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Kaga ikki

Kaga ikki
1488–1582
Location of Kaga Province in Japan
Location of Kaga Province in Japan
StatusConfederation of the Ikkō-ikki
Capitalnone (1488-1546)
Oyama Gobo (Kanazawa) (1546–1580)
Common languagesLate Middle Japanese
Religion
Jōdo ShinshūShinto
GovernmentFeudal theocratic military confederation
Monshu 
• 1457–1499
Rennyo
• 1499–1525
Jitsunyo
• 1525–1554
Shonyo
• 1560–1592
Kennyo
Shugo 
• 1488–1504
Togashi Yasutaka
• 1504–1531
Togashi Taneyasu
LegislatureKanazawa Midō
• District commanders
Hatamoto
• Group members
Kumi
Historical eraSengoku
• Togashi civil war
1473
1488
• Kaga civil war
1531
• Establishment of Kanazawa Midō
1546
• Beginning of Ishiyama Hongan-ji War
1570
• Oda Nobunaga defeats the major opposition in Kaga
1575
• Oyama Gobo captured; End of Ishiyama Hongan-ji War
1580
• Final resistance in Kaga defeated
1582
• Maeda Toshiie conquers Kanazawa
1583
Currencymon, ryō
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Togashi clan
Oda clan
Maeda clan
Toyotomi clan
Today part ofJapan

The Kaga ikki, also known as The Peasants' Kingdom, was a theocratic feudal confederacy that emerged in Kaga Province (present-day southern Ishikawa Prefecture), Japan, during the late 15th and early 16th centuries. The Kaga ikki was a faction of the Ikkō-ikki, a gathering of peasant farmers, monks, priests, and jizamurai (upper-ranking peasant warriors) that espoused belief in Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism. Though nominally under the authority of the head abbot of the Hongan-ji, the Monshu, the ikkō-ikki proved difficult to control.

During the Ōnin War, the ikki in Kaga, with the approval of the Monshu Rennyo, helped restore Togashi Masachika to the position of shugo (military governor). However, by 1474 the ikki fell into conflict with Masachika, and in late 1487, they launched the Kaga Rebellion. Masachika was overthrown, and Togashi Yasutaka, his uncle, took his place as shugo. Under Yasutaka's son, Taneyasu, the Kaga ikki asserted more and more influence over the provincial government.

In 1531, a civil war erupted as two factions within the Kaga ikki vied for control. Renjun, a son of Rennyo, won the war, abolished the position of shugo, exiled Taneyasu, and established a much tighter Hongan-ji hegemony over the province. In 1546, the Kanazawa Midō was established as a governing body in Oyama Gobo, which would eventually grow into the present-day city of Kanazawa. The Midō oversaw very loosely organized committees of select warlords and priests, who in turn ruled over the local lords and village leaders. The Kaga ikki controlled Kaga until they were overrun by the forces of Oda Nobunaga in a series of campaigns lasting from 1573 to 1582.


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