On this date in 1335,* imperial power in Japan received the executioner’s decisive verdict.
The three-year Kenmu Restoration (1333-1336) makes an interregnum sandwiched between two different eras of samurai-backed feudal shogunates, but if you were an heir to Japan’s ancient imperial house you might call the Kenmu era a plain-old regnum: the briefest of moments when the emperor actually exercised his purported authority.
It would not recur for another five centuries, during Japan’s 19th century Meiji Restoration.
Our older restoration saw Emperor Go-Daigo attempt to seize autocratic powers for his family, appointing his own sons successively as shogun. One of those sons was our date’s principal, Prince Moriyoshi (English Wikipedia entry | the more robust Japanese).
And one of those outside lords aggrieved at being cheated of the shogunate was Ashikaga Takauji, a samurai lord who would rebel against Go-Daigo. It says here that the subsequent period in Japanese historiography was the Ashikaga Shogunate, so that gives you an idea why you’re reading about Prince Moriyoshi on an execution blog. In the midst of his civil war, the upstart shogun-to-be captured Moriyoshi and sent him to a brother, who held the prince prisoner in a cave and had him beheaded at the provocation of some setback to the family cause.
Upon the re-establishment of the imperial house all those centuries later, the Meiji emperor had a Shinto shrine erected in veneration of this martyred ancestor at the place of his sufferings; the Kamakura-gu remains a popular pilgrimage and tourist site to this day.
* As best I can determine, August 12 is the consensus translation of the date from the Japanese lunisolar calendar; a date of “July 23” can also be found in some citations, which apparently reflects the 23rd day of the 7th month. However, the first day of the Japanese year occurred a few weeks after the Julian calendar’s January 1.
On this day..
- 1469: Andrea Viarani
- 1875: Joseph Le Brun, the last public hanging
- 1896: Mirza Reza Kermani, assassin of the Shah
- 1806: Josiah Burnham, despite Daniel Webster's defense
- 1895: Minnie Dean, the only woman hanged in New Zealand
- 1912: Sing Sing's seven successive sparks
- 1936: Manuel Goded Llopis
- 1469: Richard Woodville, father of the queen
- 2008: Leon David Dorsey, the Blockbuster Killer
- 1527: Jacques de Beaune, baron de Semblançay
- 1952: Night of the Murdered Poets
- 1833: Captain Henry Nicholas Nicholls, sodomite