- Soga no Iname
Soga no Iname (蘇我稲目, presumed born 506 AD, died March 570). Soga no Iname was a leader of the
Soga clan and a statesman during the reign ofEmperor Kimmei in the earlyYamato period . He was the first person to hold the position of "Ōomi" that can be verified with reasonable accuracy, in 536 AD. He was the son of Soga no Koma (蘇我高麗) and the father ofSoga no Umako . Information from Nihonshoki or Kojiki, the earliest remaining texts seems eerily absent regarding Soga no Koma, where Koma incidentally is the same Chinese for one of the abbreviated names ofGoguryeo , and his grandfather is named Soga no Karako (蘇我韓子), which can mean "son of Korea"."According to NohonshokiA Japanese aristocrat at that time has the woman in the neighboring country (Korea?) give birth to a child. It is described that the child was named Karako(韓子), which can mean "son of Korea"."
Soga no Iname solidified his power by marrying two of his daughters,
Soga no Kitashihime andSoga no Oanegimi , to Emperor Kimmei. Between the two of them they gave birth to three future emperors, Emperor Yōmei, Emperor Sushun and Empress Suiko, as well as numerous other princes and princesses.Soga no Iname is also known for his early support of
Buddhism which, according to theNihon Shoki , was introduced to the Yamato court from Paekche in 552. (However, according to a different source, the "Jōgū Shōtoku Hōō Teisetsu ", it was introduced in 538.) Opposing Iname and against the acceptance of this new foreign religion wereMononobe no Okoshi andNakatomi no Kamako . The rivalry between the Sogas and the Mononobes and Nakatomis would carry on into future generations, with Iname's son Soga no Umako defeating Okoshi's sonMononobe no Moriya in 587, and his grandson and great-grandsonSoga no Emishi andSoga no Iruka being defeated by a descendant of Kamako, Nakatomi no Kamatari, in theIsshi Incident .
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