In 1358 after the death of Takauji, the shogunate passed to his son Yoshiakira. Under his leadership, and that of the
kanrei Hosokawa Yoriyuki's, the regime succeeded in integrating the
shugo lords in the 1360s and 1370s.
Shugo branch families of the Ashikaga were now employed within the government bureaucracy. This happened due to the emergence of the
kanrei council system which tied
shugo lords firmly to the regime. Shogunal hegemony was now also stronger and this allowed them to discipline errant
shugo lords. Furthermore, the effects of the half-tax decree of 1368; the court ranking system which tied the shogunate closer to the imperial court; and limitations to Muromachi authority in the Kyūshū and Kantō regions all served to push the consolidation of Muromachi power. To mend relations after the
Kannō Incident, Yoshiakira reorganized the regime by establishing the
kanrei council system in 1362. This system was made up of two components, the
kanrei office and the senior vassal council (
jushin kaigi) over which the
kanrei presided. The system involved the most powerful
shugo families as participants in directly governing central and western Japan. Along with the shōgun, the
kanrei council emerged to form the heart of the Muromachi regime to such an extent that historians have come to characterize this regime as the
bakufu-
shugo system.
The kanrei council The very conflict that emerged with the
Kannō Incident was caused due to the separation and clash between the military vassal institutions controlled by Takauji and the bureaucratic-judicial institutions controlled by Tadayoshi. With the emergence of the
kanrei council system, the
shugo lords who represented the military were tied firmly to the bureaucracy. The job of the
kanrei was to act as a spokesman between the Senior Vassal Council (
jushin kaigi) and the shōgun. The
kanrei also had the responsibility of looking over the bureaucratic elements of the regime on a daily basis, consulting and transmitting shogunal orders to the council and to the bureaucracy. In this system, regime policy was formulated in consultations between the council and the shōgun, though final decisions were made by the latter. The
kanrei was consistently selected from a hereditary group of three
shugo families related to Takauji within four generations (Papinot 1972:27): the Hosokawa, the
Hatakeyama and the
Shiba. The three families took turns in filling the post. They were the highest ranking
shugo families in the regime. In the beginning, the council was composed of the heads of these three
shugo families along with four other heads of powerful
shugo families: the
Yamana, the
Isshiki, the
Akamatsu and the
Kyōgoku. The latter two families were unrelated to the Ashikaga family. This trend of including unrelated
shugo families into the council continued with the recruitment of the Ouchi, the Sasaki and the Toki families in the next few decades. This trend indicates that powerful
shugo families, irrespective of kinship, were tied to the regime. Conflicts of interests between
shugo lords and the shōgun was institutionalized by letting the
shugo lords voice their opinions in discussions within the council. and the
Four Heavenly Kings, 14th century The Board of Retainers (
samuraidokoro) was also headed by a Senior Vassal Council member selected in the 14th century from among the Imagawa (who became a council member a little later), the Hosokawa, the Hatakeyama, the Shiba, and the Toki. The Board of Retainers had the responsibility over police functions and the execution of criminal justice in Kyoto. By the beginning of the 15th century, the head of the Board of Retainers was chosen from among four
shugo families: the Yamana, the Akamatsu, the Kyogoku, and the Isshiki.
Shugo participation in the Senior Vassal Council and in the Board of Retainers were important because it was through the use of these intermediary instruments whereby the Ashikaga shōguns were able to centralize the state under their direction. Kinship in the form of headship ties (
soryo), looms large as a recruiting mechanism, here too, the
shugo lords were mostly branch families of the Ashikaga. However, these kinship ties did little in the way of mediating between the semi-independent
shugo lords and the regime. It was rather the effective participation of the
shugo lords in governing through the
kanrei council system which bound their interests more firmly than before to the regime.
Ashikaga and shugo coalitions In 1362, the two most powerful
shugo houses in the country, the
Ouchi and the
Yamana, submitted themselves to the Ashikaga regime on condition that the shōgun would not interfere with the internal affairs of their respective provinces (Grossberg 1981:25). Subsequently, the Yamana, who were related to the Ashikaga, and the Ouchi, who were not, began to play an increasingly important role in government affairs. However, within a few decades, both
shugo houses became powerful enough to incur the wrath of the shōgun. In 1366, the first
kanrei office holder's father,
Shiba Takatsune who held real power over his thirteen-year-old son, and who engineered the placement of Shiba family members in key government offices was declared a traitor, because of his growing power and arrogance (he felt demeaned by accepting the
kanrei post, so he had his son appointed instead). In the first show of force against an important
shugo family, Yoshiakira ordered the Yamana, Sasaki, Yoshimi and the Toki
shugo lords to attack the Shiba in the province of
Echizen. The Shiba were defeated, and their territory in Echizen was redistributed. In 1367, following the ouster of the Shiba family,
Hosokawa Yoriyuki was named as the successor to the post of
kanrei: after the shōgun Yoshiakira's death, Yoriyuki managed during the minority of the young shōgun Yoshimitsu to place the regime on a firmer foundation. The use of
shugo lords to attack one of their own colleagues in the 1366 points to the growing authority of the shōgun, compared to the
shugo lords. Up until then, there was no true punitive mechanisms that the shōgun could use against his
shugo lords. Pitting one
shugo lord against another strengthened the shōgun's hand. In 1362, the last Southern Court offensive against Kyoto forced the Ashikaga to withdraw from the capital, but like many previous attempts, the imperialists had to eventually retreat in the face of a large counterattack without having accomplished anything. The exuberance that existed during the 1350s among the imperialist armies had faded. Resistance after this date became sporadic and completely defensive. Finally, in 1369, a year after the death of
Emperor Go-Murakami, the stalwart imperialist general
Kusunoki Masanori submitted to the regime. His capitulation ended the imperialist threat to the central provinces. With the fall of Kyūshū the whole of western Japan came under the rule of the Ashikaga regime. However, campaigns alone were inadequate to legitimize Ashikaga rule over the nobles. After 1367, during the minority of the shōgun Yoshimitsu, the
kanrei Hosokawa Yoriyuki became active in trying to legitimize the regime from the point of view of the nobles. He did this through a series of extremely conservative measures, gaining prestige among the nobles in Kyoto. He used an ancient court ranking system by having the young shōgun participate in it. He also associated the regime with the court much more closely than had any other previous warrior leader. By doing this, he tied the regime closer to the imperial court, thereby erasing the stigma of the ideology that fueled the Nanboku-chō conflict: Ashikaga Takauji was seen as a traitor fighting against the restoration of imperial power. The court society survived such a long time because of its popularity among the different classes in Japanese society. On the estate level, farmers felt much closer to the nobles than towards the warriors. The waning power of the nobles notwithstanding, their influence went far beyond their actual power, because they possessed a legitimacy of tradition and the charisma of culture that the warriors did not possess. This was why Yoriyuki had the young shōgun participate in court ceremonies: the participation involved the highest military leader in a court ranking system that dated back several centuries, and had as its premise the primacy of the imperial line over everyone, including the warriors, who had to receive titles from the emperor. By participating in this court ranking ritual, the Ashikaga regime was sending a strong message to the entire society: that the legitimacy conferred by the court was still valid and still important. This participation bridged the tensions between the warrior regime and the court, and had the unintended effect of disseminating court culture among the warrior class. The warriors themselves were attracted to the culture of the nobles, and emulated the latter's tastes such as being involved with constructing Zen rock gardens. The connection effected between the shōgun and the imperial court during the late 14th century, had the effect of broadening the legitimacy of the shōgun's power. The
kanrei Yoriyuki promulgated the last half-tax decree (
hanzei) in 1368. This decree tied noble interests to the regime: it outlawed the halving of lands owned by the imperial family (lands under the control of major temples) and those that were owned by the imperial regents (the
Fujiwara). Exceptions included noble lands that were given full title by the previous shōgun, and estates managed by the samurai stewards (
jitō). This decree was applicable to all estates nationwide, and led to deter further samurai incursions onto the estates, and to defend the interests of the nobles in the face of samurai incursions. Unlike the earlier half-tax decrees, this one was conservative, and its aim was to protect noble lands from division rather than to justify it. The realities of samurai incursions that had already taken place could not be reversed. What was ideologically stated openly departed from what was actually taking place in the provinces. The incursions of the samurai and the
shugo lords on the estates were severe despite the 1368 decree. And with the 15th century, this trend of land-grabbing became ever more pronounced. The Ashikaga shōguns were not able to stop the incursions on the estates. However ineffective, the 1368 decree recognized noble interests and were defended ideologically by a warrior regime, and in the process tied together the interests of both. The direct rule of the Muromachi regime that emerged in the 1360s was limited geographically to the western and central provinces, unlike how the previous Kamakura regime was based in the
Kantō region. Outside
shugo lords (
tozama) unrelated to the Ashikaga like the
Takeda,
Chiba,
Yuki,
Satake, Oyama, Utsunomiya,
Shoni,
Otomo,
Aso, and the
Shimazu families, all of whom were concentrated in or near the Kantō and Kyūshū regions, did not participate in the
kanrei council system, and were semi-independent of the regime. They were tacitly recognized and given
shugo titles by the Ashikaga, because of their predominant positions in areas that were not easily controlled from Kyoto.
Kyūshū After the
Kyūshū campaign that began in 1370, the Kyūshū deputy (
tandai) became the representative of the Muromachi regime on that island.
Imagawa Sadayo (Ryoshun) effectively prosecuted the campaign against the Southern Court forces and on Shimazu Ujihisa. Deputies like Sadayo were Muromachi representatives, even when they arrogated the full powers of vassalage to local samurai. For example, in 1377, a contract was signed between Sadayo and a samurai alliance (ikki) consisting of sixty-one local samurai. The contract stipulated that all disputes between alliance members would be taken to the Kyūshū deputy, while disputes between alliance members and the deputy himself would be taken to the Muromachi regime in Kyoto (Harrington 1985:87). The deputy united both the interests of the regime and of the local area. It was a precarious position because of the temptation to independence it presented. However, the Muromachi regime did not extend their direct control over the entirety of their domain, and so came to rely on appointees to influence the
shugo lords and samurai.
Kantō In the late 14th century, the Kantō region was dominated by powerful warrior families. Of these, the
Uesugi were the most powerful. They were able to take advantage of the fighting that erupted between families in the region to advance their own interests. In 1368, the Utsunomiya family revolted against the Kamakura headquarters of the Muromachi regime, because they had lost their
shugo posts to the Uesugi. The Uesugi was able to extend their influence by amassing
shugo posts and by enfeoffing vassals at the expense of other families. The Kamakura headquarters were where the regime could demand orders in the region. Increasingly, the headquarters became independent from the regime, and it then took care of regional disputes, regional taxation, and developed ties with
shugo lords with minimal involvement from the regime in Kyoto—even though it was Kyoto's
de jure right to confirm fiefs and ratify
shugo appointments. ==Centralization of power: 1379–1399==