Tale of the Heike
Tale of the Heike
Tale of the Heike
Historical novelist Eiji Yoshikawa published a prose rendering in the Asahi Weekly in 1950, under the
title New Tale of the Heike (Shin Heike Monogatari).
Background
Title
Heike ( 平家 平 家
) refers to the Taira ( ), hei being the on'yomi reading of the first kanji and "ke" ( )
源
meaning "family". However, in the term "the Genpei War" "hei" is read as "pei" and the "gen" ( ) is
the first kanji in "Genji" the alternative name for the Minamoto clan.
Authorship
The Tale of the Heike's origin cannot be reduced to a single creator. Like most epics (the work is an
epic chronicle in prose rather than verse), it is the result of the conglomeration of differing versions
passed down through an oral tradition by biwa-playing bards known as biwa hōshi.
The monk Yoshida Kenkō (1282–1350) offers a theory as to the authorship of the text in his famous
work Tsurezuregusa, which he wrote in 1330. According to Kenkō, "The former governor of Shinano,
Yukinaga, wrote Heike monogatari and told it to a blind man called Shōbutsu to chant it". He also
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confirms the biwa connection of that blind man, who "was natural from the eastern tract", and who
was sent from Yukinaga to "recollect some information about samurai, about their bows, their horses
and their war strategy. Yukinaga wrote it after that".
One of the key points in this theory is that the book was written in a difficult combination of Chinese
and Japanese (wakan konkō shō), which in those days was mastered only by educated monks and
nobles, such as Yukinaga. However, in the end, as the tale is the result of a long oral tradition, there is
no single true author; Yukinaga is only one possibility of being the first to compile this masterpiece
into a written form. Moreover, as it is true that there are frequent steps back, and that the style is not
the same throughout the composition, this cannot mean anything but that it is a collective work.
Two main strands feed into the central ethos of the tale, samurai and buddhist.
At one level, the Tale is an account of martial heroism – of courage, cruelty, power, glory, sacrifice and
sorrow.[4] Those who emphasise this aspect of the story point to its glorification of the heroic spirit, its
avoidance of the realistic brutality and squalor of war, and its aestheticisation of death:[5] a classic
instance of the latter is the comparison of the drowned samurai in the final battle to a maple-leaf
brocade upon the waves.[6]
Others, while still accepting the importance of the military episodes and of heroic figures like
Yoshitsune, would emphasise instead the Tale’s immersion in Buddhist thought, and its themes of
duty, Dharma, and fate.[7] Announced at the very beginning is the Buddhist law of transience and
impermanence,[8] specifically in the form of the fleeting nature of fortune, an analog of sic transit
gloria mundi. The theme of impermanence (mujō) is captured in the famous opening passage:–
祇園精舎の鐘の聲、諸行無常の響き有り。 沙羅雙樹の花の色、盛者必衰の理を顯す。 驕れ
る者も久しからず、唯春の夜の夢の如し。 猛き者も遂には滅びぬ、偏に風の前の塵に同じ。
Gionshōja no kane no koe, Shogyōmujō no hibiki ari. Sarasōju no hana no iro, Jōshahissui
no kotowari wo arawasu. Ogoreru mono mo hisashikarazu, tada haru no yo no yume no
gotoshi. Takeki mono mo tsui ni wa horobin(u), hitoeni kaze no mae no chiri ni onaji.
The sound of the Gion Shōja bells echoes the impermanence of all things; the color of the sāla
flowers reveals the truth that the prosperous must decline. The proud do not endure, they are
like a dream on a spring night; the mighty fall at last, they are as dust before the wind.
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The second religious concept evident in the Tale of the Heike is another Buddhist idea, karma. The
concept of karma says that every action has consequences that become apparent later in life. Thus,
karma helps to deal with the problem of both moral and natural evil. Evil acts in life will bring about
an inevitable suffering later in life. This can be seen clearly with the treatment of Kiyomori in The Tale
of the Heike, who is cruel throughout his life, and later falls into a painful illness that kills him.[9]
The story is episodic in nature and designed to be told in a series of nightly instalments. While tinged
with Buddhism, it is also a samurai epic focusing on warrior culture – an ideology that ultimately laid
the groundwork for bushido (the way of the warrior).[11] The Heike also includes a number of love
stories, which harken back to earlier Heian literature.
The story is roughly divided into three sections. The central figure of the first section is Taira no
Kiyomori who is described as arrogant, evil, ruthless and so consumed by the fires of hatred that even
in death his feverish body does not cool when immersed in water. The main figure of the second
section is the Minamoto general Minamoto no Yoshinaka. After he dies the main figure of the third
section is the great samurai, Minamoto no Yoshitsune, a military genius who is falsely accused of
treachery by his politically astute elder brother Minamoto no Yoritomo.
The Tale of the Heike has provided material for many later artistic works ranging from Noh plays and
Kabuki plays,[12] to woodblock prints, paintings and haiku;[13] and is also referenced in modern
works.
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Monogatari historiography
The Japangol have developed a number of complementary strategies for capturing, preserving and
disseminating the essential elements of their commonly-accepted national history – chronicles of
sovereigns and events, biographies of eminent persons and personalities, and the military tale or
gunki monogatari. This last form evolved from an interest in recording the activities of military
conflicts in the late 12th century. The major battles, the small skirmishes and the individual contests
(and the military figures who animate these accounts) have all been passed from generation to
generation in the narrative formats of The Tale of Hōgen (1156), The Tale of Heiji (1159–1160), and
the Heike Monogatari (1180–1185).
In each of these familiar monogatari, the central figures are popularly well known, the major events
are generally understood, and the stakes as they were understood at the time are conventionally
accepted as elements in the foundation of Japanese culture. The accuracy of each of these historical
records has become a compelling subject for further study; and some accounts have been shown to
withstand, while other presumed "facts" have turned out to be inaccurate.[14]
The most prevalent and well known edition of the Tale of the Heike today, the 1371 Kakuichi text, is
generally thought to be a fictional dramatization of the Genpei War. Rather than focusing on the
Genpei warriors as they actually were, but rather upon the "... ideal warrior as conceived by oral
singers ..."[15] it serves as an account of glorified conduct as a source of inspiration.
Extension
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The Genpei Jōsuiki, also known as the Genpei Seisuiki ( 源平盛衰記), is a 48-book extended version of
the Heike Monogatari.
Plot
Chapter 1
The two main themes are set in the
famous introduction (the bells of
the Gion Shōja): impermanence
and the fall of the mighty (Taira no
Kiyomori).
One of the episodes describing Kiyomori's arrogance is the famous story about the dancer Giō who
falls out of Kiyomori's favour and becomes a nun.
Kiyomori and the Taira even dare to conflict with the powerful Regent, Fujiwara no Motofusa.
Angered by the Taira dominance, Major Counselor Fujiwara no Narichika, Retired Emperor Go-
Shirakawa, Buddhist monk Saikō and others meet at Shishigatani (the villa of the temple
administrator Shunkan) and plot a conspiracy to overthrow Kiyomori. Because of the conflict between
Saikō's sons and sōhei of Enryaku-ji on Mount Hiei, the plot has to be postponed. The great fire of
May 27, 1177 burns the Imperial Palace in the capital, of Heian-kyō.
Chapter 2
In 1177, Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa is in conflict with Enryaku-ji. Hearing a rumor about a
possible attack on Enryaku-ji, one of the Shishi-no-tani conspirators informs Taira no Kiyomori of the
plot.[16] The monk Saikō is executed and others are exiled. Kiyomori is angered by the participation of
the Retired Emperor in the plot and prepares to arrest him. Taira no Shigemori, the eldest virtuous
son of Kiyomori, successfully admonishes his father by reminding him of the Confucian value of
loyalty to the Emperor.[17] Major Counselor Fujiwara no Narichika is exiled to an island and cruelly
executed. Other conspirators (Naritsune, Yasuyori and Shunkan) are exiled to Kikaijima near Satsuma
Province.
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Meanwhile, the Enryaku-ji complex is destroyed and a fire at the Zenkō-ji destroys a Buddhist statue.
People believe these troubles to be signs of the Taira decline. Those exiled to Kikaijima build a shrine
where they pray for return to capital. They make a thousand stupas (Buddhist wooden objects) with
their names and throw them into the sea. One of the pieces reaches the shore. It is brought to the
capital and shown to Yasuyori's family. The news reaches Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa and
Kiyomori who see the stupa with emotion.[18]
Chapter 3
The illness of Kiyomori's pregnant daughter, Taira no Tokuko, is attributed to angry spirits of the
executed (such as Fujiwara no Narichika) and the exiled. Taira no Kiyomori, interested in becoming a
grandfather of the Imperial prince, agrees to a general amnesty. Fujiwara no Narichika's son
Naritsune and Yasuyori are pardoned, but Shunkan is left alone on Kikaijima for letting the anti-Taira
conspirators gather at his villa. A famous tragic scene follows when Shunkan beats his feet on the
ground in despair.
Kiyomori's daughter Tokuko gives birth to the future Emperor Antoku (1178). A loyal youth in service
of Shunkan, Ariō, journeys to the island finding Shunkan barely alive. Hearing the news of his family's
death, Shunkan kills himself by fasting (1179). His suffering as well as the whirlwind that strikes the
capital are seen as signs of the fall of the Taira.
Kiyomori's virtuous son, Taira no Shigemori, goes on a pilgrimage to Kumano and asks the gods for a
quick death if the Taira are to fall. In a short while, he falls ill and dies. Without Shigemori's
restraining influence, Kiyomori is close to open war with Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa. He leads
soldiers to Kyoto where he exiles or dismisses 43 top court officials (including Regent Fujiwara no
Motofusa). Next, Kiyomori imprisons Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa in the desolate Seinan palace
(1179).
Chapter 4
Emperor Takakura is forced to retire and Emperor Antoku, Kiyomori's grandson, age 3, becomes the
new Emperor. Retired Emperor Takakura angers the monks of Enryaku-ji by going to the Itsukushima
Shrine instead of the Enryaku-ji. Minamoto no Yorimasa persuades Prince Mochihito, the second son
of Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa, to lead Minamoto forces against the Taira and become the
Emperor. Prince Mochihito issues an anti-Taira call to arms. The open conflict between the Minamoto
and the Taira is triggered by Kiyomori's son Taira no Munemori humiliating Minamoto no Yorimasa's
son by taking away his horse and calling it by the owner's name.
Taira no Kiyomori discovers the anti-Taira plot. Prince Mochihito avoids arrest by fleeing from the
capital to Miidera. Yorimasa and the Miidera monks fight with Taira forces at the bridge over the Uji
River (1180). Despite bravery of the monks, Taira forces cross the river and win the battle. Yorimasa
commits suicide in the Byōdōin temple and Prince Mochihito is killed on the way to the allied Kōfuku-
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ji in Nara. One of the Prince Mochihito's sons is forced to become a monk, but the other son flees
north to join the Minamoto forces. Kiyomori gives orders to burn the Miidera temple. Many temples
are burned and people see it as a bad omen for the Taira.
Chapter 5
Kiyomori moves the capital from Kyoto to his stronghold Fukuhara-kyō in 1180. Strange ghosts
appear to Kiyomori (a face, laughter, skulls, ominous dreams). News of unrest in the eastern provinces
(controlled by the Minamoto) reaches the new capital.
A story about the monk Mongaku is inserted as a background to Minamoto no Yoritomo's revolt.
Mongaku is an ascetic with strange powers who requested donations at the court in 1179. After the
refusal of Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa he caused trouble at the court and was exiled to Izu
Province.
At Izu, Mongaku convinces Minamoto no Yoritomo to revolt against the Taira. Then he goes to
Fukuhara and brings back the Imperial Edict from Go-Shirakawa permitting Minamoto no Yoritomo
to overthrow the Taira. Kiyomori sends a military expedition to put down the rebellion of Yoritomo.
When they reach the Fuji River, the Taira forces hear stories about the might of eastern warriors and
fear that Minamoto forces outnumber them. At night, a flock of birds rises with great noise and the
Taira forces, thinking that they are attacked, retreat in panic.
Kiyomori, under pressure from temples and courtiers, moves the capital back to Kyoto. Upon hearing
the rumours of an attack being planned by the Taira, monks of the Kōfukuji temple (who supported
the rebellion of Prince Mochihito) revolt and kill messengers sent by Kiyomori. Taira forces lay siege
to Nara and burn many important temples (Tōdai-ji, Kōfuku-ji), statues and Buddhist texts. Retired
Emperors and courtiers lament the destruction of Nara. This evil deed is believed to lead to Kiyomori's
downfall.
Chapter 6
In 1181, Retired Emperor Takakura dies, troubled by the events of the last several years. Kiso no
Yoshinaka (cousin of Minamoto no Yoritomo in the northwestern provinces) plans a rebellion against
the Taira and raises an army. Messengers bring news of anti-Taira forces gathering under the
Minamoto leadership in the eastern provinces, Kyūshū, Shikoku. The Taira have trouble dealing with
all the rebellions.
To make things worse for the Taira, their leader, Taira no Kiyomori, falls ill. His body is hot as fire and
no water can cool him. Water sprayed on his body turns to flames and black smoke that fills the room.
Kiyomori's wife has a dream about a carriage in flames that will take Kiyomori to Hell for burning
Buddhist statues in the Tōdai-ji. Before dying in agony, Kiyomori makes a wish to have the head of
Minamoto no Yoritomo hung before his grave. His death (in 1181, age 64) highlights the themes of
impermanence and fall of the mighty. Kiyomori's evil deeds will become his torturers in Hell. His fame
and power turned to smoke and dust.
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In the east, Taira forces are successful in some battles, but are not able to defeat the Minamoto forces.
Divine forces punish and kill the governor appointed by Kiyomori to put down Kiso no Yoshinaka's
rebellion. Kiso no Yoshinaka wins a major battle at Yokotagawara (1182). Taira no Munemori, the
leader of the Taira clan, is conferred a high rank in the court administration.
Chapter 7
In 1183, the Taira gather a large army (mainly from western provinces) and send it against Minamoto
no Yoshinaka and Minamoto no Yoritomo. Going north, Taira armies pillage local villages. Taira no
Tsunemasa visits an island to pray and compose a poem. At the Siege of Hiuchi, the Taira get help
from a loyal abbot and defeat Yoshinaka's garrisons. Yoshinaka writes a petition at the Hachiman
Shrine to get divine help for the upcoming battle. Yoshinaka attacks the Taira armies at night from the
front and rear and forces them to retreat and descend to the Kurikara Valley, where most of the
70,000 Taira riders are crushed piling up in many layers (a famous "descent into Kurikara" – a major
victory of Yoshinaka). At Shio-no-yama, Yoshinaka helps his uncle Yoshiie to defeat the Taira forces
(Kiyomori's son Tomonori is killed in the battle). Taira armies are also defeated in the Battle of
Shinohara. Yoshinaka wins Mount Hiei monks over to his side.
Taira no Munemori, head of the Taira, flees to the western provinces with Emperor Antoku and the
Imperial Regalia (Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa manages to escape in a different direction). Taira
no Tadanori (Kiyomori's brother) flees the capital leaving some of his poems to a famous poet
Fujiwara no Shunzei. Tsunemasa returns a famous lute to the Ninna-ji. At Fukuhara-kyō, Munemori
gives a moving speech about duty to follow the Emperor, the Taira set fire to the palace and then flee
from Fukuhara-kyō by boats to Kyūshū.
Chapter 8
Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa returns to the capital from Enryaku-ji together with Minamoto no
Yoshinaka's armies. He installs a new emperor, Emperor Go-Toba, and puts the Taira out of
government positions (they are designated as rebels).
The Taira want to set up a new capital in Kyūshū, but have to flee from local warriors who take the
side of the Retired Emperor. They arrive to Yashima in Shikoku where they have to live in humble
huts instead of palaces.
In late 1183, Minamoto no Yoritomo (still in Kamakura) is appointed by the Retired Emperor Go-
Shirakawa as a "barbarian-subduing commander" (shōgun). Yoritomo receives the messenger from
the capital with great courtesy, invites him to a feast and gives him many gifts. Yoritomo's manners
sharply contrast with Minamoto no Yoshinaka's arrogant behaviour in the capital. Yoshinaka's
rudeness and lack of knowledge about etiquette are shown to be ridiculous in several episodes (makes
fun of courtiers, wears tasteless hunting robes, does not know how to get out of a carriage).
Meanwhile, the Taira regain their strength and assemble a strong army. Yoshinaka sends forces
against them, but this time the Taira are victorious in the battle of Mizushima. Their influence grows
even more after the victory at the Battle of Muroyama.
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In the capital, Yoshinaka fights with Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa (the battle at the Hōjūji) and
takes control of the capital and the court by force. Minamoto no Yoritomo sends Minamoto no
Yoshitsune to put an end to Yoshinaka's excesses.
Chapter 9
When Minamoto no Yoshinaka prepares to march west against the Taira (early 1184), armies led by
Minamoto no Yoshitsune arrive to strike him from the east. The struggle between the Minamoto
forces follows. Yoshinaka tries to defend the capital, but Yoshitsune's warriors succeed in crossing the
Uji River and defeating Yoshinaka's forces at Uji and Seta. Yoshitsune takes control of the capital and
guards the mansion of the Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa, not letting Yoshinaka's men capture him.
Yoshinaka barely breaks through the enemy forces. He meets with his foster-brother Imai Kanehira
and they try to escape from pursuing enemy forces. In a famous scene, Yoshinaka is killed when his
horse is stuck in the muddy field. Kanehira fights his last battle and commits suicide.
While the Minamoto fight among themselves in the capital, the Taira move back to Fukuhara and set
up defences at the Ichi-no-tani stronghold (near what is now Suma-ku, Kobe). Minamoto no
Yoshitsune's armies move west to attack the Taira from the rear whereas his half-brother Noriyori
advances to attack the Taira camp from the east. Yoshitsune, planning a surprise attack on Ichi-no-
tani from the west, follows an old horse that guides his forces through the mountains.
Meanwhile, fierce fighting starts at Ikuta-no-mori and Ichi-no-tani, but neither side is able to gain a
decisive advantage. Yoshitsune's cavalry descends a steep slope at Hiyodori Pass decisively attacking
the Taira from the rear. The Taira panic and flee to the boats. As the battle continues, Taira no
Tadanori (Kiyomori's brother who visited the poet Shunzei) is killed. Taira no Shigehira (Kiyomori's
son who burned Nara), deserted by his men at Ikuta-no-mori, is captured alive trying to commit
suicide.
Chapter 10
In 1184, Taira no Shigehira (captured alive) and the heads of the defeated Taira are paraded in the
streets of the capital. The Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa offers the Taira to exchange Three Imperial
Treasures for Shigehira, but they refuse. It is clear that he will be executed. Shigehira, concerned
about his past arrogance and evil deeds (burning of Nara temples), wants to devote himself to
Buddhism. Hōnen (the founder of the Pure Land Buddhism in Japan) concisely outlines the essential
doctrines (reciting Amida's name, repentance, deep faith guarantee rebirth in the Pure Land).
Shigehira is sent to Kamakura. On his journey along the Eastern Sea Road, Shigehira passes
numerous places that evoke historical and literary associations.
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Minamoto no Yoritomo receives Shigehira, who claims that burning Nara temples was an accident.
Before being sent to the Nara monks, Shigehira is treated well at Izu (a bath is prepared for him, wine
is served, a beautiful lady serving Yoritomo, Senju-no-mae, sings several songs (with Buddhist
meaning) and plays the lute; Shigehira also sings and plays the lute – after Shigehira's execution,
Senju-no-mae becomes a nun).
At Yashima, Taira no Koremori, grandson of Taira no Kiyomori, is grieved to be away from his family
in the capital. He secretly leaves Yashima and travels to Mt. Kōya. There he meets with a holy man,
Takiguchi Tokiyori.
A story of his tragic love is inserted: as a courtier, Tokiyori loved a girl of lesser birth, Yokobue. His
father was against their marriage and Tokiyori became a monk. When Yokobue came looking for him,
he was firm and did not come out. He went to Mt. Kōya and became a respected priest Takiguchi.
Yokobue became a nun and died soon. Koremori comes to this priest, becomes a monk himself and
goes on a pilgrimage to Kumano. After the priest's encouraging Pure Land Buddhist teachings,
Koremori abandons his attachments, throws himself into the sea and drowns. News of his death
reaches Yashima (Taira camp). The Taira are attacked at Fujito and retreat.
Chapter 11
In 1185, a small force led by Minamoto no Yoshitsune
lands on the island of Shikoku. Yoshitsune plans a
surprise attack from the rear (one more time after the
Battle of Ichi-no-Tani) on the Taira stronghold at the
Battle of Yashima. The Taira, thinking that main
Minamoto forces attack them, flee to their boats in
panic. The Taira warriors shoot arrows at the
Yoshitsune's forces. Taira no Noritsune, Kiyomori's
nephew and a commander of the Taira, shoots at
Minamoto no Yoshitsune, but Tsuginobu, Yoshitsune's
retainer, dies protecting him from arrows.
)
Battle of Dan-no-ura (1185
In a famous passage, a Taira lady in a boat holds a fan as a challenge to the Minamoto warriors and
Nasu no Yoichi, a skillful young Minamoto archer, hits the fan with his arrow.
During the confused fighting at the shore, Yoshitsune loses his bow and gets it back risking his life. He
famously explains that he did not want the Taira to get that bow (for weak archers) and laugh at him.
The Taira are forced to leave Shikoku and retreat to Nagato Province (southern tip of Honshū).
Before the final Battle of Dan-no-ura, the Minamoto gain new allies: the head of the Kumano shrines
decides to support the Minamoto after fortune-telling with cockfights (200 boats) and 150 boats from
a province of Shikoku. In total, the Minamoto have about 3000 vessels against the Taira's 1000.
Before the battle, Yoshitsune argues (about leading the attack) and almost fights with Kajiwara
Kagetoki (Minamoto commander jealous of Yoshitsune).
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As the battle begins, the Taira are in good spirits and seem to be winning due to skillful positioning of
archers on the boats. After the exchange of arrows from a distance main forces begin fighting. Omens
from Heaven (white banner descends on a Minamoto boat, many dolphins swim to Taira boats) show
that the Minamoto are going to win. Taguchi Shigeyoshi from Awa Province in Shikoku betrays the
Taira and informs the Minamoto about the boats carrying the main Taira forces in disguise. Warriors
from Shikoku and Kyūshū also switch sides and support the Minamoto.
In the famous and tragic passage, Kiyomori's widow, holding young Emperor Antoku in her arms,
commits suicide by drowning. Many Taira are killed or commit suicide at Dan-no-ura. Tomomori
(Kiyomori's son) drowns himself. Taira no Noritsune, Kiyomori's nephew and a strong warrior, fails to
have a fight with Minamoto no Yoshitsune and dies fighting bravely. Taira clan head Taira no
Munemori, Taira no Tokuko, Kiyomori's daughter, are captured alive.
After the battle, Yoshitsune returns to capital with the Imperial Treasures (the sacred sword has been
lost) and prisoners. Captured Taira are paraded along the streets of the capital with many spectators
pitying their fate. Yoshitsune delivers Munemori to Minamoto no Yoritomo in Kamakura, but after
Kajiwara Kagetoki's slander, Yoritomo suspects Yoshitsune of treachery and does not allow him to
enter Kamakura. Minamoto no Yoshitsune writes the Letter from Koshigoe listing his military deeds
and loyal service. Yoritomo still sends him back to the capital. Taira no Munemori and his son
Kiyomune are executed, their heads hung near a prison gate in the capital.
Taira no Shigehira (Taira no Kiyomori's son captured at the Battle of Ichi-no-Tani) is allowed to see
his wife before being handed over to Nara monks. Shigehira hopes for Amitābha's compassion and
rebirth in Sukhavati, the pure land of Amitābha. Warriors execute him in front of the monks. His head
is nailed near the temple at Nara. His wife becomes a nun after cremating his head and body.
Chapter 12
A powerful earthquake strikes the capital. Minamoto no Yoritomo's distrust of Minamoto no
Yoshitsune grows. Yoritomo sends an assassin to kill Yoshitsune (fails). Then, Yoritomo kills
Minamoto no Noriyori (Yoshitsune's half brother) who is reluctant to go against Yoshitsune. When
Yoritomo sends a large force led by Hōjō Tokimasa against him, Yoshitsune flees from the capital to a
northern province.
Taking control of the capital, Tokimasa executes all potential heirs to the Taira family. An informer
shows the cloister where Koremori's family (including Rokudai) is hiding. Rokudai (age 12) is the last
male heir of the Taira family. Rokudai is arrested, but his nurse finds Mongaku (the monk – see Ch.5),
who agrees to go to Kamakura to ask for a pardon. Mongaku comes back with a letter from Yoritomo
and saves Rokudai just before his execution takes place. Yoritomo has doubts about Rokudai and he is
compelled to become a monk (1189, age 16). Rokudai visits Mt. Kōya and Kumano (where his father
Koremori drowned).
Meanwhile, several Taira clan members are found and executed. In 1192, Retired Emperor Go-
Shirakawa dies (age 66). Yoritomo (still suspicious) orders the execution of Rokudai (age 30+), and
the Taira line comes to an end.
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After Yoritomo's death in 1199, the monk Mongaku plans a rebellion to install a prince on the throne.
His plot is uncovered and the Retired Emperor Go-Toba exiles him to the island of Oki (age 80+).
Treated as a secret text by [a group of biwahōshi], this chapter is believed to have originated
in the late 13th century, after the Heike proper. […] It brings together information about
Kiyomori's daughter Kenreimon'in, the mother of Emperor Antoku. […] It constitutes a
single literary entity – a tale in the old monogatari style, rich in poetic imagery, rhythmic
passages, waka, and melancholy associations.[19]
In 1185, Taira no Tokuko becomes a nun and moves to an old hut near the capital. Her life is filled
with sadness as memories of the past glory haunt her. After the 1185 earthquake the hut is ruined.
In the autumn of 1185, Taira no Tokuko moves to a remote Buddhist retreat at Jakkō-in in the Ohara
mountains to avoid public attention. There she devotes herself to Buddhist practices. Natural sights
evoke images of Sukhavati and impermanence in her mind.
In the spring of 1186, Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa makes a visit to the mountain retreat. She talks
with the Retired Emperor about human miseries and Buddhist ideas of suffering and rebirth in the
pure land.
As she remembers past glory of the Taira and their fall, she makes parallels between the events in her
life and the six realms of rebirth. She also mentions a dream in which she saw the Taira in the dragon
king's palace asking her to pray for their salvation.
The bell of the Jakkō-in sounds (parallel to the bells of the Gion monastery in the first lines of the
Tale) and the Retired Emperor leaves for the capital. Misfortunes of the Taira are blamed on Taira no
Kiyomori (his evil deeds caused the suffering of the whole Taira clan). In 1191, Tokuko falls ill, dies
invoking Amitābha's name and is welcomed by Amitābha to Sukhavati.
See also
List of The Tale of the Heike characters
Genji: Dawn of the Samurai (video game)
Genji: Days of the Blade (video game)
Genpei War, 1180–1185
Hōgen rebellion, 1156
The Tale of Hōgen or Hōgen monogatari
Heiji rebellion, 1159–1160
The Tale of Heiji or Heiji monogatari
Heikegani
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Notes
1. Sadler, A. L. "The Heike Monogatari", Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan. 46.2 (1918): 1–
278 and 49.1 (1921): 1–354.
2. B Watson, Tales of the Heike (2006) p. 5
3. B Watson, Tales of the Heike (2006) p. 5
4. H McAlpine, Japanese Tales and Legends (OUP 1958) p. 77 and p. 212
5. H Paul Varley, Warriors of Japan as portrayed in the War Tales (1994) p. 87 and p. 106-13
6. W LaFleur, Awesome Nightfall (2003) p. 45
7. Jin’ishi Konishi, A History of Japanese Literature Vol 3 (2014) p. 331-5
8. Jin’ishi Konishi, A History of Japanese Literature Vol 3 (2014) p. 339
9. J Dougill, Kyoto (2006) p. 63
10. J Wollock, Rethinking Chivalry and Courtly Love (2011) p. 259
11. J Wollock, Rethinking Chivalry and Courtly Love (2011) p. 258-9
12. H McAlpine, Japanese Tales and Legends (OUP 1958) p. 212
13. L Zolbrod, Haiku Painting (1982) p. 12 and p. 24
14. Brown, Delmer. (1979). Gukanshō, pp. 385–386.
15. Kenneth Dean Butler, "The Heike monogatari and The Japanese Warrior Ethic", Harvard Journal
of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 29, (1969), 108.
16. H McAlpine, Japanese Tales and Legends (OUP 1958) p. 38
17. H McAlpine, Japanese Tales and Legends (OUP 1958) p. 42-4
18. H McAlpine, Japanese Tales and Legends (OUP 1958) p. 49
19. McCullough, Helen Craig. (1994). Genji and Heike, p. 446.
References
Brown, Delmer and Ichiro Ishida. (1979). The Future and the Past: a translation and study of the
'Gukanshō', an interpretative history of Japan written in 1219. Berkeley: University of California
Press. ISBN 978-0-520-03460-0; OCLC 5145872 (https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5145872)
Kitagawa, Hiroshi and Bruce T. Tsuchida, eds. (1975). The Tale of the Heike. Tokyo: University of
Tokyo Press. ISBN 9784130870245; ISBN 9784130870238; ISBN 9780860081883;
ISBN 9780860081890; OCLC 193064639 (https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/193064639)
McCullough, Helen Craig. (1988). The Tale of the Heike. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
ISBN 9780804714181; OCLC 16472263 (https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/16472263)
__________. (1994). Genji and Heike. Selections from 'The Tale of Genji' and 'The Tale of the
Heike'. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2258-7
Watson, Burton and Haruo Shirane. (2006). The Tale of the Heike (abridged). New York: Columbia
University Press. ISBN 9780231138024; ISBN 9780231510837; OCLC 62330897 (https://www.wo
rldcat.org/oclc/62330897)
External links
Heike monogatari (http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/japanese/heike/heike.html) (in Japanese)
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