court.&amp;nbsp; They were still, however, cultural outsiders.&amp;nbsp; It is quite likely that they spoke a different language, and given the number of placenames in Tohoku that seem to correspond with the modern Ainu language, it is quite likely that a language at least related to modern Ainu was spoken in the Emishi controlled areas. A similar pattern to the year 658 took place in the entries for the following year.&amp;nbsp; Once again, Abe no Hirafu went north with 180 ships on what we are told, at least in Aston\u2019s translation, was an expedition against the Emishi.&amp;nbsp; He assembled a selection of the Emishi of Akita and Nushiro, totaling 241 people, with 31 of their captives, as well as 112 Emishi of Tsugaru with 4 of their captives, and 20 Emishi of Ifurisahe.&amp;nbsp; Once he had them all at his mercy he then\u2026 feasted them and gave them presents.&amp;nbsp; Is this really what an expedition *against* the Emishi looked like?&amp;nbsp; It almost sounds more like a diplomatic mission. We are told that after feasting and giving the assembled Emishi presents, Abe no Hirafu made an offering to the local gods of a boat and silk of various colors. He then proceeded to a place called \u201cShishiriko\u201d, where two Emishi from a place called Tohiu, named Ikashima and Uhona, came forward and told him that Yamato should create an outpost at Shiribeshi, on the west coast of Hokkaido, which would be the seat of local Yamato government.&amp;nbsp; This sounds not entirely dissimilar from the idea of the Dazai in Kyushu.&amp;nbsp; Abe no Hirafu agreed and established a district governor there. Relevant to this, between the 7th and 8th centuries, we see clusters of pit dwellings in Hokkaido largely in the areas corresponding to the modern sub-prefectures of Sorachi, Ishikari, and Iburi, with many of them clustered near modern Sapporo, and a very small number near Rumoi, further north along the western coast. Once more it is another account, not the main narrative of the Nihon Shoki, where we might see what was really going on.&amp;nbsp; That entry claims that Abe no Hirafu went north to fight with the Mishihase and, on his return, he brought back some 49 captives.&amp;nbsp; So was this what all of this was really about?&amp;nbsp; Was he going up there to fight the Emishi, or was he perhaps fighting with the Emishi against the Mishihase? When Abe no Hirafu finally returned, it seems that the provincial governors of Michinoku\u2014pretty much the whole of Touhoku\u2014and Koshi, which was also a land known for being home to Emishi, were granted two grades of rank.&amp;nbsp; Their subordinates, the district governors and administrators, each received one grade of rank. We are also told that on the 17th day of the 3rd month of 659, that a copy of Mt. Meru was constructed on the riverbank east of Amakashi no Oka and that Emishi of Michonoku and Koshi were both entertained there.&amp;nbsp; Little more is given, and, again, it isn\u2019t clear if this is before or after Hirafu\u2019s expedition of that year. Mt. Meru\u2014read as Shumisen, today\u2014is the mountain at the center of the world, according to some Buddhist traditions.&amp;nbsp; Building a copy would have been a statement, creating a copy of the mountain and bringing the center of the universe to you.&amp;nbsp; This was probably a feature in a garden\u2014at least that is how it was conceived of during the reign of Kashikiya Hime.&amp;nbsp; This second one may have been made with a pile of stones, and there have even been found some features in Asuka that some think could be remnants of this ancient model of the universe, but they aren\u2019t without controversy. In any case, that same year that the Emishi were brought to Asuka to view this Buddhist monument, in 659, a mission was sent to the Tang court.&amp;nbsp; We\u2019ll talk about the mission at some other time, but for now I want to focus on the fact that they brought with them an Emishi man and a woman to show the Tang emperor.&amp;nbsp; Regrettably, we don\u2019t know their names, and we don\u2019t know their status in Emishi society.&amp;nbsp; Were these captives, possibly enslaved?&amp;nbsp; Or were these volunteers, who had gone willingly with the envoys to see the lands beyond their home.&amp;nbsp; They likely had heard of the Tang empire from Yamato, and so it wouldn\u2019t be so surprising if they decided to go see it for themselves. Where it is of particular interest to us right now is that we have an apparent eyewitness account of the description given to the Tang Emperor about the Emishi by the Yamato envoys.&amp;nbsp; Be aware that the envoys were not necessarily experts in Emishi culture, and may not have met any other than their travel companions, but the description, given by none other than Yuki no Hakatoko, who was apparently there, at the Tang court, when it happened, gives us invaluable insight into how Yamato viewed the Emishi. The entire thing is a bit of a question and answer session as the Tang Emperor, Tang Gaozong, inquired about the Emishi and who they were.&amp;nbsp; In response to his questions, the envoys assured him that Yamato and the Emishi were at peace with each other.&amp;nbsp; They further noted that there were three different groups of Emishi.&amp;nbsp; Those farthest from Yamato were the Tsugaru Emishi.&amp;nbsp; Next, slightly closer to Yamato, were the Ara-Emishi.&amp;nbsp; \u201cAra\u201d in this case means \u201csoft\u201d, and was probably a reference to the fact that those Emishi closer to Yamato were seen as more compliant.&amp;nbsp; Finally ,there are the \u201cNigi-Emishi\u201d, living right on the borders.&amp;nbsp; \u201cNigi\u201d in this case seems to refer to them being the \u201cGentle\u201d or even \u201cCivilized\u201d Emishi.&amp;nbsp; I suspect that those living closest to Yamato were also the ones doing things like farming, and possibly building burial mounds.&amp;nbsp; They may have even mixed with some of the border communities, and may have included Wa communities that were outside of Yamato\u2019s influence.&amp;nbsp; After all, it isn\u2019t entirely obvious that \u201cEmishi\u201d referred to a single ethnic identity. In providing further answers to the emperor\u2019s questioning, we are told that the Emishi, at least according to the Yamato envoys, didn\u2019t farm, but instead they sustained themselves through hunting and fishing.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, we are told that they didn\u2019t live in houses, but instead they dwelt under trees and in the recesses of the mountains.&amp;nbsp; This one is a little more questionable, after all, we have evidence of pit houses and villages all the way up to Aomori and back to Jomon times.&amp;nbsp; However, it is quite possible that Yamato was often encountering hunting parties, which very likely may have been using makeshift shelters or utilizing natural features like caves when they were out traveling.&amp;nbsp; Some of this, though, may have been built around ideas and concepts of how quote-unquote \u201cbarbaric\u201d people lived, focusing on the exceptional, exotic, and sensationalist instances rather than on the more mundane day-to-day details.&amp;nbsp; Finally, the emperor himself commented on the \u201cunusual appearance\u201d of the Emishi.&amp;nbsp; We know that the Japanese terms for the Emishi refer to them as hairy barbarians, and if they were anything like modern Ainu, they were likely a good deal more hirsute than their Yamato neighbors.&amp;nbsp; This was no doubt a stereotype, as, again, Emishi may have also included some members of the Wa in their numbers, but they also appear to have included groups of people that were quite physically distinct.&amp;nbsp; Some DNA evidence also bears this out, and even today many people with deep ancestral ties to the Tohoku region demonstrate closer ties to ancient Jomon populations than to the succeeding Yayoi population that came over from the continent with their rice farming techniques. And so that gives us mostly what we know about the Emishi, except that they seem to have left out the Emishi of Watari no Shima\u2014the Emishi of Hokkaido.&amp;nbsp; They would have been beyond the Tsugaru Emishi, unless they were considered similar, and painted with the same brush. And speaking of Watari no Shima, we have one more entry before we bring things to a close, and that is from the third month of the year 660.&amp;nbsp; Once more, Abe no Omi, who must have been getting his frequent sailor miles in by this point\u2014or at least one hopes he had been invited to the Captain\u2019s circle at least.&amp;nbsp; Anyway, Abe no Omi was sent on yet another expedition, this time with 200 ships, and this time quite specifically against the Mishihase.&amp;nbsp; He made a stop in Michinoku on the way up where he brought some of the Emishi on his own boat\u2014possibly as translators and guides.&amp;nbsp; They then continued northern until they reached a large river\u2014Aston suggests that it was possibly the Ishikari river, north of modern Sapporo.&amp;nbsp; There they found a thousand Emishi of Watari no Shima encamped. Upon seeing the Yamato forces, two men came out from the camp to let Hirafu and his men know that the Mishihase had arrived in their own fleet, threatening to kill all of them.&amp;nbsp; And so they asked permission to cross the river over to Hirafu and join him.&amp;nbsp; Specifically we are told they asked to \u201cserve the government\u201d suggesting that they were willing to suborn themselves if Hirafu would assist with driving off the Mishihase. Hirafu had the two spokespersons come aboard his ship and then show him where the enemy was concealed.&amp;nbsp; They showed him where, telling him that the Mishihase had some 20 ships. Hirafu sent for the Mishihase to come and face him, but they refused.&amp;nbsp; And so instead he tried a different tactic.&amp;nbsp; He piled up colored silk cloth, weapons, iron, etc., in sight of the Mishihase, hoping that their curiosity and greed would get the better of them.&amp;nbsp; Sure enough, they drew up in their boats, which were decorated with feathers tied on poles like a flag.&amp;nbsp; Their vessels were powered with oars, and they brought them to the shallows.&amp;nbsp; From there, they sent two older men out to inspect the pile.&amp;nbsp; The men came out, and when they saw what was there, they exchanged their clothes for some from the pile and took some of the silk cloth and then returned to their ship.&amp;nbsp; After some time, they came back out, took off the exchanged garments and laid them down with the silk.&amp;nbsp; With that, they then boarded their ship and departed. Aston suggests that this behavior mimics an aspect of something called an \u201cunseen trade\u201d which he claims had been common in the region of Hokkaido until recently.&amp;nbsp; I hadn\u2019t found anything specifically about that, but it does make a kind of sense, especially if groups are possibly hostile and perhaps don\u2019t speak the same language. So does that mean that, for all of his military might, Hirafu was basically just buying off the Mishihase? In any case, it seems they did not take it.&amp;nbsp; They left the garments and the silk, which seems to have indicated that they had no deal, and they departed.&amp;nbsp; Hirafu pursued the Mishihase, and tried to get them to come out again\u2014presumably looking for a stand up fight between his 200 ships and the MIshihase\u2019s 20, but instead the Mishihase headed to the island of Herobe, in another part of Watari no Shima.&amp;nbsp; After a while of being holed up, the Mishihase did sue for peace, but by that point, Abe no Hirafu was having none of it.&amp;nbsp; So they took themselves to their palisades and there they tried to hold out against Abe no Hirafu\u2019s forces.&amp;nbsp; Noto no Omi no Mamukatsu was slain in the fighting, as we can only suspect that others were as well, but over time the Yamato forces began to wear them down. Finally, when it seemed there was no way they could win or escape, the MIshihase took the drastic step of killing their own women and children, perhaps fearing what the Yamato soldiers would do to them if they were caught. And with that, it was over.&amp;nbsp; There are only a few mentions of the Mishihase, or even the Emishi, in the rest of the Nihon Shoki.&amp;nbsp; Granted, as we will eventually see, the people of Yamato were no doubt pre-occupied with what was going on to the west, where the Baekje-Tang war would be soon coming to a close.&amp;nbsp; Abe no Hirafu would be called on, once more, in that famous conflict, but we are going to save that for another day. For now, I think we can end things here.&amp;nbsp; Or just about.&amp;nbsp; I would be remiss if I didn\u2019t mention that there is a theory that many of these expeditions were actually the same thing, but recorded slightly differently in different ways, with some confusion about the actual dates.&amp;nbsp; Even if that was the case, it doesn\u2019t necessarily discount the overall information provided, and that information seems to at least somewhat conform to what we know about the archaeological record, as far as I can tell.&amp;nbsp; Granted, this is still the story as told by outsiders.&amp;nbsp; Since the people labeled \u201cEmishi\u201d didn\u2019t leave us with any records of this time, themselves, we don\u2019t exactly have their side of things, which is something we should keep in mind. This isn\u2019t the last time the Emishi will pop up in Japanese history.&amp;nbsp; Even if they were being granted rank, the Emishi remained a group apart.&amp;nbsp; Succeeding generations of Japanese would settle in the Tohoku region, eventually absorbing or pushing out the Emishi, or Ezo, while on Hokkaido, the people we know as the Ainu, who were likely an amalgamation of both Okhotsk Sea people and Epi-Jomon and Satsumon cultures, would eventually become dominant across the island of Hokkaido\u2014at least until the 19th century. But that is for much later episodes.&amp;nbsp; For now, we\u2019ll continue to stick with our small, but active corner of the 7th century.&amp;nbsp; There is still a lot more to explore in this reign.&amp;nbsp; Next episode will be our annual New Year\u2019s recap, and then we will continue on with more from this episode in the following year. Until then thank you for listening and for all of your support. If you like what we are doing, please tell your friends and feel free to rate us wherever you listen to podcasts.&amp;nbsp; If you feel the need to do more, and want to help us keep this going, we have information about how you can donate on Patreon or through our KoFi site, ko-fi.com\/sengokudaimyo, or find the links over at our main website,&amp;nbsp; SengokuDaimyo.com\/Podcast, where we will have some more discussion on topics from this episode. Also, feel free to reach out to our Sengoku Daimyo Facebook page.&amp;nbsp; You can also email us at the.sengoku.daimyo@gmail.com.&amp;nbsp; Thank you, also, to Ellen for their work editing the podcast. And that\u2019s all for now.&amp;nbsp; Thank you again, and I\u2019ll see you next episode on Sengoku Daimyo\u2019s Chronicles of Japan. 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