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s tendencies towards drama and exaggeration are acknowledged, but the text is regarded as remaining mostly accurate. It is the primary and first-hand source on many of the warriors and battles of this period, and also documents elements of the fall of the powerful and historically important
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These battles are historically very important as they led to the extinction of the
Southern Court of the Japanese Imperial Line, which to this day is seen as legitimate. Northern Court members may be considered
110:, who dominated the Imperial regency following the fall of the Hōjō, sought to retain influence. These battles, political maneuvers, and other developments of the time are related in the
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The latest
English translation consists of 12 chapters of the 40-chapter epic, and spans the period from Go-Daigo's accession in 1318 (when Takauji was still a minor vassal of the
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became well-known among
Japanese nationalists and pro-imperialist in the 19th and 20th centuries and the legends about him became an ideal for them to follow.
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as an agent of change against the decadent Hōjō, rather than a national traitor as generally viewed by
Japanese historians.
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188:(regarding how "he wished that he would be reborn seven times to fight for the emperor" in an improved way) in the
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a fraud, as
Hirohito's entire line is descended from the Northern Court. Despite this, he was not arrested for
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52:) written in the late 14th century and covers the period from 1319 to 1367. It deals primarily with the
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before and after him, sought to supersede the power of the
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295:Conlan, Thomas D. (2022). Spilling, Michael (ed.).
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149:detailing his bloodline back to Go-Daigo in
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297:Samurai Weapons & Fighting Techniques
161:Like most Japanese historical epics, the
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274:. Overlook Duckworth. pp. 157–158.
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181:A line said by the pro-imperial
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344:Complete text (in Japanese)
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355:Waseda University Library
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240:Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric
16:Japanese historical epic
118:Historical significance
615:Muromachi-period works
455:Murasaki Shikibu Nikki
326:Helen Craig McCullough
272:Legends of the Samurai
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349:Japan's Other Emperor
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353:Manuscript scans at
332:. Tuttle Publishing.
585:Japanese chronicles
400:Japanese literature
177:Cultural references
605:Nanboku-chō period
465:Konjaku Monogatari
252:Japan Encyclopedia
186:Kusunoki Masashige
135:, calling Emperor
129:Kumazawa Hiromichi
90:Kamakura shogunate
29:
572:
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306:978-1-83886-214-5
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610:Gunki monogatari
503:Heike monogatari
498:Heiji monogatari
493:Hogen monogatari
475:Ôshû Gosannen Ki
440:Genji monogatari
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62:Ashikaga Takauji
49:gunki monogatari
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559:Kōyō Gunkan
200:taiga drama
54:Nanboku-chō
595:Monogatari
579:Categories
445:Tosa Nikki
398:Classical
242:. (2005).
227:References
125:pretenders
68:, and the
531:Meitokuki
523:Muromachi
470:Mutsuwaki
402:by period
171:Hōjō clan
94:Hōjō clan
513:Taiheiki
485:Kamakura
460:Shômonki
328:(1979).
270:(1995).
246:Taiheiki
215:See also
204:Taiheiki
198:'s 1991
190:Taiheiki
163:Taiheiki
157:Analysis
137:Hirohito
112:Taiheiki
98:emperors
34:Taiheiki
26:Taiheiki
564:Taikōki
536:Gikeiki
508:Jokyuki
422:Nihongi
324:Trans.
183:samurai
151:Yoshino
103:shōguns
78:Yoshino
417:Kojiki
303:
278:
147:koseki
432:Heian
166:'
66:Kyoto
409:Nara
363:1698
359:1603
301:ISBN
276:ISBN
31:The
551:Edo
250:in
196:NHK
92:'s
76:in
72:of
64:in
60:of
41:太平記
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361:,
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259:^
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391:e
384:t
377:v
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44:)
38:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.