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Fujiwara no Nagate

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Japanese court noble and statesman of the Nara period
Fujiwara no Nagate
藤原永手
Illustration by Kikuchi Yōsai, from "Zenken-Kojitsu" (pub. 1903)
Born714
DiedMarch 11, 771
FamilyFujiwara Hokke
FatherFujiwara no Fusasaki
In this Japanese name, the surname is Fujiwara.

Fujiwara no Nagate (藤原永手, 714 – March 11, 771) was a Japanese court noble and statesman of the Nara period. He was the second son of the founder of the Hokke House of the Fujiwara clan, the sangi Fujiwara no Fusasaki. He achieved the court rank of Senior First Rank and the position of Minister of the Left, and posthumously of Chancellor of the Realm. He was also known as Nagaoka-Daijin (長岡大臣).

Life

With the early death of his older brother Fujiwara no Torikai, Nagate became the effective leader of the Hokke. In 737, he was promoted from ju roku-i no ge (従六位下) to ju roku-i no jō (従六位上), but the emperor of the time, Shōmu, favored Nagate's younger brother Yatsuka. Nagate was not promoted again until 749, immediately before the emperor's abdication, when he gained the rank of ju shi-i no ge (従四位下).

He was more highly valued in the court of the new ruler Empress Kōken, where he was promoted to ju shi-i no jō (従四位上) in 750 and again in 754 to ju san-mi (従三位), marking him among the ranks of the kugyō. Immediately after the death of ex-emperor Shōmu in 756, Nagate was promoted directly to chūnagon, skipping sangi entirely.

On the other hand, he remained in conflict with his powerful relative Fujiwara no Nakamaro. After the disinheritance of Crown Prince Funado in 757, he joined with Fujiwara no Toyonari in supporting Prince Shioyaki as Empress Kōken's new heir, but Nakamaro's favored candidate Prince Ōi, the future Emperor Junnin, won out. In 758, Nagate was the only member of a committee to sit out a daijō-kan meeting called by Nakamaro. After 757, Nakamaro controlled the court, and this bad relationship left Nagate in an uncomfortable political position, despite his status as the third most powerful man in the Daijō-kan after Ishikawa no Toshitari and Fun'ya no Kiyomi.

In 764, Fujiwara no Nakamaro rebelled, and Nagate supported the side of Empress Kōken and Dōkyō. He was promoted to shō san-mi (正三位) and dainagon and conferred honors, second-class. After Dōkyō established his power, and after Toyonari's death in 765, Nagate held his position as the most powerful kugyō in the daijō-kan until his death. In 766 he was promoted to udaijin and then sadaijin, and obtained the rank of shō ni-i (正二位).

Empress Kōken died in 770, and in the ensuing dispute over the heir, Nagate supported Prince Shirakabe, the future Emperor Kōnin. He was rewarded for his efforts with a promotion to shō ichi-i (正一位) by the new sovereign.

Nagate died of sickness on March 11, 771, at the age of 58. He was posthumously granted the position of Daijō-daijin on the same day.

Genealogy

  • Father: Fujiwara no Fusasaki
  • Mother: Muro no Ōkimi (daughter of Prince Minu)
  • Wife: Ōno no Nakachi (daughter of Ōno no Azumabito)
  • Wife: (daughter of Fujiwara no Torikai)
    • Son: Fujiwara no Ieyori (743–785)
  • Wife: (daughter of Fujiwara no Yoshitsugu)
    • Son: Fujiwara no Oyori
    • Daughter: Fujiwara no Sōshi (藤原曹子, ?–793) (wife of Emperor Kōnin)
  • Wife: (unknown)
    • Daughter: Wife of Fujiwara no Kosemaro
    • Daughter: (?–800) Wife of Fujiwara no Uchimaro

References

  • Yoshikawa, Toshiko (2006). "仲麻呂政権と藤原永手・八束(真楯)・千尋(御楯)" [Nakamaro's Administration and Fujiwara no Nagate, Matate, and Mitate]. 律令貴族成立史の研究 [Research on the Establishment of the Ritsuryō Nobles] (in Japanese). Hanawa Shobō (塙書房). ISBN 978-4-8273-1201-0.
Fujiwara family tree
Kamatari
614–669
Fuhito
659–720
NANKE branchHOKKE branchSHIKIKE branchKYŌKE branch
Muchimaro
680–737
Fusasaki
681–737
Umakai
694–737
Maro
695–737
Toyonari
704–766
Nakamaro
706–764
OtomaroNagate
714–771
Matate
715–766
Uona
721–783
Kaedemaro
723–776
Yoshitsugu
716–777
Tamaro
722–783
Momokawa
732–779
Hamanari
724–790
Tsuginawa
727–796
Korekimi
727–789
Uchimaro
756–812
Sonohito
756–819
Otsugu
774–843
Fuyutsugu
775–826
Nagara
802–826
Yoshifusa
804–872
Yoshiyo
823–900
Mototsune
836–891
Tokihira
871–909
Tadahira
880–949
Saneyori
900–970
Morosuke
909–960
Yoritada
924–989
Koretada
924–972
Yoritada
925–977
Kaneie
929–990
Michitaka
953–995
Michikane
961–995
Michinaga
966–1028
Yorimichi
992–1074
Norimichi
996–1075
Morozane
1042–1101
Moromichi
1062–1099
Tadazane
1075–1162
Tadamichi
1097–1164
Yorinaga
1120–1156
Konoe
Family
Matsudono
Family
Kujō
Family
Konoe Motozane
1143–1166
Matsudono Motofusa
1144?–1231
Kujō Kanezane
1149–1207
Konoe Motomichi
1160–1233
Matsudono Moroie
1172–1238
Kujō Yoshitsune
1169–1206
Konoe Iezane
1179–1242
Kujō Michiie
1193–1252
Takatsukasa
Family
Nijō
Family
Ichijō
Family
Konoe Kanetsune
1210–1259
Takatsukasa Kanehira
1228–1294
Kujō Norizane
1211–1235
Nijō Yoshizane
1216–1271
Ichijō Sanetsune
1223–1284
Notes
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  4. ^ 平城宮兵部省跡. 奈良文化財研究所. 2005. p. 168.
  5. Yoshikawa, Toshiko (2006). 仲麻呂政権と藤原永手・八束(真楯)・千尋(御楯). Hanawa Shobō (塙書房). ISBN 978-4-8273-1201-0.
  6. Tyler, Royall (1993). The Book of the Great Practice: The Life of the Mt. Fuji Ascetic Kakugyō Tōbutsu Kū (PDF). Asian Folklore Studies. p. 324.
  7. Yoneda, Yūsuke (2002). 藤原摂関家の誕生. 吉川弘文館. p. 139.
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  9. Kimoto, Yoshinobu (1998). 藤原式家官人の考察. 高科書店. p. 47. ISBN 978-4-87294-923-0.
  10. Takemitsu, Makoto (2013). 日本史の影の主役藤原氏の正体: 鎌足から続く1400年の歴史. PHP研究所. p. 103. ISBN 978-4569761046.
  11. http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~sg2h-ymst/hamanari.html
  12. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). In Japan Encyclopedia at Google Books; Brinkley, Frank et al. (1915).
  13. Kimoto, Yoshinobu (2004). "『牛屋大臣』藤原是公について" [On "Ushiya-Daijin" Fujiwara no Korekimi]. 奈良時代の藤原氏と諸氏族 [The Fujiwara Clan and Other Clans of the Nara Period] (in Japanese). Ohfu.
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  17. Kitayama, Shigeo (1973). 日本の歴史4 平安京 [History of Japan IV: Heian-kyō] (in Japanese). Chūkō Bunko (中公文庫). p. 242.
  18. 日本古代氏族人名辞典(普及版) [Dictionary of Names from Ancient Japanese Clans (Trade Version)] (in Japanese). Yoshikawa Kōbunkan (吉川弘文館). 2010. ISBN 978-4-642-01458-8.
  19. ^ Nobuyoshi, Yamamoto (2003). 摂関政治史論考 (in Japanese). Yoshikawa Kōbunkan (吉川弘文館). ISBN 978-4-642-02394-8.
  20. Haruo, Sasayama (2003). "藤原兼通の政権獲得過程". 日本律令制の展開 (in Japanese). Yoshikawa Kōbunkan (吉川弘文館). ISBN 978-4-642-02393-1.
  21. Frederic, Louis (2002). "Japan Encyclopedia." Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
  22. ^ Papinot, Edmond (1910). Historical and geographical dictionary of Japan. Tokyo: Librarie Sansaisha.
  23. Brown, Delmer M. and Ichirō Ishida, eds. (1979). Gukanshō: The Future and the Past. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-03460-0; OCLC 251325323
  24. Varley, Paul (2000). Japanese Culture. Fourth Edition. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press.
  25. Uejima, Susumu (2010). "日本中世社会の形成と王権". 中世庄園制の形成過程―〈立庄〉再考 (in Japanese). The University of Nagoya Press. ISBN 978-4-8158-0635-4.
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