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聖武天皇[查看正文] [修改] [查看歷史]ctext:23791
關係 | 對象 | 文獻依據 |
---|---|---|
type | person | |
name | 聖武天皇 | default |
ruled | dynasty:日本 | |
from-date 神亀元年二月甲午 724/3/3 | ||
to-date 天平感宝元年七月癸巳 749/8/18 | ||
authority-wikidata | Q349263 | |
link-wikipedia_zh | 圣武天皇 | |
link-wikipedia_en | Emperor_Shōmu |
元明天皇之孫,714年被立為皇太子,以年紀尚幼為由,715年由冰高皇女即天皇位,為元正天皇。以當時的情況來看,首皇子的年紀並不算真的十分年幼,因此也有說法認為元正天皇的即位是為了削弱藤原不比等一族的勢力。
聖武天皇的嬪妃不多,子嗣也較少,僅與光明子生有安倍內親王(孝謙天皇)、基皇子,與縣犬養廣刀自夫人生有井上內親王、不破內親王、安積皇子。727年閏九月二十九日基皇子出生,十一月二日立為皇太子,728年九月十三日未及周歲而薨。729年二月十日,長屋王遭密告,以咒殺基皇太子罪嫌,定長屋王與其正妃吉備內親王及所有已成年的兒子死罪。長屋王在妻兒自縊後切腹自殺,史稱長屋王之變。其後,因<大伴子蟲斫殺中臣宮處東人一事,證明長屋王之罪實為誣告。
729年8月以藤原不比等之女光明子為后,打破立后不出皇族之慣例。由於「后」的皇位繼承順序比「皇子」高,而當時聖武天皇的皇子僅有安積皇子一人,因此光明子的立后之舉可說是藤原氏一族為了讓天皇持續有藤原氏血統所產生的結果。
聖武天皇在位期間,處理天災地變,氏族對立、叛亂等政治危機極為得體,並極力採納唐代文物制度,用以充實國政。信仰佛教,創建國分寺、東大寺,發心鑄造大佛,兩次派遣唐使,出現了天平文化盛景。749年,讓位出家,法號勝滿。
家族
• 父:文武天皇
• 母:藤原宮子 - 藤原不比等女
• 皇后:光明皇后(701-760) - 藤原不比等女、母親宮子的異母妹,即聖武天皇姨母。
• 阿倍內親王(第一次即位稱孝謙天皇,第二次即位稱稱德天皇)
• 基王(727-728) - 皇太子
• 夫人:縣犬養廣刀自(?-762)
• 井上內親王(717?-775) - 光仁天皇皇后
• 酒人內親王(754-829) - 桓武天皇妃
• 他戶親王(?-775) - 光仁天皇皇太子
• 不破內親王(723?-795?) - 塩燒王(氷上塩燒)妃
• 氷上志計志麻呂、氷上川繼
• 安積親王(728-744)
• 夫人:藤原武智麻呂女(?-748)
• 夫人:橘古那可智(?-759)
• 夫人:藤原房前女(?-760)
譜系
影視作品
• 2010年日本歷史劇:《大佛開眼》,飾演聖武天皇。
參考
• 《續日本紀》——卷第九 聖武天皇 天璽國押開豐櫻彥天皇
顯示更多...: Traditional narrative Events of Shōmus reign Emperor Shōmus tour to the eastern provinces Timeline Legacy Shōsōin Kugyō Eras of Shōmus life Consorts and children Ancestry
Traditional narrative
Before his ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne, his personal name (imina) is not clearly known, but he was known as Oshi-hiraki Toyosakura-hiko-no-mikoto.
Shōmu was the son of Emperor Monmu and Fujiwara no Miyako, a daughter of Fujiwara no Fuhito.
Shōmu had four Empresses and six Imperial sons and daughters.
Events of Shōmus reign
Shōmu was still a child at the time of his father's death; thus, Empresses Gemmei and Gensho occupied the throne before he acceded.
• 724 (Yōrō 8, 1st month): In the 9th year of Genshō-tennō 's reign (元正天皇九年), the empress abdicated; and her younger brother received the succession (『『senso』』). Shortly thereafter, Emperor Shōmu is said to have acceded to the throne (『『sokui』』).
• January 31, 724 (Jinki 1): The era name is changed to mark the accession of Emperor Shōmu.
• 735–737: A major smallpox epidemic raged throughout Japan, incurring adult mortality rates of about 25% to 35%.
Shōmu continued to reside in the Hezei Palace.
Shōmu is known as the first emperor whose consort was not born into the imperial household. His consort Kōmyō was a non-royal Fujiwara commoner. A ritsuryō office was created for the queen-consort, the Kogogushiki; and this bureaucratic innovation continued into the Heian period.
Emperor Shōmus tour to the eastern provinces
While battle maneuvers of the Fujiwara no Hirotsugu Rebellion were still underway, in Tenpyō 12 10th month (November, 740) Emperor Shōmu left the capital at Heijō-kyō (Nara) and traveled eastward via Horikoshi (堀越頓宮; today Tsuge; 10th month, 29th day: November 22), Nabari (10th month, 30th day: November 23), Ao (安保頓宮; today Aoyama ; 11th month 1st day: November 24) to Kawaguchi in Ichishi District, Ise Province (today part of Tsu, formerly part of Hakusan) where he retreated together with his court to a temporary palace. One of his generals was left in command of the capital. Presumably Shōmu feared Fujiwara supporters in Nara and was hoping to quell potential uprisings in other parts of the country with his presence. After four days travelling through heavy rain and thick mud, the party reached Kawaguchi on Tenpyō 12 11th month, 2nd day (25 November, 740) A couple of days later, they learn of Hirotsugu's execution and that the rebellion had been quelled.
Despite the good news, Shōmu did not return to Heijō-kyō immediately, but stayed in Kawaguchi until Tenpyō 12 11th month, 11th day (4 December, 740). He continued his journey east, then north via Mino Province and back west along the shores of Lake Biwa to Kuni in Yamashiro Province (today in Kizugawa) which he reached on Tenpyō 12 12th month, 15th day (6 January, 741). Places passed along the way included Akasaka (赤坂頓宮; today Suzuka; 11th m. 14th d.: Dec 7), Asake district (朝明郡; today Yokkaichi; 11th m. 20th d.: Dec 13), Ishiura (石占頓宮; today Tado; 11th m. 25th d.: Dec 18), Tagi district (当伎郡; today Yōrō; 11th m. 26th d.: Dec 19), Fuwa (不破頓宮; today Tarui; 12th m. 1st d.: Dec 23), Yokokawa (横川頓宮; today Santō or Maihara; 12th m. 6th d.: Dec 28), Inukami (犬上頓宮; today Hikone; 12th m. 7th d.: Dec 29), Gamō district (蒲生郡; today near Yōkaichi; 12th m. 9th d.: Dec 31), Yasu (野洲頓宮; today Yasu or Moriyama; 12th m. 10th d.: Jan 1), Awazu (禾津頓宮; today Ōtsu; 12th m. 11th d.: Jan 2), Tamanoi (玉井頓宮; today Yamashina-ku, Kyoto; 12th m. 14th d.). Situated among the hills and near a river north of Nara, Kuni was easily defensible. In addition, the area was linked with the Minister of the Right, Tachibana no Moroe, while Nara was a center of the Fujiwara clan. On Tenpyō 12 12th month, 15 day (6 January, 741) Shōmu proclaimed a new capital at Kuni-kyō.
Timeline
• 724 (Jinki 1): Emperor Shōmu rises to throne.
• 740 (Tenpyō 12, 8th month): In the Imperial court in Nara, Kibi no Makibi and Genbō conspire to discredit Fujiwara no Hirotsugu, who is Dazai shoni in Kyushu.
• 740 (Tenpyō 12, 9th month): Hirotsugu rebels in reaction to the growing influence of Genbō and others.
• 740 (Tenpyō 12, 9th month): Under the command of Ōno no Azumabito, an Imperial army of 17,000 is sent to Kyushu to stop the potential disturbance.
• 740 (Tenpyō 12, 10th month): Hirotsugu is decisively beaten in battle; and he is beheaded in Hizen Province.
• 740 (Tenpyō 12): The capital is moved to Kuni-kyō
• 741 (Tenpyō 13): The Emperor calls for nationwide establishment of provincial temples. Provincial temples ("kokubunji") and provincial nunneries ("kokubunniji") were established throughout the country. The more formal name for these "kokubunji" was "konkomyo-shitenno-gokoku no tera" (meaning "temples for the protection of the country by the four guardian deities of the golden light"). The more formal name for these "bokubunniji" was "hokke-metuzai no tera" (meaning "nunneries for eliminating sin by means of the Lotus Sutra").
• 743 (Tenpyō 15): The Emperor issues a rescript to build the Daibutsu (Great Buddha), later to be completed and placed in Tōdai-ji, Nara.
• 743 (Tenpyō 15): The law of Perpetual Ownership of Cultivated Lands (墾田永代私財法) issued
• 744 (Tenpyō 16): In the spring, the court was moved to Naniwa-kyō which then became the new capital.
• 745 (Tenpyō 17): The Emperor declares by himself Shigaraki-kyō the capital
• 745 (Tenpyō 17): The capital returns to Heijō-kyō, construction of the Great Buddha resumes.
• 749 (Tenpyō 21, 4th month): Shōmu, accompanied by the empress, their children, and all the great men and women of the court, went in procession to Todai-ji. The emperor stood before the statue of the Buddha and proclaimed himself to be a disciple of the three jewels, which are the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha.
• 749 (Tenpyō 21, 7th month): After a 25-year reign, Emperor Shōmu abdicates in favor of his daughter, Princess Takano, who would become Empress Kōken. After abdication, Shōmu took the tonsure, thus becoming the first retired emperor to become a Buddhist priest. Empress Komyo, following her husband's example, also took holy vows in becoming a Buddhist nun.
• 752 (Tenpyō-shōhō 4, 4th month): The Eye-Opening Ceremony, presided over by Rōben and celebrating the completion of the Great Buddha, is held at Tōdai-ji.
Legacy
Shōmu, a devout Buddhist, is best remembered for commissioning, in 743, the sixteen-meter high statue of the Vairocana Buddha (the Daibutsu) in Tōdai-ji of Nara. At the time, this was such a massive undertaking that later chroniclers accuse him of having completely exhausted the country's reserves of bronze and precious metals. In 752, the Shōmu held the Eye-opening Ceremony of the Great Buddha.
Earlier in 741, he established the system of provincial temples, making this the closest anyone ever came to declaring Japan a Buddhist nation. In addition he commissioned the observance of the ohigan holiday for both spring and autumnal equinox.
Emperor Shōmu died at age 56.
Memorial Shinto shrine and mausoleum honoring Emperor Shōmu
The actual site of Shōmu's grave is known. This emperor is traditionally venerated at a memorial Shinto shrine (misasagi) at Nara.
The Imperial Household Agency designates this location as Shōmu's mausoleum. It is formally named Sahoyama no minami no misasagi. The tomb site can be visited today in Horenji-cho, Tenri City near Nara City. The Imperial tomb of Shōmu's consort, Empress Kōmyō, is located nearby.
Shōsōin
The Shōsō-in (正倉院) is the treasure house of Tōdai-ji Temple in Nara, Japan.
It houses about 9.000 artifacts connected to Emperor Shōmu (701–756) and Empress Kōmyō (701–760), as well as arts and crafts of the Tempyō era of Japanese history.
Its general importance derives from the fact, that it may be called an ark of Tang dynasty period cultural relics from Japan as well as from the continent: furniture, games, music instruments, clothing/accessories, weaponry, buddhist objects and pieces of writing.
See main entry.
Kugyō
is a collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras.
In general, this elite group included only three to four men at a time. These were hereditary courtiers whose experience and background would have brought them to the pinnacle of a life's career. During Shōmu's reign, this apex of the Daijō-kan included:
• Daijō-daijin (720–735), Toneri-shinnō (舎人親王) (9th son of Emperor Tenmu).
• Daijō-daijin (737–745), Suzuka-ō (鈴鹿王) (son of Prince Takechi).
• Sadaijin (724–729), Nagaya-ō (長屋王) (son of Prince Takechi).
• Sadaijin (743–756), Tachibana no Moroe (橘諸兄) (formerly Katsuragi-ō, Prince Katsuragi) (half brother of Empress Kōmyō) .
• Udaijin (734–737), Fujiwara no Muchimaro (藤原武智麻呂) (son of Fujiwara no Fuhito).
• Naidaijin, Fujiwara no Toyonari (藤原豊成) (son of Fujiwara no Muchimaro).
• Dainagon, Fujiwara no Fusasaki (藤原房前) (son of Fujiwara no Fuhito).
Eras of Shōmus life
The years of Shōmu's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengō.
•
• Jinki (724–729)
• Tenpyō (729–749)
• Tenpyō-kanpō (749)
• Tenpyō-shōhō (749–757)
Consorts and children
• Empress: Fujiwara Asukabehime (藤原 安宿媛), Fujiwara no Fuhito』s daughter
• Imperial Princess Abe (阿倍内親王) later Empress Kōken
• First Son: Prince Motoi (基王, 727–728)
• Bunin: Agatainukai no Hirotoji (県犬養広刀自, d.762), Agatainukai no Morokoshi's daughter
• First Daughter: Imperial Princess Inoe (井上内親王), married to Emperor Kōnin
• Imperial Princess Fuwa (不破内親王, 723-795), married to Prince Shioyaki
• Second Son: Imperial Prince Asaka (安積親王, 728–744)
• Bunin: Nan-dono (南殿, d.748), Fujiwara no Muchimaro』s daughter
• Bunin: Hoku-dono (北殿, d.760), Fujiwara no Fusasaki』s daughter
• Bunin: Tachibana-no-Hirooka no Konakachi (橘広岡古那可智, d.759), Tachibana no Sai's daughter
Ancestry
主題 | 關係 | from-date | to-date |
---|---|---|---|
神亀 | ruler | 724/3/3神亀元年二月甲午 | 729/9/1神亀六年八月壬戌 |
天平 | ruler | 729/9/2天平元年八月癸亥 | 749/5/3天平二十一年四月丙午 |
天平感宝 | ruler | 749/5/4天平感宝元年四月丁未 | 749/8/18天平感宝元年七月癸巳 |
文獻資料 | 引用次數 |
---|---|
日本國志 | 1 |
宋史 | 3 |
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