{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Year One","description":"It is the first year of a new reign, so come and let's take a look at how it all begins. For more, check out our blog page at: https:\/\/sengokudaimyo.com\/podcast\/episode-135 Rough Transcript &amp;nbsp; Welcome to Sengoku Daimyo\u2019s Chronicles of Japan.&amp;nbsp; My name is Joshua and this is episode 135: Year One The officials of the Ministry of Kami Affairs bustled to and fro as they prepared the ritual grounds and the temporary buildings.&amp;nbsp; They were carefully erecting the structures, which would only be used for a single festival, and then torn down, but this would be an important festival.&amp;nbsp; It was the harvest festival, the Niiname-sai, the festival of the first-fruits.&amp;nbsp; Rice, from the regions of Tamba and Harima, specifically chosen through divination, would be offered to his majesty along with the kami who had blessed the land.&amp;nbsp; But this time, there was more. After all, this was the first harvest festival of a new reign, and they had orders to make it special.&amp;nbsp; The ascension ceremony had been held earlier in the year, but in some ways that was just a prelude.&amp;nbsp; There had been various rituals and ceremonies throughout the year emphasizing that this year was special\u2014even foreign lands were sending envoys to congratulate him on the event.&amp;nbsp; But this wasn\u2019t for them.&amp;nbsp; This was the sovereign taking part, for the first time, in one of the most important ceremonies of the year.&amp;nbsp; After all, the feast of first-fruits was the culmination of all that the kami had done, and it emphasized the sovereign\u2019s role as both a descendant of heaven and as the preeminent intercessor with the divine spirits of the land. And so they knew, that everything had to be bigger, with even more pomp and circumstance than normal.&amp;nbsp; This wouldn\u2019t just be about the new rice.&amp;nbsp; This would be a grand ceremony, one that only happened once in a generation, and yet which would echo through the centuries.&amp;nbsp; As the annual harvest festival, it was an ancient tradition.&amp;nbsp; But as something new\u2014as the Daijosai\u2014it was something else all together. And it would have to be perfect! &amp;nbsp; Last episode we talked about the Kiyomihara palace and a little bit about what it was like in the court of Ohoama, aka Temmu Tennou.&amp;nbsp; After defeating the Afumi court supporting his nephew, Ohotomo, in 672, Ohoama had taken control of the government.&amp;nbsp; He moved back to Asuka, and into the refurbished Okamoto palace, building a southern exclave known to us today as the Ebinoko enclosure, which held one large building, which may have been a residence or a ceremonial structure\u2014possibly the first \u201cDaigokuden\u201d or ceremonial hall. Ohoama\u2019s court built on the ideas that his brother, Naka no Oe, aka Tenji Tennou, had put forth since the Taika era.&amp;nbsp; This was a continuation of the form of government known as the Ritsuryo system, or Ritsuryo-sei, literally a government of laws and punishments, and Ohoama had taken the reins.&amp;nbsp; He seems to have taken a much more direct approach to governance compared to some of his predecessors. For instance, the role of the ministerial families was reduced, with Ohoama or various princes\u2014actual or invented relatives of the throne\u2014taking a much more prominent role.&amp;nbsp; He also expanded access to the central government to those outside of the the Home Provinces.&amp;nbsp; After all, it was the traditional ministerial families\u2014the Soga, the Nakatomi, and even the Kose\u2014who had been part of the Afumi government that he had just defeated.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, much of his military support had come from the Eastern provinces, though with prominent indications of support from Kibi and Tsukushi as well. This episode we are going to get back to the events documented in the Chronicles, looking just at the first year of Ohoama\u2019s reign.&amp;nbsp; Well, technically it was the second year, with 672 being the first, but this is the first year in which he formally sat on the throne.&amp;nbsp; There\u2019s plenty going on in this year to fill a whole episode: it was the year of Ohoama\u2019s formal ascension, and there were numerous festivals, ceremonies, and other activities that seem to be directly related to a fresh, new start.&amp;nbsp; We will also look at the custom of handing out posthumous ranks, particularly to those who supported Ohoama during the Jinshin no Ran, and how that relates to the various ranks and titles used in Ohoama\u2019s court.&amp;nbsp; We have envoys from three different countries\u2014Tamna, Silla, and Goguryeo\u2014and their interactions with the Dazaifu in Tsukushi.&amp;nbsp; Finally, we have the first Daijosai, one of the most important ceremonies in any reign. And so, let\u2019s get into it. &amp;nbsp; The year 673 started with a banquet for various princes and ministers, and on the 27th day of the 2nd month, Ohoama formally assumed the throne at what would come to be known as Kiyomihara Palace.&amp;nbsp; Uno, his consort, who had traveled with him through the mountains from Yoshino to Ise, was made his queen, and their son, Royal Prince Kusakabe, was named Crown Prince.&amp;nbsp; Two days later they held a ceremony to convey cap-ranks on those deemed worthy. We are then told that on the 17th day of the following month, word came from the governor of Bingo, the far western side of ancient Kibi, today the eastern part of modern Hiroshima.&amp;nbsp; They had caught a white pheasant in Kameshi and sent it as tribute.&amp;nbsp; White or albino animals were seen as particularly auspicious signs, and no doubt it was taken as an omen of good fortune for the reign.&amp;nbsp; In response, the forced labor from Bingo, which households were required to supply to the State, was remitted.&amp;nbsp; There was also a general amnesty granted throughout the land. That same month we are also told that scribes were brought in to Kawaradera to copy the Issaiko\u2014aka the Tripitaka, or the entirety of the Buddhist canon.&amp;nbsp; That would include hundreds of scrolls.&amp;nbsp; This clearly seems to be an act of Buddhist merit-making:&amp;nbsp; by copying out the scrolls you make merit, which translates to good karma.&amp;nbsp; That would be another auspicious start to the reign, and we see frequently that rulers would fund sutra copying\u2014or sutra recitations\u2014as well as temples, statues, bells and all other such things to earn Buddhist merit.&amp;nbsp; As the ruler, this merit didn\u2019t just accrue to you, but to the entire state, presumably bringing good fortune and helping to avert disaster. However, it wasn\u2019t just the Law of the Buddha that Ohoama was appealing to.&amp;nbsp; In the following entry, on the14th day of the 4th month, we are told that Princess Ohoki was preparing herself at the saigu, or abstinence palace, in Hatsuse\u2014known as Hase, today, east of modern Sakurai, along the Yonabari river, on the road to Uda.&amp;nbsp; Ohoki was the sister of Prince Ohotsu.&amp;nbsp; Her mother was Ohota, the Queen\u2019s elder sister, making her a grandchild of Naka no Ohoye as well as the daughter of Ohoama.&amp;nbsp; Princess Ohoki\u2019s time at the abstinence palace was so that she could purify herself.&amp;nbsp; This was all to get her ready to head to Ise, to approach none other than the sun goddess, Amaterasu Ohokami. With all of these events, we see the full panoply of ritual and ceremony on display.&amp;nbsp; The formal, legal ceremonies of ascension and granting of rank.&amp;nbsp; The declaration of auspicious omens for the reign.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; There is the making of Buddhist merit, but also the worship of the kami of the archipelago.&amp;nbsp; This is not an either-or situation.&amp;nbsp; We are seeing in the first half of this first year the fusion of all of these different elements into something that may not even be all that sensational to those of us, today.&amp;nbsp; After all, anyone who goes to Japan is likely well-accustomed to the way that both Buddhist and Shinto institutions can both play a large part in people\u2019s lives.&amp;nbsp; While some people may be more drawn to one than the other, for most they are complimentary. That isn\u2019t how it had to be.&amp;nbsp; For a time, it was possible that Buddhism would displace local kami worship altogether.&amp;nbsp; This was the core of the backlash that we saw from groups like the Nakatomi, whose role in kami-focused ceremonies was threatened by the new religion.&amp;nbsp; Indeed, for a while now it seems like mention of the kami has taken a backseat to Buddhist temples and ceremonies in the Chronicles.&amp;nbsp; Likewise, as a foreign religion, Buddhism could have also fallen out of favor.&amp;nbsp; It was not fore-ordained that it would come to have a permanent place on the archipelago.&amp;nbsp; This tension between local kami worship\u2014later called Shinto, the Way of the Kami\u2014and Buddhist teachings would vary throughout Japanese history, with one sometimes seen as more prestigious or more natural than the other, but neither one would fully eclipse the other. One could say that was in part due to the role that Amaterasu and kami worship played in the court ceremonies.&amp;nbsp; However, even there indigenous practices were not necessarily safe.&amp;nbsp; The court could have just as easily imported Confucian rituals, and replaced the spiritual connection between the sovereign and the kami with the continental style Mandate of Heaven. And thus, the choices that were being made at this time would have huge implications for the Japanese state for centuries to come. I should note that it is unlikely that this spontaneously arose amongst the upper class and the leadership.&amp;nbsp; I doubt this was just Ohoama\u2019s strategy to give himself multiple levers of power\u2014though I\u2019m not saying he wasn\u2019t thinking about that either.&amp;nbsp; But the only way that these levers existed was through their continued life in the culture and the people of the time.&amp;nbsp; If the people didn\u2019t believe in Buddhist merit, or that the kami influenced their lives, then neither would have given them much sway.&amp;nbsp; It was the fact that these were a part of the cultural imaginary of the state, and how people imagined themselves and their surroundings, that they were effective tools for Ohoama and his government. And so it seems that Ohoama\u2019s first year is off to a smashing success.&amp;nbsp; By the fifth month he is already issuing edicts\u2014specifically on the structure of the state, which we discussed some last episode. But the high could not be maintained indefinitely.&amp;nbsp; And on the 29th day of the 5th month we have what we might consider our first negative entry, when Sakamoto no Takara no Omi passed away. You may remember Sakamoto, but I wouldn\u2019t blame you if you didn\u2019t.&amp;nbsp; He was the commander in the Nara Basin, under general Wofukei, who took 300 troops to Tatsuta.&amp;nbsp; From there he advanced to the Hiraishi plain and up to the top of Mt. Takayasu, to confront the Afumi forces that had taken the castle.&amp;nbsp; They fled, and Takara and his men overnighted at the castle.&amp;nbsp; The next day they tried to intercept Afumi troops advancing from the Kawachi plain, but they were forced to fall back to a defensive position.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; We covered that in Episode 131 with the rest of the campaign in the Nara Basin. Takara\u2019s death is the first of many entries\u2014I count roughly 21 through this and the following reign\u2014which, for the most part, are all similarly worded.&amp;nbsp; Sakamoto no Takara no Omi, of Upper Daikin rank, died.&amp;nbsp; He was posthumously granted the rank of Shoushi for service in the Year of Mizu-no-e Saru, aka Jinshin.&amp;nbsp; We are told the individual, their rank at the time of their death, and then a note about a posthumous grant of rank.&amp;nbsp; Upper Daikin was already about the 7th rank from the top in the system of 664, and Shoushi would be the 6th rank, and one of the \u201cministerial\u201d ranks.&amp;nbsp; This is out of 26, total.&amp;nbsp; \u201cKin\u201d itself was the fourth of about 7 categories, and the last category that was split into six sub-ranks, with greater and lesser (Daikin and Shokin), each of which was further divided into Upper, Middle, and Lower ranks.&amp;nbsp; There\u2019s a lot to go into, in fact a little too much for this episode, so for more on the ranks in use at the start of the reign, check out our blogpost for this episode.&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; The giving of posthumous rank is mostly just an honorific.&amp;nbsp; After all, the individual is now deceased, so it isn\u2019t as if they would be drawing more of a stipend, though their new ranks may have influenced their funerary rites and similar things. As I said, on a quick scan of the text, I counted&amp;nbsp; 21 of these entries, though there may be a few more with slightly different phrasing or circumstances.&amp;nbsp; Some of them were quite notable in the record, while others may have only had a mention here or there.&amp;nbsp; That they are mentioned, though, likely speaks to the importance of that connection to such a momentous year.&amp;nbsp; The Nihon Shoki is thought to have been started around the time of Ohoama or his successor, along with the Kojiki, and so it would have been important to people of the time to remind everyone that their ancestors had been the ones who helped with that momentous event.&amp;nbsp; It really isn\u2019t that much different from those who proudly trace their lineage back to heroes of, say, the American Revolution, though it likely held even more sway being closer to the actual events. After the death of Sakamoto no Takara, we get another death announcement.&amp;nbsp; This is of someone that Aston translates as \u201cSatek Syomyeong\u201d of Baekje, of Lower Daikin rank.&amp;nbsp; We aren\u2019t given much else about him, but we are told that Ohoama was shocked.&amp;nbsp; He granted Syomyeong the posthumous rank of \u201cOuter Shoushi\u201d, per Aston\u2019s translation.&amp;nbsp; He also posthumously named him as Prime Minister, or Desapyong, of Baekje. There are a few clues about who this might be, but very little to go on.&amp;nbsp; He is mentioned in 671, during the reign of Naka no Oe, when he received the rank of Upper Daikin along with Minister\u2014or Sapyong\u2014Yo Jasin.&amp;nbsp; It is also said in the interlinear text that he was the Vice Minister of the Ministry of Judgment\u2014the Houkan no Taifu.&amp;nbsp; The Ministry of Judgment\u2014the Houkan or perhaps the Nori no Tsukasa\u2014is thought to have been the progenitor of the later Shikibu, the Ministry of Ceremony.&amp;nbsp; One of the major roles it played was in the selection of candidates for rank, position, and promotion. We are also told that in the year 660, in the reign of Takara Hime, one of the nobles captured in the Tang invasion of Baekje was \u201cDesapyong Satek\u201d, so perhaps this Syomyeong was a descendant or relative of the previous prime minister, who fled to Yamato with other refugees.&amp;nbsp; We also have another record from 671 of a Satek Sondeung and his companions accompanying the Tang envoy Guo Yacun.&amp;nbsp; So it would seem that the Sathek family was certainly notable The name \u201cSatek\u201d shows up once more, though Aston then translates it as \u201cSataku\u201d, like a monk or scholar\u2019s name.&amp;nbsp; \u201cSataku\u201d would be the Japanese on\u2019yomi pronunciation of the same characters, so perhaps another relative. What we can take away from all of this is that the Baekje refugee community is still a thing in Yamato.&amp;nbsp; This Satek Seomyeong has court rank\u2014Upper Daikin rank, just like Sakamoto, in the previous entry.&amp;nbsp; And we know that he had an official position at court\u2014not just in the Baekje court in exile.&amp;nbsp; We\u2019ll see more on this as the community is further integrated into the rest of Society, such that there would no longer be a Baekje community, but families would continue to trace their lineages back to Baekje families, often with pride. The other odd thing here is the character \u201couter\u201d or \u201coutside\u201d before \u201cShoushi\u201d.&amp;nbsp; Aston translates it as part of the rank, and we see it show up a total of four times in some variation of \u201cOuter Lesser X rank\u201d.&amp;nbsp; Mostly it is as here, Outer Lesser Purple.&amp;nbsp; Later we would see a distinction of \u201couter\u201d and \u201cinner\u201d ranks, which this may be a version of.&amp;nbsp; Depending on one\u2019s family lineage would denote whether one received an \u201couter\u201d or \u201cinner\u201d rank, and so it may be that since Satek Syomyeong was from the Baekje community, it was more appropriate for him to have an \u201coutside\u201d rank. \u201cOuter\u201d rank would also be given to Murakuni no Muraji no Woyori, the general who had led the campaign to Afumi, taking the Seta bridge.&amp;nbsp; He was also posthumously given the rank of \u201cOuter Shoushi\u201d upon his death in 676.&amp;nbsp; Murakuni no Woyori is the only person of that surname mentioned around this time, so perhaps he wasn\u2019t from one of the \u201ccore\u201d families of the Yamato court, despite the service he had rendered.&amp;nbsp; We also have at least one other noble of Baekje who is likewise granted an \u201douter\u201d rank. On the other side there are those like Ohomiwa no Makamuta no Kobito no Kimi, who was posthumously granted the rank of \u201cInner\u201d Shoushi.&amp;nbsp; Here I would note that Ohomiwa certainly seems to suggest an origin in the Nara Basin, in the heartland of Yamato. The terms \u201cInner\u201d and \u201cOuter\u201d are only used on occasion, however, and not consistently in all cases.&amp;nbsp; This could just be because of the records that the scribes were working off of at the time.&amp;nbsp; It is hard to say, exactly. All of these entries about posthumous ranks being granted tend to refer to cap ranks, those applying to members of various Uji, the clans that had been created to help organize the pre-Ritsuryo state. The Uji and their members played important roles in the court and the nation, both as ministers and lower functionaries.&amp;nbsp; But I also want to mention another important component of Ohoama\u2019s court, the members of the princely class, many of whom also actively contributed to the functioning of the state.&amp;nbsp; Among this class are those that Aston refers to as \u201cPrinces of the Blood\u201d, or \u201cShinnou\u201d.&amp;nbsp; These include the royal princes, sons of Ohoama who were in line for the throne, but also any of his brothers and sisters.&amp;nbsp; Then there were the \u201cmiko\u201d, like Prince Kurikuma, who had been the Viceroy in Tsukushi, denying troops to the Afumi court.&amp;nbsp; Those princes claimed some lineal descent from a sovereign, but they were not directly related to the reigning sovereign.&amp;nbsp; In fact, it isn\u2019t clear, today, if they were even indirectly related to the reigning sovereign, other than through the fact that the elites of the archipelago had likely been forming marriage alliances with one another for centuries, so who knows.&amp;nbsp; And maybe they made their claims back to a heavenly descendant, like Nigi Hayahi.&amp;nbsp; Either way, they were the ones with claims\u2014legitimate or otherwise\u2014to royal blood.&amp;nbsp; Notably, the Princes did not belong to any of the Uji, , and they didn\u2019t have kabane, either\u2014no \u201cOmi\u201d, \u201cMuraji\u201d, \u201cAtahe\u201d, et cetera. They did, at least from this reign forward, have rank.&amp;nbsp; But it was separate and different from the rank of the Uji members.&amp;nbsp; Members of the various Uji were referred to with cap rank, but the Princely ranks were just numbered\u2014in the Nihon Shoki we see mention of princes of the 2nd through 5th ranks\u2014though presumably there was also a \u201cfirst\u201d rank.&amp;nbsp; It is not entirely clear when this princely rank system was put into place, but it was probably as they were moving all of the land, and thus the taxes, to the state.&amp;nbsp; Therefore the court would have needed to know what kind of stipend each prince was to receive\u2014a stipend based on their rank.&amp;nbsp; These ranks, as with later numbered ranks, appear to have been given in ascending order, like medals in a tournament:&amp;nbsp; first rank, second rank, third rank, etc. with fifth rank being the lowest of the Princely ranks. Many of these Princes also held formal positions in the government.&amp;nbsp; We saw this in Naka no Oe\u2019s reign with Prince Kurikuma taking the Viceroy-ship of Tsukushi, but during Ohoama\u2019s reign we see it even more. Beneath the Princes were the various Ministers and Public Functionaries\u2014the Officers of the court, from the lowest page to the highest minister.&amp;nbsp; They were members of the elite noble families, for the most part, or else they claimed descent from the elite families of the continent.&amp;nbsp; Either way they were part of what we would no doubt call the Nobility.&amp;nbsp; Their cap-rank system, mentioned earlier, was separate from that used by the Princes. And, then at the bottom, supporting this structure, were the common people.&amp;nbsp; Like the princes, they did not necessarily have a surname, and they didn\u2019t really figure into the formal rank system.&amp;nbsp; They certainly weren\u2019t considered members of the titled class, and often don\u2019t even show up in the record.&amp;nbsp; And yet we should not forget that they were no doubt the most numerous and diverse group for the majority of Japanese history.&amp;nbsp; Our sources, however, have a much more narrow focus. There is one more class of people to mention here, and that is the evolving priestly class.&amp;nbsp; Those who took Buddhist orders and became Buddhist monks were technically placed outside of the social system, though that did not entirely negate their connections to the outside world.&amp;nbsp; We see, for example, how Ohoama, even in taking orders, still had servants and others to wait on him.&amp;nbsp; However, they were at least theoretically outside of the social hierarchy, and could achieve standing within the Buddhist community through their studies of Buddhist scripture.&amp;nbsp; They had their own hierarchy, which was tied in to the State through particular Buddhist officers appointed by the government, but otherwise the various temples seem to have been largely in charge of their own affairs. But anyway, let\u2019s get back to the Chronicles. Following closely on the heels of Satek Syomyeong\u2019s passing, two days later, we have another entry, this one much more neutral.&amp;nbsp; We are told that Tamna, aka the kingdom on Jeju island off the southern tip of the Korean peninsula, sent Princes Kumaye, Tora, Uma, and others with tribute. So now we are getting back into the diplomatic swing of things.&amp;nbsp; There had been one previous embassy\u2014that of Gim Apsil of Silla, who had arrived just towards the end of the Jinshin War, but they were merely entertained in Tsukushi and sent back, probably because Ohoama\u2019s court were still cleaning house. Tamna, Silla, and Goguryeo\u2014usually accompanied by Silla escorts\u2014would be the main visitors to Yamato for a time.&amp;nbsp; At this point, Silla was busy trying to get the Tang forces to leave the peninsula.&amp;nbsp; This was partly assisted by the various uprisings in the captured territories of Goguryeo and Baekje\u2014primarily up in Goguryeo.&amp;nbsp; There were various attempts to restore the kingdom.&amp;nbsp; It isn\u2019t clear, but I suspect that the Goguryeo envoys we do eventually see were operating largely as a vassal state under Silla. Tamna, on the other hand, seems to have been outside of the conflict, from what we see in the records, and it likely was out of the way of the majority of any fighting.&amp;nbsp; They also seem to have had a different relationship with Yamato, based on some of the interactions. It is very curious to me that the names of the people from Tamna seem like they could come from Yamato.&amp;nbsp; Perhaps that is related in some way to theories that Tamna was one of the last hold-outs of continental proto-Japonic language prior to the ancestor of modern Korean gaining ascendancy.&amp;nbsp; Or it could just be an accident of how things got copied down in Sinitic characters and then translated back out. The Tamna mission arrived on the 8th day of the 6th intercalary month of 673.&amp;nbsp; A Silla embassy arrived 7 days later, but rather than tribute, their mission was twofold\u2014two ambassadors to offer congratulations to Ohoama and two to offer condolences on the late sovereign\u2014though whether that means Naka no Oe or Ohotomo is not exactly clear.&amp;nbsp; All of these arrived and would have been hosted, initially, in Tsukushi, probably at modern Fukuoka.&amp;nbsp; The Silla envoys were accompanied by Escorts, who were briefly entertained and offered presents by the Dazaifu, the Yamato government extension on Kyushu, and then sent home.&amp;nbsp; From then on, the envoys would be at the mercy of Yamato and their ships. About a month and a half later, on the 20th day of the 8th month, Goguryeo envoys also showed up with tribute, accompanied by Silla escorts.&amp;nbsp; Five days later, word arrived back from the court in Asuka.&amp;nbsp; The Silla envoys who had come to offer congratulations to the sovereign on his ascension were to be sent onwards.&amp;nbsp; Those who had just come with tribute, however, could leave it with the viceroy in Tsukushi.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; They specifically made this point to the Tamna envoys, whom they then suggested should head back soon, as the weather was about to turn, and they wouldn\u2019t want to be stuck there when the monsoon season came. The Tamna cohort weren\u2019t just kicked out, however.&amp;nbsp; The court did grant them and their king cap-rank.&amp;nbsp; The envoys were given Upper Dai-otsu, which Yamato equated to the rank of a minister in Tamna. The Silla envoys\u2014about 27 in total\u2014made their way to Naniwa.&amp;nbsp; It took them a month, and they arrived in Naniwa on the 28th day of the 9th month.&amp;nbsp; Their arrival was met with entertainments\u2014musical performances and presents that were given to the envoys.&amp;nbsp; This was all part of the standard diplomatic song and dance\u2014quite literally, in this case. We aren\u2019t given details on everything.&amp;nbsp; Presumably the envoys offered their congratulations, which likely included some presents from Silla, as well as a congratulatory message.&amp;nbsp; We aren\u2019t given exact details, but a little more than a month later, on the first day of the 11th month, envoy Gim Seungwon took his leave. Meanwhile, the Goguryeo envoys, who, like Tamna, had arrived merely with tribute, were still in Tsukushi.&amp;nbsp; On the 21st day of the 11th month, just over two months after they arrived, we are told that they were entertained at the Ohogohori in Tsukushi and were given presents based on their rank. The Ohogohori, or \u201cBig District\u201d, appears to mirror a similar area in Naniwa that was likewise known for hosting diplomatic envoys. With the diplomatic niceties over, there was one more thing to do in this first year of the new reign: the thanksgiving ritual always held at the beginning of a new reign, the Daijosai, or oho-namematsuri.&amp;nbsp; This is a harvest ritual where the newly enthroned sovereign offers new rice to the kami and then eats some himself.&amp;nbsp; At least in the modern version, he gives thanks and prays to Amaterasu Ohomikami, as well as to the amatsu-kami and kunitsu-kami, the kami of heaven and earth. The Daijosai shares a lot in common with another important annual festival, the Niinamesai, or the Feast of First Fruits.&amp;nbsp; This is the traditional harvest festival, usually held in November.&amp;nbsp; The Daijosai follows much the same form as the Niinamesai, and as such, in years where there is a new sovereign, and thus the Daijosai is held, the Niinamesai is not, since it would be duplicative. Many of the rituals of the Daijosai are private affairs and not open to the public. There are various theories about what happens, but only those who are part of the ritual know for sure, and they are sworn to secrecy. The first instance of the Daijosai in the Chronicles is during the reign of Shiraga Takehiko Kunioshi Waka Yamato Neko, aka Seinei Tennou, in the 5th century, but we should take that with a huge grain of salt.&amp;nbsp; Remember, one of the purposes behind the chronicles was to explain how everything came to be, and saying \u201cwe just made it up\u201d wasn\u2019t really going to fly. I\u2019ve seen some sources suggest that the Daijosai can be attributed to the first reign of Ohoama\u2019s mother, Takara Hime, aka Kougyoku Tennou.&amp;nbsp; The term used in her reign, though is Niiname, which seems to refer to the annual Niinamesai, though she is the first in the Chronicles that seems to celebrate it in the first year of her reign, sharing with the Crown Prince and Ministers. It is likely that the ritual is much older in origin.&amp;nbsp; After all, giving the first fruits of the harvest to the kami to thank them for their assistance seems like the core of harvest festivals around the world.&amp;nbsp; We see it mentioned as the Niinamesai in much of the rest of the Nihon Shoki, even back to the Age of the Gods, when it played an important part in the stories of Amaterasu and Susanowo.&amp;nbsp; It is in Ohoama\u2019s reign, though, that it seems to first take on its character as a true ritual of the state.&amp;nbsp; We see that the Nakatomi and the Imbe were involved.&amp;nbsp; Together these two families oversaw much of the court ritual having to do with kami worship.&amp;nbsp; We also know that the officials of the Jingikan, the Ministry of Kami Affairs, were also present, as they were all given presents for attending on the sovereign during the festival.&amp;nbsp; We also see that the district governors of Harima and Tamba, which were both in the area of modern Hyougo Prefecture, as well as various laborers under them, were all recognized with presents as well.&amp;nbsp; We can assume that this was because they provided the rice and other offerings used in the festival.&amp;nbsp; In addition to the presents they received, the two governors were each given an extra grade of cap-rank. Another Daijosai would be carried out in the first year of Ohoama\u2019s successor, and from there on it seems to have become one of if not *the* major festival of a reign.&amp;nbsp; It marks, in many ways, the end of the first year of ceremonies for the first year of a reign.&amp;nbsp; And even in other years, the Niinamesai is often one of the pre-eminent festivals. The Daijosai may have been the climax of the year in many ways, but the year was not quite done yet.&amp;nbsp; We have two more entries, and both are related to Buddhism.&amp;nbsp; First, on the 17th day of the 12th month, just twelve days after the Daijosai, Prince Mino and Ki no Omi no Katamaro were appointed Commissioners for the erection of the Great Temple of Takechi\u2014aka the Ohomiya no Ohodera, also known as the Daikandaiji. The Daikandaiji was a massive temple complex.&amp;nbsp; It is thought that it was originally a relocation of Kudara Ohodera, and we have remains at the foot of Kaguyama\u2014Mt. Kagu, in the Asuka region of modern Kashihara city.&amp;nbsp; Many of the ruins, however, seem to date to a slightly later period, suggesting that the main temple buildings were rebuilt after Ohoama\u2019s reign.&amp;nbsp; Still, it is quite likely that he had people start the initial work. In setting up the temple, of course it needed a head priest.&amp;nbsp; And so Ohoama called upon a priest named Fukurin and made him an offer he couldn\u2019t refuse\u2026 literally.&amp;nbsp; Fukurin tried to object to being posted as the head priest.&amp;nbsp; He said that he was too old to be in charge of the temple.&amp;nbsp; Ohoama wasn\u2019t having any of it.&amp;nbsp; He had made up his mind, and Fukurin was in no position to refuse him. A quick note on the two commissioners here.&amp;nbsp; First off, I would note that Prince Mino here isn\u2019t mentioned as having Princely rank.&amp;nbsp; Instead, he is mentioned with the ministerial rank of Shoushi.&amp;nbsp; Ki no Katamaro, on the other hand, is Lower Shoukin, several grades below.&amp;nbsp; Once again, a bit of confusion in the ranks, as it were. The final entry for the year 673 occurred 10 days after the erection of the great temple, and it was a fairly straightforward entry:&amp;nbsp; The Buddhist Priest, Gijou, was made Shou-soudzu, or Junior Soudzu.&amp;nbsp; Junior Soudzu was one of the government appointed positions of priests charged with overseeing the activities of the priests and temples and holding them to account as necessary.&amp;nbsp; Originally there was the Soujou and the Soudzu, but they were later broken up into several different positions, likely due to the proliferation of Buddhism throughout the archipelago. There doesn\u2019t seem to be much on Gijou before this point, but we know that he would go on to live a pretty full life, passing away over thirty years later, in 706 CE. He would outlive Ohoama and his successor.&amp;nbsp; And with that, we come to the end of the first year.&amp;nbsp; I am not planning to go year by year through this entire reign\u2014in fact, we have already touched on a lot of the various recurring entries.&amp;nbsp; But I do think that it is worth it to see how the Chronicles treat this first year for a reign that would have been considered pretty momentous to the people of the time. Next episode we\u2019ll continue going through the reign of Ohoama, aka Temmu Tennou.&amp;nbsp; There is a lot going on, which, as I\u2019ve said, will influence the nation for centuries\u2014even up until the modern day. Until then, 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. &amp;nbsp; ","author_name":"Sengoku Daimyo's Chronicles of Japan","author_url":"http:\/\/www.sengokudaimyo.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/38402580\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/item\/38402580"}