Yōwa famine
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2019) |
35°00′42″N 135°46′06″E / 35.011667°N 135.768333°E
The Yōwa famine (養和の飢饉, Yōwa no kikin), was a famine which affected Japan at the end of Heian period. It began in 1181, and lasted until 1182. It was named after the Yōwa era (1181–1182), during the reign of Emperor Antoku. The shogunate system was not established in Japan yet. The famine was most severe in western Honshū (including Kyoto) and Kyushu islands and caused by an alternating, untimely drought and flood.[1]
During the same period, there was also the Genpei War (1180-1185), partially caused by famine itself. In 1181, the Taira clan food requisitions in Yamashiro Province for the needs of starving Kyoto city have cost them popular support, while Minamoto no Yoritomo supplied rice for the starving provinces in exchange for grants for independent rule in Kamakura.
The famine become worse in 1182, as epidemic was superimposed on scarcity of food. The food prices rose to such levels that a man's load of processed timber was not worth the amount of food to survive a day. The riverbanks were lined with the deceased[citation needed]. According to Hojoki, the number of dead in Kyoto was 43200, and temples were overwhelmed, resulting in improper burials. Many corpses were left to rot, resulting in foul smells in several districts of the city.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "A Japanese Thoreau of the Twelfth Century (6)". minakatella.net. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
This page is based on Japanese Wikipedia page 養和の飢饉, accessed 8 July 2019