Heian Period
Epoch of the history of Japan, dating from the establishment of the new imperial capital at Heian-kyo (modern Kyoto) in 794, ending the Nara period, to the military triumph of Minamoto Yoritomo in 1185, which began the Kamakura period. The Heian period was predominantly peaceful, and was regarded in later epochs as the classical age of Japanese civilization, in which a sophisticated indigenous culture was established. Officially the emperor ruled unchallenged, but in practice powerful aristocratic families, especially the Fujiwara, and other interest groups exercised power, rather than the reigning emperors. Despite its peaceful appearance, the Heian period also fostered provincial military clans, the daimyo and their followers the samurai, which eventually brought its end in a bitter civil war.
Heian Politics
The Heian period is dated from a political act, when the
reigning Emperor Kammu (reigned 781-806) set up his new capital,
Heian-kyo (Capital of Peace and Tranquillity) on a virgin site in
794, laid out on a Chinese-style grid plan modelled after the
Tang dynasty capital of Chang'an (modern Xi'an). Seeking to
escape the powerful Buddhist clergy and other entrenched factions
in the old capital of Nara, he had first chosen a site in 784,
but moved again ten years later. The political history of the
Heian period can be divided into four spans: early Heian, from
794 to 894; middle or Fujiwara Heian, from the breaking off of
relations with China in 894 until 1068; the heyday of insei
(cloistered rule) government by retired emperors starting in 1068
with the accession of Go-Sanjo, the first emperor for over a
century not born of a Fujiwara mother; and three decades of
growing daimyo dominance from the Hogen Disturbance of 1156 until
1185. Throughout, Japan was in theory governed according to the
Chinese-style ritsu-ryo constitution, as developed by Emperor
Tenji in the Taika Reform of 645. However, practice grew further
and further from this transplanted structure, much of which had
never taken root in Japan, until it finally broke down completely
in 1185.
Erosion of Imperial Power
The first period, from the foundation of Heian-kyo in 794 to the
ending of official embassies to China in 894, began dominated by
the imperial house, but power increasingly fell into Fujiwara
hands. The strong Emperor Kammu, who had ordered the original
move to Heian-kyo, also reformed administration and curbed the
influence of the Buddhist clergy in politics. He was the most
active and powerful emperor Japan would have for many centuries,
but he owed his enthronement to his Fujiwara father-in-law, and
the Fujiwara family subsequently strove to increase their
influence over the imperial line.
In 857 Fujiwara Yoshifusa (804-872), who had married into the
imperial family and arranged for his sister to do likewise,
became Great Minister of State, a powerful post long kept empty
by the court. In 858 he had his young grandson enthroned as
Emperor Seiwa, and himself became sessho (regent), the first in
Japanese history from outside the imperial line. His nephew
Fujiwara Mototsune (836-891) after serving as sessho, became, in
887, the first kampaku (chancellor), giving him full powers of
regency even when the emperor was of age. Emperor Uda (867-931,
reigned 887-897), who had no close blood ties to the Fujiwara,
tried to regain power by keeping the post of kampaku vacant after
Mototsune's death in 891, using minor courtiers as counsellors.
One of these was Sugawara Michizane, a provincial governor and
scholar of Chinese Confucianism, who in 894 ended Japan's
embassies to China, because of the chaos accompanying the
collapse of the Tang dynasty.
The Fujiwara triumphed definitively soon after Japan's isolation.
Uda abdicated in 897 in favour of Emperor Daigo (885-930, reigned
897-930), who also ruled without a kampaku. He tried to
revitalize the ritsu-ryo code, made new compilations of
governmental procedures, and was a great patron of art and
literature; later generations regarded his reign as a golden age,
but he could not control the Fujiwara. In 899 the imperial court
managed to have Michizane appointed Minister of the Right (the
second highest government office), but were forced to concede the
appointment of Fujiwara Tokihira as Minister of the Left. Within
two years, Tokihira had secured Michizane's exile on false
treason charges to Kyushu, where he died in 903, and Fujiwara
domination of government was complete.
Michizane's position as a Confucian scholar was significant, for
he was a last hope for the Chinese-style emperor-centred state,
with its corps of Confucian mandarins, instituted by the original
Taika Reforms. Following his demise, native aristocratic
traditions triumphed over the foreign reforms. The imperial
family's difficulty was that, although it began as an
aristocratic house, it had become the state through the
Chinese-inspired reforms and lost the capacity to function
independently, so that when new sources of power developed
outside the bureaucratic system it lost out to the powerful
private families. Cadet branches of the imperial house cut off
from the succession to avoid proliferation of princes, such as
the Taira and Minamoto military clans, developed like other
private families once cut free from the state apparatus.
Fujiwara Japan
Tokihira's successor Fujiwara Tadahira (880-949) recovered the
office of kampaku in 930, and from 967 the family held it almost
without interruption until near the end of the Heian period.
Fujiwara family offices conducted government, while Fujiwara
daughters married successive emperors, keeping the imperial
family in tutelage to the Fujiwara. The Fujiwara and other great
families awarded state titles to their private stewards, and
lesser provincial retainers also received such titles, becoming
vassals bound to their lords by feudal loyalties: these bonds of
obligation became the provincial power bases of the great
families. The Fujiwara were able to dominate Japan without
violence by manipulating existing institutions, especially the
imperial court, and excluding rival aristocrats from positions of
power. So self-confident and secure was Fujiwara Michinaga, who
brought Fujiwara to its peak after becoming clan head in 995,
that until his death in 1028 he never bothered to become kampaku.
His private administrative office (mandokoro) handled all
important government business, while he married his daughters to
four different emperors.
A critical development underlying the wealth of the Fujiwara
family and the breakdown of the ritsu-ryo system was the
development of shoen (private estates). These estates developed
out of the supposedly equal distribution of lands under the
ritsu-ryo system. Public lands originally assigned to support
important officials tended to become hereditary possessions, as
did the state offices themselves; and peasants likewise became
hereditary owners of the plots awarded to them. From 743, newly
reclaimed lands became the permanent property of the reclaimer
(the word shoen originally meant the depot for a land reclamation
project), and this new ownership principle undercut the original
commitment to exclusive state landownership. Early shoen were
mostly genuine reclaimed lands, but as time went by they were
kept as private possessions. They also were progressively freed
from ritsu-ryo obligations for taxes and compulsory labour
services, exemptions justified by the expense and labour involved
in opening up land. Temples were freed from the start from such
obligations by the ritsu-ryo codes. Once established, the
exemptions were easily extended as more land was opened up or
purchased.
From the early 10th century, even more land was taken out of the
state domain by the principle of commendation. This involved
estate holders transferring the legal title to their lands to
more powerful courtiers or temples, which then kept them in place
as adminstrators while received a fixed portion of the land's
yield and using political influence to gain or extend tax
exemption for it. (These were rights to use the land, which in
theory itself remained state property.) The transactions were
private, outside the scope of the original ritsu-ryo system. The
new nominal owners of the land could pass their newly acquired
titles even higher up the social scale, to cement a fealty
relationship or to get even more political leverage on the
estate's behalf, leading to futher division of the income. At the
local level, peasants were protected from the state's tax and
forced labour demands, while estate managers were protected from
interference by local government officials. By the early 11th
century, some estates were immune from entry by any government
officials, even the imperial police.
The growth of the shoen system, however, reflected a collapse in
provincial government. While the Fujiwara concentrated on the
capital, new forces were at work in the provinces. Much of
northern Japan had formerly been occupied by tribes called Ezo,
perhaps relatives of the modern Ainu of Hokkaido, whose
pacification had required extensive military expeditions. This
military presence in the provinces was compounded by the local
warrior bands (the earliest samurai) used by the nobility and
their stewards to police their estates and settle local disputes,
and by powerful military families (the earliest daimyo), often
lesser branches of the imperial house or thwarted aristocrats
seeking new opportunities outside the Fujiwara-dominated capital.
Armed uprisings were thus a constant threat. Taira Masakado, a
member of the Taira imperial cadet house, and Fujiwara Sumitomo,
a pirate Fujiwara renegade, rebelled in east and west Japan
respectively in the 930s; and the Earlier Nine Years' War of
1051-1062 and the Later Three Years' War (1083-1087) saw
pacification campaigns against rebels in far northern Honshu
develop into huge territorial conquests by the Minamoto family,
descendants of Fujiwara Yoshifusa's pawn, the Emperor Seiwa.
These revolts never threatened the capital, but they discredited
central authority and made the military clans more likely to
settle major quarrels between themselves. Also, the military
families, able to offer protection as well as influence, became
preferable to the Fujiwara as guarantors for shoen, undermining
the basis of Fujiwara wealth.
Government by Retired Emperors
Michinaga's heir Fujiwara Yorimichi (992-1074, sessho 1016-1068)
kept up his father's grand style, but as Fujiwara power ebbed in
the provinces, he also lost control of the centre as the Fujiwara
family ran out of daughters to marry to imperial heirs: in 1068
Emperor Go-Sanjo (1034-1073, reigned 1068-1072), the first
emperor in over 100 years without a Fujiwara mother, succeeded to
the throne. He set up a new office to scrutinize the legal titles
of shoen and confiscate unauthorized holdings, but by refusing to
cooperate the Fujiwara forced Go-Sanjo's abdication. However, his
son Emperor Shirakawa (1053-1129, reigned 1072-1086) took
advantage of a new political tactic developed by Go-Sanjo, the
insei (cloister government) system, whereby an emperor abdicated
and took Buddhist monastic vows but retained political control by
manipulating a series of child emperors, just as the Fujiwara had
done.
Three great retired emperors, Shirakawa, Toba (1103-1156, reigned
1107-1123), and Go-Shirakawa (1127-1192, reigned 1155-1158),
ruled from retirement for 43, 27, and 34 years respectively. They
made no attempt to revitalize the ritsu-ryo system, alter Heian
political institutions, or subjugate the Fujiwara; rather, they
worked within existing arrangements to recover power and wealth
for the imperial house, while Fujiwara responses were hindered by
growing feuds between various branches of the family. Go-Sanjo's
restrictions of 1069 that disallowed immunities for many shoen
were more an attempt to rein in the system than remove it, and
the imperial family became ultimate guarantors for many estates
across Japan. The retired emperors supported the provincial
governors appointed to collect state tax revenues, but more to
fill state coffers than to reassert state power. However,
imperial support for provincial officials with the right to
decide tax immunities took power away from courtier families such
as the Fujiwara who were supported by shoen. Shirakawa set up a
private administration modelled on Fujiwara practice, and he and
his successors received numerous commended shoen (usually by
proxy to avoid publicly undermining the ritsu-ryo system), so
that by 1185 the imperial household was once again the largest
landowner in Japan.
The Heian Collapse
The last phase of the Heian period began when court politics
became entangled with rivalries between military families. The
Taira clan at first exploited the new insei system by allying
itself to the retired emperors, while the Minamoto stayed with
their traditional patrons, the Fujiwara. However, in 1155 both
imperial and Fujiwara families split into rival parties, with an
ambitious retired emperor challenging the new emperor,
Go-Shirakawa. In July 1156 the Hogen Disturbance occured, when
warriors from both sides clashed in Kyoto. Go-Shirakawa's
succession was secured, but his abdication in 1158 gave him no
additional power against the new might of the Taira family. In
the Heiji Disturbance of 1159, the Taira under Taira Kiyomori
beat off a Minamoto challenge and routed their rivals. This new
violence was strange to the Heian capital, where even corporal
punishment had been almost unknown.
The Taira burned rebellious temples, exiled courtiers, and
generally acted far more ruthlessly than any rulers had for
centuries. However, they also became absorbed in the affairs of
the capital, and neglected their own provincial power base.
Though from a low provincial military background, Taira Kiyomori
gained admission to the councils of state, becoming chief
minister in 1167 and filling offices with his relatives.
Following Fujiwara precedent, he married his daughter to the
reigning emperor, and in 1180 placed their infant son on the
throne as the Emperor Antoku. He briefly attempted to move the
court to his own domains, before forced to return it to the
capital. Meanwhile, the Minamoto heir Minamoto Yoritomo, his
brother Minamoto Yoshitsune, and other surviving Minamoto were
organizing their revenge.
The resulting conflict, the Gempei War (1180-1185), reached its
height after Kiyomori's death in 1181, ending in the annihilation
of the Taira in the sea battle of Dannoura (1185). Yorimoto's
triumph signalled the end of the Heian period, for he remained in
his base at Kamakura instead of moving to Heian-kyo, introducing
a new military system of government (the bakufu), which was
formalized in 1192 when he was appointed Japan's first ruling
shogun.
Heian Economics and Society
Society and economics were closely intertwined in Heian Japan
because the country was overwhelmingly agricultural, with most of
its population tied closely to the land. Heian-kyo was the only
large city, and poor communications and Fujiwara snobbery kept
its influence in the provinces to a minimum. Most Japanese lived
in the shoen estates which had become the basic units of local
organization. These formed enclosed social and economic units,
with tools and other materials for farming being manufactured
locally, the estate's few "exports" generally being
specialized goods for its lord in the capital. The few coins in
circulation stayed chiefly in or around Heian-kyo, and most of
the country had a barter economy (clothes or fabrics were used
everywhere as a form of currency). Protected from state taxes and
labour duties, the shoen tenants were better off than peasants on
public lands, and many public tenants fled to shoen or helped
landlords establish them, shrinking the imperial state's tax
base. Early in the 10th century the government tried to arrest
this decline by making land rather than people the basis of
taxation and by awarding their provincial governors a share of
taxes collection, turning them into tax farmers. Yet shoen
continued to proliferate, until by 1185 they made up over half of
Japan's farmland.
The shoen sustained the aristocracy, who were Heian Japan's
dominant class, politically, socially, and culturally. They were
descended from the uji, the clan groups of mixed social levels
which had made up pre-Heian Japan (the imperial family or Yamato
clan was originally one uji among others), but Heian society's
growing wealth and complexity broke the close ties between uji
chiefs and vassals. Heian Japan developed a keen sense of social
distinction, and high aristocrats disdained virtually all below
them, even the provincial governors and warlords who also had
distinguished ancestors. Heian-kyo was the unchallenged centre of
society, and the high aristocracy (which chiefly meant the
Fujiwara family) rarely ventured outside it, developing a very
closed and refined culture of their own. Highborn women in
particular were expected to seclude themselves inside the great
city manors: but they enjoyed equal property rights with men and
many other freedoms, not least sexual. Japanese tradition
dictated that after marriage a wife often remained at her
parents' house for some years, with the husband visiting; while
polygamy for the upper classes who could afford it meant that
several noble wives often occupied different wings of a single
husband's mansion. Gentlemen cultivated arts of seduction,
involving tasteful messages and nocturnal visits to ladies'
apartments, and courtly romance was one of the age's great
pastimes.
The rest of society, viewed as scarcely human by some
aristocrats, lived in a graduated hierarchy based on the
agricultural system. The lowest level, the peasants, were perhaps
better off than in later periods of Japanese history, though
agriculture was primitive: shoen tenants were lightly taxed, and
there were no major wars to disrupt their lives. The local
landowners were paired with agents of the aristocrats they had
pledged their estates to, so that a double tier of landholding
grew up. The provincial military families, offshoots of the
imperial and aristocratic families, were also local landlords,
while their armed retainers (the future samurai) who provided
police and other similar services for the abstentee aristocratic
landowners were petty fiefholders or even part-time farmers
themselves.
Heian Culture
Heian Japan is particularly famous today for its culture,
which left a tradition of extreme aesthetic sensitivity and
aristocratic cultivation that inspired many subsequent
developments in Japanese art, Japanese music, and Japanese
literature. The Heian aristocracy, especially the Fujiwara,
devoted its wealth and leisure to artistic pursuits, and the
period is known for the "rule of taste": the extreme
importance of discernment and sensibility in aristocratic social
relations. Aristocratic culture dominated the Heian tradition,
and the lower classes were restricted to providing their betters
with fine craftworks or quaint ballads, not least because they
had no education. Nonetheless, Heian high culture employed much
popular material, though refining it through sophisticated
aesthetic standards, and its heritage enriched the entire nation.
Heian literature broke with previous trends following the
invention of kana, the syllabic script able to record faithfully
the sounds of the Japanese language. This invention was credited
to the great Buddhist monk Kukai, and was certainly in use by the
early 9th century, supplanting the previous cumbersome system of
using Chinese characters phonetically to render Japanese. It
favoured women writers, for men were expected to use Chinese for
government business, while women were expected to know and write
only Japanese. It also meant that Heian literature concentrated
on private life, rather than the public realm dominated by the
Chinese language.
The native 31-syllable tanka form of poetry was an early
beneficiary of the invention of kana. Despite the decline of
imperial power, the imperial family remained an important
cultural focus, and in 905 the Kokinshu (Anthology of Ancient and
Modern Poems), first of the great imperial poetry anthologies,
was compiled on the order of Emperor Daigo. The new aesthetics
governing its compilation favoured aristocratic good taste and
elegant wit at the expense of the rugged sincerity of earlier
poets. Its compiler, Ki Tsurayuki, established a canon of taste,
and Japan's first poetics in his preface. Ariwara Narihira, the
half-legendary poet and courtier at the centre of the poem-tale
Ise monogatari (The Tale of Ise, c. 980), and the poetess Ono no
Komachi were just two of the greatest representatives of this new
aristocratic poetry, which set the standard for subsequent ages.
Mono no aware (the pathos of things), a keen response to the
world's fleeting beauty, developed as a key element of Heian and
subsequent literature.
Kana also allowed Japan to produce perhaps the world's first true
novel. Murasaki Shikibu created the greatest work of Japanese
literature in her The Tale of Genji, a fictionalized version of
Fujiwara court life which became a touchstone for Japanese
culture, as much for its elegaic depiction of the lost Heian
peace as for its literary excellence. She was a courtier, and her
creation of the dazzling courtly lover Prince Genji probably owed
much to her close observation of Fujiwara Michinaga. Many other
novels were written at the time, but few matched her level. Her
witty contemporary Sei Shonagon was the greatest diarist in a
tradition that became another important strand of Japanese
literature, as the anonymous female authors of the Kagero nikki
(translated as The Gossamer Years) and the Sarashina nikki
(translated as As I Crossed a Bridge of Dreams) recorded their
trials and sorrows.
Later Heian literature changed focus, mirroring historical
changes in society. The Konjaku monogatari (Tales of Now and
Then), compiled in the early 12th century, was a vast compilation
of stories, many of popular origin, signifying a broadening in
the social range of literature. Go-Shirakawa collected an
anthology of folk songs in the imayo ballad form in 1179, while
the brilliant monk-poet Saigyo came from the lowly samurai class.
He and his contemporaries Fujiwara Teika and Kamo no Chomei
exploited the best of the aristocratic tradition while increasing
its profundity and emotive force, carrying on its traditions into
the more brutal Kamakura period.
Heian art benefited first from the new Shingon and Tendai sects
of Buddhism. Shingon in particular employed mandalas
(cosmological diagrams), extensive statue groups, and rich
implements in its ceremonies, while both sects required temple
buildings such as the splendid Muro-ji (early 9th century) near
Nara. As the Fujiwara aristocracy came to power, their tastes
were reflected in the growing tradition of Yamato-e painting,
showing decorative and colourful landscapes in contrast to more
sober Chinese-style ink paintings. Decorative calligraphy in the
new kana scripts also became artistically important, while
Fujiwara opulence was reflected in rich fabric designs and finely
crafted objets d'art.
As Fujiwara power waned, a less optimistic and more elegaic art
developed. Fujiwara Yorimichi's Ho-o-do (Phoenix Hall, completed
1053) of the Byodoin, a temple in Uji near Kyoto, represents an
earthly paradise, but it is also partly a place of retreat from
the world. The horizontal narrative handscroll or emaki, which
developed after 1100, significantly took illustrated versions of
The Tale of Genji as a chief subject, portraying an already
waning world of courtly refinement.
Heian music was also intimately bound up with aristocratic court
life. Heian aristocrats, like Murasaki Shikibu's characters, were
usually skilled performers on the koto, sho, biwa, shakuhachi, or
other instrument, while larger court ensembles provided the
splendid court music gagaku. This form, closely based on the
court music of Tang dynasty China, has been maintained by guilds
associated with the imperial court, making it the oldest
preserved musical tradition in the world.
Heian Religion
The Heian period saw the arrival of some of the most important
Buddhist sects in Japan, and Buddhism's growth from a minority
creed introduced by state initiative into a genuine popular
faith. Kukai, the famous Buddhist sage, brought the Shingon sect
of esoteric Buddhism to Japan from China in 806, soon followed by
the monk Saicho who brought the Tendai sect, an important Chinese
development of Mahayana Buddhism. Their great monastic centres on
Mount Koya and Mount Hiei near Heian-kyo became immensely rich
and powerful, and Tendai in particular established the permanent
dominance of Mahayana Buddhism in Japan. The aristocracy favoured
both sects as much for their rich art and ceremonial as for their
religious profundity, and used monastic endowments and tax
exemptions for secular purposes. Heian Buddhism developed fairly
close ties with the native Shinto religion, through elaborate
doctrines that presented the various Japanese kami (gods) as
aspects of various Mahayana Buddhas, and through institutions
such as the wandering mountain monks, who combined Buddhism and
Shinto with folk traditions of shamanism and mountain worship.
These helped spread the new religion among the common people. The
imperial family was obliged by its ritual duties to worship at
the Ise Shrine and other great shrines of Shinto, but also
extensively patronized Buddhism. Most Heian Japanese,
particularly in the aristocracy, held eclectic mixtures of
Buddhist, Shinto, and superstitious beliefs.
As the Heian period went on, the Buddhist sects acquired more and
more secular wealth and power. Through their lay followers, the
monasteries had considerable military forces, which they grew to
use to settle property and doctrinal disputes. The Tendai centre
of Enryakuji in particular became notorious for its unruly monks,
who would descend on the capital to force the government to heed
the sect's wishes. Meanwhile, new varieties of Buddhism were
growing out of Tendai's highly comprehensive and diverse
doctrines, including Pure Land Buddhism. Pure Land, with its
simple devotional chants and cult of universal salvation promised
by the Buddha Amida, spread through all levels of society,
propagated by evangelists like the saint Honen, and subsequently
blossomed into independent popular cults.