- Fujiwara no Kiyohira
was a Japanese samurai of the late
Heian period (794–1185), who was the founder of the Hiraizumi orNorthern Fujiwara dynasty that ruled Northern Japan from about 1100 to 1226.Kiyohira was the son of
Fujiwara no Tsunekiyo and a daughter ofAbe no Yoritoki whose name is not known. He was born somewhere in the Kitakami Basin in 1056. His father was of the Hidesato branch of the Fujiwara clan which was known for their fighting ability. Even so Tsunekiyo was a mid-level bureaucrat at Fort Taga in present daySendai ,Miyagi Prefecture when he married hisEmishi wife, left his position and went to live with his wife's family in present dayIwate Prefecture . Thus, Kiyohira was born in an Emishi household in Emishi territory to a father who was considered a traitor by the Japanese authorities.Much of his early life was spent in a community at war with the Japanese central authorities. The Earlier Nine Years War (
Zenkunen War , 前九年合戦) was fought on and off from 1050 to 1062 while the Latter Three Years War (Gosannen War , 後三年合戦) ran from 1083 to 1087. He lost his grandfather, Abe no Yoritoki, in battle in 1057, his uncle Sadato in 1062 and all of his mother's brothers were deported toKyūshū in the same year. His own father was personally beheaded byMinamoto no Yoriyoshi (源頼義) with a blunt sword. These are the events which would shape his life and influence his decisions as long as he lived.After he lost his father in The Earlier Nine Wars, his mother became the concubine of his enemy, Kiyohara no Takehira, who had helped Minamoto no Yoriyoshi in the last war. Kiyohira was brought up in this enemy clan as Kiyohara no Kiyohira, with his elder step-brother Sanehira and younger half-brother Iehira. The Later Three Years War involved a struggle among the three brothers in this complex relationship. Kiyohira won the final victory in the war in 1087, with aid of
Minamoto no Yoshiie (源義家), the son of another of his old enemies, Minamto no Yoriyoshi. Kiyohira, however, lost his wife and son during the war, killed by his half-brother Iehira.Victorious in the Latter Three Years War Kiyohira returned to his home at Fort Toyota (
Iwayadō Castle ), in present day Esashi Ward, Ōshū City, to plan his future. Sometime around 1090 to 1100 he built a new home on Mount Kanzan, "Barrier Mountain" in what is nowHiraizumi Town. There appear to be three main reasons for his choice of site. First was its location directly on the Frontier Way, the main highway leading south to the capital and other major cities and north to the lands he controlled. Secondly it was determined to be the center of their realm, Ōshū, as measured from theShirakawa Barrier in the south to Sotogahama in present dayAomori Prefecture in the north.There is evidence that Kiyohira did not use the name Fujiwara but use the name Kiyohara, until 1117 when he was more than 60 years old. But he did use it and passed it on to his children. Kiyohira had several wives and consorts including a Taira wife from Kyoto who was called the mother of his six children. She seems to have tired quickly of life on the remote frontier, returned to Kyoto, married a policeman and never returned. He is also known to have had two Emishi wives, a Kiyohara and an Abe. His eldest son and rightful heir was Koretsune. His second son and eventual successor was Motohira, born about 1105, likely to one of Kiyohira's Emishi wives.
After setting up house in Hiraizumi, Kiyohira began an ambitious Buddhist temple building program on the top of Mount Kanzan,
Chūson-ji . This complex of temples, pagodas, repositories and gardens was to be his legacy, the embodiment of his vision for himself, his family and his domain for all time.
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