was the 105th Emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. He reigned from June 9, 1526, until his death in 1557, during the Sengoku period of the Muromachi Bakufu. His personal name was Tomohito (çÂ¥ä»Â).
Genealogy
He was the second son of Emperor Go-Kashiwabara. His mother was Fujiwara Fujiko (è¤åÂÂè¤åÂÂ)
- NyÃ
Âin: MadenokÃ
Âji (Fujiwara) Eiko (ä¸ÂéÂÂå°Âè·¯æ ÂÃ¥ÂÂ; 1499âÂÂ1522), MadenokÃ
Âji Katafusa's daughter
- First daughter: (1514âÂÂ1515)
- First son: Imperial Prince Michihito (æÂ¹ä»Â親çÂÂ) later Emperor Ã
Âgimachi
- Second daughter: Princess Eiju (1519âÂÂ1535; 永寿女çÂÂ)
- Second Son: (1521âÂÂ1530)
- Lady-in-waiting: Takakura (Fujiwara) Kazuko? (é«ÂÃ¥ÂÂï¼Âè¤åÂÂï¼ÂéÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ), Tachibana Yukio's daughter
- Fifth daughter: Princess FukÃ
Â? (d.1579; æÂ®åÂ
Â女çÂÂ)
- Lady-in-waiting: Hirohashi (Fujiwara) Kuniko? (åºÂæ©Â(è¤åÂÂ)å½åÂÂ), Hirohashi Kanehide's daughter
- Seventh daughter: Princess SeishÃ
« (1552âÂÂ1623; èÂÂç§Â女çÂÂ)
- Naishi: Fujiwara (Hino) Tomoko, Minase Hidekane's daughter
- Court lady: Iyo-no-Tsubone (ä¼ÂäºÂå±Â), Mibu Harutomi's Daughter
- Third son: kakujyo (1521âÂÂ1574; è¦ÂæÂÂ)
- Court lady: Daughter of Jimyoin Motoharu
- Princess (Twins, 1520)
- Princess (Twins, 1520)
- Court lady: Daughter of Imperial Prince Tokiwai Tsunenao
Events of Go-Nara's life
- Daiei 6, in the 4th month (June 9, 1526): Go-Nara was proclaimed emperor upon the death of his father, Emperor Go-Kashiwabara. He began his reign at age 31.
- Daiei 6, 7th month (1526): An army from Awa Province marched towards Miyako. Hosokawa Takakuni attacked these forces at the Katsura River, but his forces were unsuccessful. Hosokawa Takakage came to the aid of Takakuni, and their combined forces were successful in stopping the advancing army.
- Daiei 6, 12th month (1526): ShÃ
Âgun Ashikaga Yoshiharu invited archers from neighboring provinces to come to the capital for an archery contest.
- KyÃ
Âroku gannen or KyÃ
Âroku 1 (1528): Former Kampuku Konoe Tanye became Sadaijin. The former Nadaijin Minamoto-no Mitsukoto became Udaijin. Former Dainagon Kiusho Tanemitsu became Nadaijin.
- Tenbun 4, 26th day of 2nd month (March 29, 1535): Go-Nara was formally installed as emperor. The Imperial Court was so impoverished, that a nationwide appeal for contributions went out. Contributions from the HÃ
ÂjÃ
 clan, the Ã
Âuchi clan, the Imagawa clan, and other great daimyÃ
 clans of the Sengoku period allowed the Emperor to carry out the formal coronation ceremonies ten years later. The Imperial Court's poverty was so extreme that the Emperor was forced to sell his calligraphy.
- Tenbun 11, 25th day of the 8th month (1543): Portuguese ship drifts ashore at Tanegashima, and European guns are introduced into Japan.
- Tenbun 20, 8th to 9th month (1551): Courtiers in preparation to move the emperor from war-torn Kyoto to the Ã
Âuchi city of Yamaguchi were caught in the Tainei-ji incident, a coup within the Ã
Âuchi clan. The massacre of the courtiers in Yamaguchi resulted in a widespread loss of court records along with knowledge of court rituals and imperial calendar-making. The emperor remained in Kyoto.
- KÃ
Âji 3, 5th day of 9th month (1557): Emperor Go-Nara died at age 62. He was unburied for 70 days.
Go-Nara is enshrined with other emperors at the imperial tomb called Fukakusa no kita no misasagi (æ·±èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂéµ) in Fushimi-ku, Kyoto.
KugyÃ
Â
KugyÃ
 (Ã¥Â
ŒÂ¿) is a collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras. Even during those years in which the court's actual influence outside the palace walls was minimal, the hierarchic organization persisted.
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 Go-Nara's reign, this apex of the DaijÃ
Â-kan included:
Eras of Go-Nara's reign
The years of Go-Nara's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name or nengÃ
Â.
Ancestry
Notes
References
- Ponsonby-Fane, Richard Arthur Brabazon. (1959). The Imperial House of Japan. Kyoto: Ponsonby Memorial Society. OCLC 194887
- Titsingh, Isaac, ed. (1834). [Siyun-sai Rin-siyo/Hayashi GahÃ
Â, 1652], Nipon o daï itsi ran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon. Paris: Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland.
- Varley, H. Paul, ed. (1980). [ Kitabatake Chikafusa, 1359], JinnÃ
 ShÃ
ÂtÃ
Âki (A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns: JinnÃ
 ShÃ
ÂtÃ
Âki. New York: Columbia University Press.
See also