Daikakuji-tō
The connects Daikaku-ji , or Daikakuji-tō , is a line of emperors and princes going down from the emperor Kameyama at the end of the time of Kamakura. It owes its name with the Buddhist temple of the Daikaku-ji to Kyōto, since which Kameyama exerted its government withdrawn. This line was in which was in fight for the control of the Trône of the chrysanthemum against a rival branch going down from an older brother of Kameyama, that of the Jimyōin-tō. Indeed, after the death of the emperor Go-Saga, the Shogunat de Kamakura had increased its control on the court and intervened in the choices of succession, imposing a certain form of alternation between the two lines.
During the reign of the emperor Hanazono of the line of Jimyōin-tō, the argument of succession is regulated thanks to an agreement between the two parts and the Bakufu, to alternate the throne between the two branches every 10 years. Under the terms of this agreement, Hanazono thus abdicates in 1318 in favor of his/her cousin Go-Daigo, of the Daikakuji line, but this last refuses to return the throne at the end of ten years and initiates the Restauration of Kemmu.
After the failure of the latter, having lost the control of the capital, Go-Daigo takes refuge in the mountains with Yoshino, where it establishes the Cour of the South (Nanchō), while an emperor of the line of Jimyōin-tō is put on the throne of the Cour of North, with Kyōto. However, the dynasty of the South, downward of the Daikaku-ji branch does not manage to be essential, and after one 60 years period of fight between the two courses called time Nanboku-chō, ends up accepting the reunification.
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