in pink, areas loyal to or allied with
Yamana Sōzen in light green. Hosokawa's Eastern Army of about 85,000 and Yamana's Western Army of about 80,000 were almost evenly matched when mobilized near Kyoto. The fighting started in March when a Hosokawa mansion was burned. Then in May 1467, a Yamana mansion was attacked. In July, according to Sansom, Yoshimasa appointed Hosokawa commanding general in an attempt to "chastise the rebel" Yamana. Sansom states "heavy fighting continued throughout July" and "several hundred large buildings were destroyed, and destruction continued day after day". Hosokawa was soon cornered in the northeast portion of Kyoto around his mansion, while Yamana controlled the south and west. Yamana received 20,000 reinforcements under
Ōuchi Masahiro in September. However, Sansom states Hosokawa was able to bring the "sovereign and the abdicated Emperor" to the Bakufu from the Emperor's Palace, before it was seized by Yamana with 50,000 men. Hosokawa then received Akamatsu troops as reinforcements. On 1 November, Yamana was able to capture the
Shōkoku-ji after bribing a monk. Sansom states "The chronicles of the time paint a dreadful picture of the carnage", and "the two adversaries faced one another without action for the rest of the year". While Kyoto was burning, Ashikaga Yoshimasa spent his time in poetry readings and other cultural activities, and in planning
Ginkaku-ji, a Silver Pavilion to rival
Kinkaku-ji, the Golden Pavilion that his grandfather,
Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, had built. The Ōnin War, and the
shōguns complacent attitude towards it, "sanctioned" private wars and skirmishes between the other
daimyō. No part of Japan escaped the violence. Although the battles in Kyoto had been abandoned, the war had spread to the rest of Japan. In
Yamashiro Province, the
Hatakeyama clan had split into two parts that fought each other to a standstill. This stalemate was to have serious consequences. In 1485, the peasantry and
jizamurai (lesser samurai – mostly armed peasants) had had enough, and revolted. They organized the
Yamashiro ikki and forced the clan armies to leave the province. The ikki became a powerful force, much more than simply an armed mob. By 1486 they had even set up a provisional government for Yamashiro province. Other ikki would form and appear throughout other parts of Japan, such as
Kaga Province, where a sect of the
Jōdo Shinshū Buddhists, the
Ikkō, started their own revolt during the Ōnin War after being enlisted by one of Kaga's most prominent warlords,
Togashi Masachika. The Ikkō, who had a complex relationship with the
Jōdo Shinshō leader
Rennyo, appealed to the common peasants in their region, and inevitably formed the
Ikkō-ikki. By 1488 the Ikkō-ikki of Kaga Province
overthrew Masachika and
took control of the province. After this they began building a fortified castle-cathedral along the
Yodo River and used it as their headquarters. The uprising of the Ikkō-ikki and the Yamashiro-ikki formed part of the general outbreak of civil war. Sansom states some refer to this as
gekokujō (roughly "the low oppress the high"), or a "disturbed social order". Sansom further states, "The frequent risings of the fifteenth century were expressions of popular discontent in which peasants took part". ==Aftermath==