Ako Controversy
The Ako Controversy (阿衡の紛議) or Ako Incident (阿衡事件) was a political controversy that occurred in the early Heian Period of Japanese history. On November 21, 887 AD, the newly enthroned Emperor Uda issued an imperial edict assigning Fujiwara no Mototsune as Kanpaku (Chief Imperial Advisor). However, the Emperor, together with Tachibana no Hiromi, then issued a second edict equating "Kanpaku" with "Ako". Ako, which comes from the Chinese title a-heng, was said to be just a title without any official duties, which would effectively dismiss Mototsune from the government. This imperial edict triggered the Ako Controversy.
primaryTopic
Ako Controversy
The Ako Controversy (阿衡の紛議) or Ako Incident (阿衡事件) was a political controversy that occurred in the early Heian Period of Japanese history. On November 21, 887 AD, the newly enthroned Emperor Uda issued an imperial edict assigning Fujiwara no Mototsune as Kanpaku (Chief Imperial Advisor). However, the Emperor, together with Tachibana no Hiromi, then issued a second edict equating "Kanpaku" with "Ako". Ako, which comes from the Chinese title a-heng, was said to be just a title without any official duties, which would effectively dismiss Mototsune from the government. This imperial edict triggered the Ako Controversy.
has abstract
The Ako Controversy (阿衡の紛議) or ...... moved from the imperial edict.
@en
Wikipage page ID
37,845,270
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
975,619,325
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
hypernym
type
comment
The Ako Controversy (阿衡の紛議) or ...... triggered the Ako Controversy.
@en
label
Ako Controversy
@en