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Mount Hiei: Home of Japan's Warrior Monks

2025/5/20
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Chris Harding: 比叡山位于京都东北方,在风水上被认为是不吉利的方向,因此与保护京都及其贵族有关。在14、15世纪,比叡山是一个巨大的佛教综合体,拥有寺院、讲堂、冥想厅,以及服务于僧侣的社区,它不仅是一个孤立的地方,还是一个具有政治和宗教功能的居住地。比叡山有偏远地区,但也有成千上万的佛教建筑,山顶最重要的建筑群是延历寺,是天台宗的中心。僧人最澄从中国带回天台宗的教义,并在比叡山建立,逐渐说服京都统治者,天台宗是最新的佛教,并包含所有其他佛教教义。最澄将天台宗定位为一种包罗万象的佛教形式,囊括了所有佛教教派的精华,因此不需要其他形式的佛教。最澄提倡人人皆有佛性,并可以通过正确的仪式、信仰、学习和冥想来实现,这为天台宗的发展做出了贡献。日本人,尤其是皇室和京都的贵族,认为在宇宙保护方面,多多益善,因此佛教和神道可以共同发挥作用。佛教和神道在争夺政治支持和资金方面存在竞争,但在理论上,两者可以协同工作。比叡山与京都和皇室的联系意味着它具有重要的声望,这有助于天台宗的发展。藤原氏通过与天台宗合作,将女儿嫁给皇室,从而将藤原氏的血统融入皇室,从而巩固了其在比叡山的影响力。天台宗擅长仪式,可以为精英阶层提供各种问题的解决方案,因此成为了日本的“英国国教”。虽然理论上天台宗面向所有人,但在12世纪末和13世纪,其优势被颠覆,一些僧侣离开了比叡山,开始宣扬自己的佛教版本,吸引了大量追随者。天台宗的僧侣开始宣扬自己的佛教版本,例如净土真宗,吸引了大量追随者,这可以被视为佛教的改革。净土真宗提倡通过呼唤阿弥陀佛的名字来获得救赎,这种简易的方式吸引了许多普通民众。这些通俗的佛教形式开始蚕食天台宗的势力,因为它们更简单直接,更适合普通民众的教育水平和空闲时间。在织田信长统一日本的时期,比叡山因其在日本宗教中的重要性,也扮演着政治角色。比叡山拥有宗教影响力、对统治精英的心理控制力,以及由训练有素的僧侣组成的武装力量,这些僧侣会下山恐吓京都的对手,甚至烧毁敌对佛教教派的寺庙。净土真宗是信鸾的教派,强调通过呼唤阿弥陀佛的名字来获得救赎,拥有强大的武装力量和信徒,对织田信长构成了威胁。像天台宗和净土真宗这样的宗教派别对织田信长来说非常危险,因为他们的领袖反对他,并号召信徒拿起武器反对他。织田信长憎恨这些拥有金钱和武装支持的独立佛教教派,因此将目光投向了比叡山。比叡山拥有训练有素的武士僧侣,在政治、经济、宗教和军事上都具有影响力,类似于几个世纪前的圣殿骑士团。拥有数百名训练有素的武士僧侣的比叡山具有强大的心理影响力。佛教组织在二战期间支持日本皇军,他们通过讲述佛陀过去世的故事来证明这一点,在这些故事中,佛陀会杀死某人以避免他们积累恶业。织田信长对欧洲基督徒友好,因为他和葡萄牙人,特别是基督教传教士,都憎恨佛教。织田信长不相信来世,他只相信今生的权力和安全。织田信长年轻时曾因僧侣未能救活他的父亲而将他们杀死。织田信长派遣三万士兵包围比叡山,他们屠杀了山上的人,并烧毁了所有的建筑物。织田信长有效地消灭了佛教在日本的政治力量,使其再也无法恢复到比叡山鼎盛时期的水平。织田信长的继任者丰臣秀吉也面临着类似的问题,他需要以类似的方式处理基督徒,因为他们与葡萄牙贸易商和更广泛的欧洲世界有联系。德川家康创建了德川幕府,并成功地将日本佛教置于他的控制之下,利用佛教寺庙来登记当地人口,并迫使人们践踏基督教图像以证明他们放弃了基督教。在17世纪,统治日本的真正思想基础和人们应该接受的价值观更多地来自儒家思想。佛教和神道仍然是其中的一部分,但日本的道德核心是儒家思想,它不像佛教那样在日本具有危险的制度存在。关于比叡山被摧毁的证据主要来自当时的记载,尽管这些建筑被烧毁,但后来又被重建,现在仍然是一个旅游景点。天台宗幸存了下来,但从未恢复到其鼎盛时期的影响力水平,当时它几乎没有受到挑战,是日本的“国家教会”。天台宗的著名代表人物濑户内寂听为天台宗辩护,认为真正的佛教需要努力才能获得。比叡山仍然吸引着那些想要冥想的人,但它不太可能恢复到以前的影响力水平。随着首都从京都迁往江户,比叡山的重要性有所下降,因为它不再处于保护皇都的位置,并且失去了与皇都的联系。尽管首都迁往江户,但京都仍然是日本的文化中心,比叡山仍然与这个重要地区保持着联系。随着政治中心转移,京都可能被认为是传统的,但可能不再处于真正的领先地位,比叡山也因此受到一定程度的影响。在战国时期,宗教,包括佛教派别、基督教和其他宗教影响,以及像织田信长这样可能有些无神论或不可知论的人,在其中发挥着重要作用。织田信长对天台宗的担忧表明了宗教的重要性,天台宗的创始人最澄是日本最早的民族主义者之一,他希望天台宗成为日本的政治力量。天台宗本可以与织田信长合作,但不幸的是,他们决定反对他,并为此付出了代价。最澄和织田信长本可以有很多共同点,并可以合作,但最终天台宗却成为了织田信长的对手。最澄对日本的历史及其在世界上的地位有着强烈的意识,并认为宗教和政治应该结合在一起。织田信长不愿与任何人分享权力,他对待京都幕府的方式表明了这一点,他最终摧毁了幕府。织田信长可能认为天台宗难以对付,因为他们之间总是存在一种平行的关系,他无法容忍这一点。

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Join me, Holly Frey, and a slate of incredible guests as we are all inspired by their journeys with psoriasis. Along with these uplifting and candid personal histories, we take a step back into the bizarre and occasionally poisonous history of our skin and how we take care of it. Whether you're looking for inspiration on your own skincare journey or are curious about the sometimes strange history of how we treat our skin, you'll find genuine, empathetic, transformative conversations here on Our Skin.

Listen to Our Skin on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey folks, welcome to Dan Snow's History. We're going to run an episode today from our sister podcast, Echoes of History. It's our collaboration with Ubisoft. And it delves into the real places, people, and events behind the Assassin's Creed games. It's well worth checking out. It's very good fun. This episode is about Mount Hi'ai, the mystical mountain home of an army of warrior monks. Enjoy.

Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories of the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. Over the past few episodes, we've returned to the heart of Sengoku-era Japan, the tumultuous setting for the eagerly awaited Assassin's Creed Shadows.

With the release of the game just weeks away, we'll be delving into the period's intricate landscapes of power and ambition, preparing you, as a player, to experience it all for yourself in Assassin's Creed Shadows.

Later this week, I'll continue my special series of episodes that take a close look at samurai and shinobi, the weapons they wielded, the battle tactics they used, their politics and culture. No stone will remain unturned as we discover just what separated and united the two iconic warrior classes of Japan. But today, we're headed to a mountain, lying just northeast of Japan's imperial capital of Kyoto, Mount Hiei.

We'll be reuniting with some familiar characters, notably the fearsome Oda Nobunaga. But before we do that, let's climb the mountainside path as it winds through the dense forest past shrines and temples to the top of this sacred mountain.

Returning to the podcast is Dr Chris Harding, Senior Lecturer in Asian History from the University of Edinburgh, who will help us understand what life was like on Mount Hiei during the late Sengoku period, its role in the story of Japanese unification, and what all of this can tell us about Japanese religious beliefs at the time.

Welcome back to Echoes of History, Chris. It's fantastic to have you back with us. Thank you for having me. It's a pleasure. It was such good fun the other two times you came on. We had to find another reason to drag you back to talk to us again. And we thought this time we would talk about a place, and it's a place that I've not heard of before, so I'm really interested to find out more about this. And I wonder if I could check with you before we start how I pronounce the name of this mountain that we're going to talk about. Yes, so this is Mount Hiei.

Right, lovely. Mount Hiei. And Mount Hiei is going to be a place in Assassin's Creed Shadows that players can visit and walk around and tour the settlements of. So whereabouts in Japan is Mount Hiei? And what would people expect to see if they visited it during this period?

Mount Hiei lies just outside Kyoto. It's just to the northeast of Kyoto and it's this lovely location, Kyoto to one side and this beautiful lake, Lake Biwa, to the other. I think one of the reasons it becomes so well known is that around 795 Japan's capital, the imperial capital, moved to what we now know as Kyoto.

They called it Heianqiu, city of peace and tranquility at the time, which is rather lovely. And because Mount Hiei was to the northeast of the city, this was a direction in which, according to various ideas from Chinese geomancy, was an unlucky location.

direction. This was a direction from which all sorts of evil spirits might make their way into the city. Mount Hie becomes associated with protecting Kyoto and protecting the emperor and protecting all these aristocrats who were building lovely homes there.

And so Mount Hiei is important for that reason. But also if you went there by the time we're in the period that we're thinking about, so what the 14th, 15th centuries, it was also home to an enormous Buddhist complex. So you'd have monasteries, lecture halls, meditation halls, also ordinary people, little communities living around the mountain, serving all the monks who lived on the mountain. So we're not talking about an isolated place.

where people might go for whatever reason. This is an inhabited mountain that serves a political and a religious function and is covered in people. Yes, that's right. You can find sort of remote parts of it. So you'll find some of the aristocrats living down in Kyoto might go on a pilgrimage or on a retreat to the mountains. So it does have its wild remote parts, but also there are literally thousands of Buddhist buildings dotted all around the mountain. And at the absolute summit,

The most important building is the Enryaku-ji temple complex, which is sort of the beating heart of the particular Buddhist sect in charge of the mountain. And they're called the Tendai sect. And what do we know about the emergence of the mountain as an important place and of the Tendai sect? Are there any sort of milestones that we can point to in the emergence of the Buddhist presence there? Yeah.

Yeah, I think probably an important name is Saicho, who's a Japanese monk, Japanese Buddhist monk, who traveled to China in the early 9th century. A lot of Japan's Buddhist ideas would come in waves through China and Korea. He went to China. He learned some new teachings in China called the Tiantai teachings, from which...

Tendai comes and he basically brought those back to Japan set himself up on Mount Hiei and managed bit by bit to persuade the rulers of Kyoto the imperial family these big aristocratic families that what he was offering was as it were the latest update and

not just the latest update, but the way he talked about Tendai was it included all the other Buddhist teachings. So although Buddhism was divided into various sects, if you were a Tendai Buddhist, you had everything included under that umbrella. So he was quite a strong advocate for it as a religion, but also as a force in Japan's national life generally. And it's really Saicho that helps to get Tendai going and Mount Hiei going. So Tendai kind of

positions itself as a catch-all form of Buddhism so you can get the best bits of all of the Buddhist cults, all the Buddhist sects out there and bring them all together in Tendai so you don't ever need another form of Buddhism really. I think that's his plan. It's also part of a trend in Buddhism towards offering something to everybody. So Saichō talked about Buddhahood for all whereas in an earlier generation or many many generations before in Japan

It might have been primarily monastics, monks and nuns who were working every day, day in and day out for their salvation. For Sai Chol, what he's offering in Tendai is the idea that everybody has the Buddha nature. And if you perform the right rituals, if you have faith, if you learn, if you meditate, you can realize that Buddha nature. And it really is for everybody. And he's particularly interested in this idea within Buddhism, which is the Bodhisattva, which

which is someone who has developed themselves to the point of enlightenment, but decides to hang back and work for the enlightenment of everybody else before they, as it were, cross over into Nirvana themselves. So he's really throwing the doors of Buddhism wide open to everybody, which I think really helps to build up Tendai as he does. And how then does Tendai sort of sit with...

with something like Shinto, a traditional religion of Japan. Do we see tension between the two of those or do they find a way to bring Shinto into Tendai as well? Good question. There was considerable tension when Buddhism first came into Japan, maybe around the 6th and 7th centuries. People tried to bring in statues and sutras from Korea and then when there was famine or a plague,

someone, often someone who is deeply invested in Shinto, would say that's because the Japanese gods, the native gods, are angry at these basic migrant deities who should be kicked out of the country. And so they might throw the statue in the river to see if it improved things. But over time, Buddhism gets a foothold. And the attitude that the Japanese take, especially the imperial family and the aristocrats in Kyoto, is that when it comes to cosmic protection, there's no such thing as having too much.

So if you've got the native gods looking out for you, if you've also got people on Hiei praying to various Buddhist deities for you, then you are doubly protected. So I think that's how they begin to see Buddhism. The only difficulty, I think, in practice, this gets us on later on to when Hiei finds itself in trouble, is there's only so much money and political influence to go around. So in practice, different Buddhist sects

and Buddhist sects versus Shintar sects do find themselves scrapping for political favour and for cold hard cash. But at least in theory, the two can work together. I quite like the idea of spiritual double glazing. It's a good way of putting it. Yeah, absolutely. If one layer is not enough, we'll just get another layer of protection over us as well. Yes.

Presumably the connection of Hiei as the location in which Tendai develops and its connection to Kyoto and the imperial family means that there is significant prestige already associated with Hiei, which helps Tendai to grow.

Yes, I think absolutely. So in the period where Tendai grows and Hiei develops, we're talking really about the 9th and 10th centuries in Japan. Some of your listeners might know it from the Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu. Some people call it, you know, the world's first novel or the world's first psychological novel, perhaps. Published around the year 1000.

And at this point you've got the imperial family in Kyoto, but real power is starting to pass to these great aristocratic clans.

clans, notably the Fujiwara. They do things like marrying their daughters to imperial princes so they can have a Fujiwara. A bit of Fujiwara blood added to the imperial line. And Fujiwara, the Fujiwara clan is very good at trying to do business with Tende on Mount Hiei. So after a while, some of the most important priests and leaders on Hiei are from the Fujiwara clan. So they really fit together, I think, quite neatly.

Also, if people read something like the tale of Genji, they might be struck by the extent to which Japanese people really were every day bothered by various supernatural forces, fear of what happens after death. If you have, for example, the birth of an important person, an imperial or an aristocratic child in Kyoto, you will hire shamans for the occasion. You will have Buddhist monks chanting, all sorts of other rituals being done

And what Tendai is really good at is ceremonial. They can say whatever the problem is, birth of a child, pregnancy, can't get pregnant, worried about death, whatever it might be, we have something for you. And I think by supplying that to the elite, they become, I would say, almost the sort of

a kind of Japan's answer to the Church of England. You know, the country's elite at prayer is really what Tendai becomes, I think, in its heyday. And would it have appealed and been as important to ordinary Japanese people too? Was this something that was the preserve of the elite?

Or was this something that everybody could engage with? It's an interesting one. In theory, it was for everybody. So you've got Tendai temples around the country. At various stages of every person's life, there will be rituals, particularly funeral rituals and memorial rituals, which Tendai would be heavily involved in. But funnily enough, what happens in the late 12th century, 13th century,

The advantage of Tendai is kind of turned on its head. So its advantage is that it encompasses all these different Buddhist traditions within it. So you've got Zen style meditation, you've got all these other elements including the worship of a Buddha called Amida Buddha, the Buddha of infinite light and compassion. So it includes everything. As you say, you get Tendai, you get everything you possibly need. But the flip side is that when some monks on Mount Hiei find that

life's a bit tough. All the ceremonies they have to do, one of them for example involves for 90 days non-stop walking around a statue of Amida Buddha reciting Amida Buddha's name and for some people this just becomes too much and a handful of monks one after the other leave here

start to preach their own version of Buddhism and start to attract quite large followings around them. So to offer you another European parallel, people talk about it as a kind of reformation in Buddhism. It becomes a populist reformation. So some of these people, a leader like Shinran in the 13th century, he tells his followers, you don't need ritual, you don't need to pay priests for things, you don't need to read loads of sutras.

You don't need to do lots of back-breaking meditation. All you need to do, literally, is call on the name of Amida Buddha, a very short prayer, call on his name, and when you die, he will come and rescue you and take you away to the Pure Land. You get these lovely paintings called Raigo, which show someone at the bottom on their deathbed and Amida coming down with his bodhisattvas, riding on clouds to take them away.

So these populist forms of Buddhism start to eat Tendai's lunch, I think. So a lot of ordinary Japanese are drawn to these, you could say, easier, more straightforward sects, which appeal to their level of education and also to the spare time they have. You know, if you're an aristocrat, you've got a bit of time, you can go for a two or three day retreat.

if you're working in the fields, you can't realistically take time off from that. So these easier forms of Buddhism really start to take over in Japan. It's amazing how often some of those things that are meant for everybody aren't in practice actually for everybody. Yes, very much so. And when we get to the period...

in which Assassin's Creed Shadows is set. So in the later 16th century, we're talking about the time of Oda Nobunaga and the beginning of the unification of Japan. Given Mount Hiei's importance in Japanese religion, does it also have a political role to play in that period of turbulence? Yes, it has that role.

religious influence in Japan. It has that psychological hold on the ruling elite, you know, to whose various needs and anxieties it's managed to tend quite effectively. It also has what are called Soshi, warrior monks. So these army of trained monks who now and again will descend the mountain, intimidate rivals in Kyoto. Occasionally they'll actually

burn down the temples of rival Buddhist sects. So they can still project their power in these various different ways. Nevertheless, at the same time, some of these newer sects that came about in this period of reformation have also become very powerful. I think the one worth briefly mentioning when we're talking about Nobunaga is Shinran's sect called the True Pure Land sect of Buddhism, Jodo Shinshu. This is the sect where

"If you but call on the name of Amida Buddha, you will be saved" That very simple, pure kind of faith which it emphasizes And it is incredibly well armed So it has a fortified complex at what is now Osaka in Japan With these fortified outposts, very hard to get at It also has quite wealthy and well-equipped followers across Japan To whom the leader from Osaka can send out a message

saying rise up and people will equip themselves feed themselves and go off and fight whoever they're told to fight so

Religious sects like these, Tendai and Jodo Shinshu, are really dangerous for someone like Oda Nobunaga. He's got enough to worry about with these secular warlords who he's trying to fight. But what he finds is as his power grows in the final third of the 16th century, both Tendai and Jodo Shinshu, their leaders come out against him.

and denounce him. What that means for Jodo Shinshu is people are told around the country to take up arms against Oda Nobunaga and that if they don't they won't be considered members of the sect anymore. And there's a certain amount of evidence that

the kind of faith involved in Jodo Shinshu Buddhism can be really effective on the battlefield. People sometimes carry into battle pieces of paper with this short prayer written on them and it would give them this extra kind of boost, this extra kind of strength. And so Oda Nobunaga comes to detest these independent Buddhist sects who wield all this money and all this armed support. And that's why he turns his gaze on Hiei. I was going to ask about warrior monks, but you know,

I wonder whether that was going to be a real thing or is that a myth? We think about Buddhist monks having this warrior element to what they do. And I guess while you were talking then, I was thinking about European parallels again. And I'm thinking they sound something like maybe the Templars a few centuries earlier in that they are a political powerhouse, but they're also a financial one and a religious one and a military one too. They kind of bring all of that together to mean that you've got this

really significant thing perched on this mountain that really nobody can ignore. Yes, I think that's a really good parallel. You can imagine the psychological impact of having an imposing mountain on which you know is living hundreds and hundreds of well-trained warrior monks. Also within Buddhism, you know, it used to be thought years ago that Buddhism is a

the quintessentially peaceful religion and that it demands it, you know, it's very cool. And that's why I was wondering about the warrior monk thing, because, you know, you think of peaceful religions and you also think of warrior monks and you think, how do you reconcile those two? But I mean, religions have always been quite good at reconciling violence with the idea that you shouldn't be violent. I think so. There was a lot of work done on this after the Second World War because

Buddhist organizations in Japan had given a lot of support to the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II, including holding meditation retreats for them. One of the things they used to use to justify this was there are stories of past lives of the Buddha where he would kill someone to avoid them accumulating bad karma. If they lived much longer, their karma would get worse, their subsequent rebirth would be worse.

And so, as it were, the best thing for them is to take them out early on. So all sorts of ways in which you could justify this if you wanted to. And what's striking about Oda Nobunaga is he's quite friendly to European Christians in this period. You know, we know the Portuguese are in Japan by this point, partly because both Oda Nobunaga and the Portuguese, particularly the Christian missionaries, detest Buddhism. They have them up there as one of their principal enemies.

Interesting. So yeah, the enemy of my enemy becomes my friend. When it comes to spending, sometimes it's out of sight, out of mind. That daily coffee habit, those streaming subscriptions, they're up fast without you even noticing. Rocket Money helps you spot those patterns so you can do something about them and keep more money in your pocket. Rocket Money is a personal finance app that helps find and cancel your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps lower your bills so you can grow your savings.

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Join me, Holly Frey, and a slate of incredible guests as we are all inspired by their journeys with psoriasis. Along with these uplifting and candid personal histories, we take a step back into the bizarre and occasionally poisonous history of our skin and how we take care of it. Whether you're looking for inspiration on your own skincare journey or are curious about the sometimes strange history of how we treat our skin, you'll find genuine, empathetic, transformative conversations here on Our Skin.

Listen to Our Skin on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Everything that I've learned about Oden Abenaga throughout doing these podcasts has taught me that he's not someone you want to be on the wrong side of. So I'm feeling like Tendai might have made a mistake by getting on the wrong side of Oden Abenaga. How does he go about tackling this force who are encouraging people to fight against him?

So I think absolutely right, he isn't someone... he's not only someone you don't want to get on the wrong side of, he's also someone who doesn't seem to have strong, what we would think of as being strong religious convictions.

So he didn't believe there was anything after death. What he believed in was power and security in this life. There's even a story that when he was about 17, his father died. He had the Buddhist monks who had prayed for his father locked into a temple, locked inside a temple. Then he surrounded the temple with soldiers holding muskets and shot them to death for having failed, basically, to keep his father alive. So that's the kind of person that they are up against, I think,

there was a hope. This is the early 1570s, so Oda Nobunaga is doing well, but he's not yet this invincible force in Japanese politics. And I think Tendai hoped that they would manage to be part of a coalition.

that would do away with him because he was such a menace. But he obviously takes it rather badly having Tendai come out against him and so he sends roughly 30,000 men to encircle the base of Mount Hiei. These are men who've been through awfully bloody battles already, properly battle hardened, and as soon as they appear around the base of Mount Hiei some of the people, ordinary men, women and children who live towards the base of the mountain think well we can't get out

can't get out by going downwards so we have to go upwards and they make their way up the mountain because as we said earlier on the most important building or the most important complex on Mount Hiei is Enryakuji, the original temple that Saicho built back in the 9th century so they make their way up there they try and buy Nobunaga's men off they offer him lots of cash basically but

Nobunaga has as much cash as he really needs. He's not bothered by that. And he sends, this is September 1571, he sends his men up the mountain. And from what we know, they murder people completely indiscriminately. So we have quite vivid records from this period of these men making their way up the mountain. People are sort of fleeing in front of them and they are shooting them dead. They're hacking them to death. You have...

arquebus wielding snipers in holes taking people out as they come past. Some people are begging for the lives of their wives and children but Nobunaga orders them basically all to be executed. And there's an amazing picture in words that gets drawn from us by the end. So you've got we think somewhere in the region of 3,000 Buddhist buildings on this mountain. They're looted and then they're burned to the ground so Mount Hiei becomes this

basic

whirlwind of fire. These are all of course wooden buildings which very often in Japan have burned down when people go to war. But it's completely engulfed in flames and then afterwards someone remembers Mount Hiei as this place that was associated with wealth, erudition, political influence, great art as well of course within these temples. And now it's said to be a barren landscape carpeted in ash across which only badgers and foxes can now move.

So just this picture of utter devastation when Oda Nobunaga's done his business. He's a pretty terrifying bloke, isn't he?

He is, and he's equally awful with the true Pure Land sect in Osaka when he lays siege to their fortress, not terribly far away from Kyoto actually. The only good thing in the case of the siege of this other sect in Osaka is that the patriarch of that, this is in the early 1580s so about 10 years later, the patriarch surrenders to Oda Nobunaga because how merciless he is, and he leaves the temple to go and surrender in person.

But his son, just before he leaves and all his men leave with him, sets fire to the entire temple compound in Osaka. So Nobunaga, Oro Nobunaga, had hoped to be able to stroll in and survey his great prize, but instead this person burns it to the ground. So, you know, if his sect can't have it, Nobunaga can't have it either.

It's a very, very small victory given the scale of what Oda Nobunaga has done. But I think very effectively he wipes out the power, the political power of Buddhism in Japan and it never really recovers the level of power that it had back in the heyday of Mount Hiei. Yeah, I was going to ask how significant Oda Nobunaga's victory there was in the grand scheme of the unification of Japan.

Is it a major moment that he breaks this power of Buddhism or, you know, is that a playing hindsight to see it as something bigger than it probably was at the time?

No, I think at the time it was recognized how big it was. And what's interesting is Oda Nobunaga's successor, Koyotomi Hideyoshi, has a similar problem with Christians in Japan. So as it were, Oda Nobunaga's taking care of the Buddhists. Hideyoshi finds that Christians have influence not because they're armed in the way the Buddhists were, but because they have links with Portuguese traders and with the wider European world in general. And so Hideyoshi has to deal with the Christians in a similar way.

Of course after Hideyoshi comes Tokugawa Ieyasu who creates the Tokugawa Shogunate and he's very successful at keeping Japanese Buddhism under his boot basically. Some of the larger sects he divides into two. He uses some of the Buddhist temples as a way of registering the local population. You have to go and register your name at the temple. If they suspect you of being a Christian you've got to go to the Buddhist temple and stand on an image

of Jesus on the cross or perhaps the Virgin Mary to prove that you've renounced your Christianity. So you see the state making use of Buddhism as opposed to being pushed around by it. Yeah, it's an interesting reversal of fortunes, I guess, isn't it? From Mount Hiei's heyday, sort of having all of this influence over Kyoto and the elite there to now being just a tool of the state afterwards. Yeah.

I think that's right. The other thing I might sort of add on that is once you get into the 1600s, the real ideological basis of the way Japan is ruled and the values that people are expected to accept comes much more from Confucianism.

So Buddhism and Shinto are still part of the mix, but the kind of moral core of Japan is Confucianism and it doesn't have that dangerous institutional presence in Japan that Buddhism had once had. So in yet another sense, I suppose Buddhism has been tamed. Yeah.

And I don't know whether this is possible with the nature of Japanese buildings of this period, but does any sort of archaeology survive from this destruction of Mount Hiei to give us an idea of how true it is? You know, there are accounts of it being destroyed and burned and, as you said, thousands of people potentially being killed. Is there any evidence that survives to back that up?

I think most of the evidence is in terms of accounts of the time, so it's quite well evidenced. The problem with these Japanese buildings is, obviously in this case they were deliberately put to the torch, but in fact in the middle of the 10th century a lot of it had been rebuilt anyway because it burned down, so periodically these buildings have to be renewed. But a lot of them do get rebuilt, and so Mount Hiei now is still a tourist attraction. You can get there up a cable car for a month.

You get a lovely view over Kyoto, also a lovely view over Lake Biwa. For anybody who's in Kyoto during the hot, the very hot and muggy summer months, a trip up Mount Hiei is well worth a look. Does Mount Hiei ever see a revival after this? Do Buddhists return to the mountain? Does it regain any of its previous significance or is it permanently broken?

No, it does survive. Tendai does survive. It never gets back to the level of influence I think it had, almost unchallenged. There were other Buddhist sects, but Tendai was so far out at the front in terms of size and wealth and political influence in 10th, 11th centuries that it really was, as I sort of suggested, you know, the kind of national church of Japan. In the centuries afterwards, it's really these other sects.

which are much larger, so Joro Shinshu, True Pure Land sect. Of course, Zen sects become really big in Japan. So it takes its place amongst other Japanese Buddhist sects. One of its most famous representatives, a nun called Setouchi Jakucho, she passed away, I think, a few years ago, but I interviewed her.

early in her 90s and she was defending Tendai because I was saying what do you think about sex like Jodo Shinshu where all you have to do is have faith and declare your faith in Amida and she said no no no that's easy Buddhism if you want the real thing you know you've got to work for it and she was this great celebrity presence in Japan a kind of

agony aunt, actually. Big presence on TV, advice columns. She wrote lots of books. She was even a novelist, actually, in an earlier life. So I think she helped to put Tendai on the map. And now there are plenty of Japanese who like to go on meditation retreats.

It's, you know, getting away from everyday rat race for a bit. So I think it's succeeding on that basis. And its location still, as ever, is formidable. So it's always going to be attracting people. But I would be surprised if it ever goes back to the kind of influence it once had. Yeah, and presumably it loses...

a degree of its importance to when the capital moves from Kyoto to Edo, you know, because it's no longer in that position protecting the imperial capital with that proximity to the imperial capital and all of those connections that had allowed it to thrive. Presumably when the capital moves from Kyoto, a lot of that is gone too. Yeah.

I think that's right. Yeah, that's a good point. So the capital moves and also power has shifted to the Tokugawa clan, which historically doesn't have as much to do with Tendai as the Fujiwara clan did, which we were talking about a little bit earlier on. I think it retains something in that although the capital moves to Edo and in later centuries, Edo's both political capital becomes a great production, industrial capital as well. Kyoto remains...

remains the cultural capital of Japan. I think Kyotoites would probably, if you ask them, tell you Kyoto's the real capital. So it maintains a connection with what is still considered to be this really important area of Japan. But certainly, yeah, the movers and shakers of Japan politically after the war, I suppose as well, the Second World War this is, it's

probably Tokyo, maybe Osaka as a big second city where a lot of the jobs are, the media is. So Kyoto maybe becomes thought of as being traditional, yes, but maybe slightly quaint and perhaps not at the real cutting edge of things anymore. So yeah, I think I'd agree Mount Hiei probably suffers to some extent with that association. What I'm taking away from this is a religious element to this whole Sengoku period and this unification of Japan that I hadn't really...

picked up on before that this is often about Buddhist sects versus different Buddhist sects versus Christianity and the influence that's coming over with that versus other religious influences and also someone like Nobunaga who's probably a bit of an atheist or agnostic but willing to use these religions where they work for him and destroy them where they don't. Is it fair to think that religion is a fairly significant part of what goes on in Japan in this period?

I think it is certainly in the time of Oda Nobunaga. The fact that he was worried enough about Tendai to send 30,000 monks up there and finish them off, I think tells you something. There's a bit of an irony to it because the founder of Tendai, Saicho, was one of Japan's earliest, I suppose you could say proto-nationalists. So he talked about Daimippon Teikoku, you know, the great Japan or the great Japanese

empire and he wanted people to consider Tendai as part of the buttress for Japan, you know, as a political force in the world. So the fact that his sect ended up, as it were, on the wrong end of this war in the Sengoku period, I think he'd have regarded it as an irony. He might even, perhaps, who knows, have sensed something about Oda Nobunaga and would have said either

let's throw in our lot with him, or as a lot of inglorious participants tend to do in these wars, is hang back and see who looks like getting the upper hand and then throw in your lot with them. Perhaps that's what they'd have done, but very sadly for Tendai and Hiei, the decision was made to go against Nobunaga, and they really paid the price. Yeah, yeah, I mean, that's fascinating because you can see a world in which

Tendai and Nobunaga could have complemented each other. So if Saicho and Nobunaga had sat down, it sounds like they might have had a lot in common and a lot of similar ideas and could have worked together. Whereas you say, instead, you end up in a situation where Tendai is very much the opponent of Nobunaga. Yeah, it's a real shame. I think Saicho, his idea, I think I said...

Dai Nippon Teikoku. Great Japan wasn't the sense of an empire just yet. Great Japan, it means. He had a really strong sense of both Japan's history and its purpose in the world. This is Saicho. So he talked about Prince Shotoku, this legendary, semi-legendary figure from the Japanese past, sometimes credited with coming up

with the name of Nihon, Land of the Rising Sun or Root of the Sun for Japan. He talked about that Prince Shoto who was being his own spiritual grandfather. So I think he had a really astute sense of how religion and politics would go together, linked, as you said, with this kind of spiritual double glazing.

I think Oda Nobunaga would not have wanted to share power with anybody and I think you get a sense of that by the way that he treats the shogun in Kyoto when he finally reaches Kyoto. He tries to work with the shogun for a while, builds him a nice castle which is supposed to double as a kind of cage for him

But the minute the Shogun appears to want to develop his own policies and make his own alliances, Nobunaga has him shut down, basically destroys him, sends him off. And I think the Shogun ends his life as a kind of wandering beggar. So there's no sense in which Nobunaga would have shared power. And I suspect he would have thought that Tendai would be difficult people to deal with because there would always be a sense of a parallel relationship.

order going on there and I don't think he could tolerate that yeah yeah maybe I'm wrong then maybe he would have always found an excuse to fall out with Tendai eventually potentially yeah unless Saicho was extremely clever and realized what kind of a person Oda Nobunaga was and would have to be uh making his obeisances that could have worked be a bit humiliating for him but it might have worked and just to end on I I'm asking everybody that I speak to about this

Assassin's Creed puts players back into this world. You can walk through Japan during this period, during its reunification, and witness some of the events and visit some of these key places. If I could put you into an Animus machine and I could send you back to feudal Japan in this period, when and where would you like to go? What would you like to see? That's an interesting one. I think I would like to be...

sat next to Oda Nobunaga with his men on the day when they'd just vanquished one of their great enemies and they had had sake cups made from their skulls, from the tops of their skulls. They lacquered them, I think in silver or gold, perhaps both. They drank out of those cups and told stories and sang songs. I think I would have wanted to be there and sit in the aura

of a man like Oda Nobunaga. Not that I admire him or perhaps respect his attitude to the taking of human life but he must have had something about him and I think to be there with him and soak it up and find out what it was

would be really something. Yeah, that's terrifying. Again, he's an increasingly terrifying man. The more I learn about him, the more terrified I am of him. Even though he can't get me, he can't get me, he can't get me. But yeah, and I mean, talking to you about Mount Hiei has just made me think, you know, that

It must have been an incredible place to visit the mountain itself when it's at its height, when it's this bustling centre of politics and religion, lots of money flowing up and down the mountain and a military force too. It must have been an incredible sight and an incredible feeling to be on that mountain when it was at its peak. I bet, absolutely. And to have all the great and good of Kyoto coming up the mountain for a chance to sit at the feet of these monks and lords.

and learn something. There's, as you say, there's just a sense of the sheer clout that you have at your peak with these people. That must have been quite something. And also these beautiful cavernous temples with the artwork, the gilded statues of the Buddha, the incense wafting around, the chanting of the monks.

I think that would have been, yeah, maybe that would be number two on my list after the sake drinking from skulls in terms of what I might like. I think you'd want to unwind after the sake drinking from skulls experience. You might need a little bit of a mountain retreat to get over that.

Perfect. The combination sounds fabulous. Yeah, wonderful. Well, thank you so much for joining us again, Chris. It's been an absolute pleasure. It's been fascinating to find out more about Hiei and the influence of Tendai and the power that that mountain had for a brief while and also how Oda Nobunaga broke and crushed that power too. So thank you so much for joining us. Thank you for having me.

I hope you've enjoyed this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. In the next episode, I'll continue my special series by examining the politics of samurai and shinobi with Professor Eric Rath. Then, next week, we're returning to the history of the Sengoku era as we relive the epic events of the Battle of Nagashino, when traditional medieval Japanese warfare clashed with modern firearms.

Don't forget to subscribe and follow Echoes of History wherever you get your podcasts. And if you're enjoying it, you can leave us a review too. I'll see you next time among the Echoes of History. Our skin tells a story.

Join me, Holly Frey, and a slate of incredible guests as we are all inspired by their journeys with psoriasis. Along with these uplifting and candid personal histories, we take a step back into the bizarre and occasionally poisonous history of our skin and how we take care of it. Whether you're looking for inspiration on your own skincare journey or are curious about the sometimes strange history of how we treat our skin,

You'll find genuine, empathetic, transformative conversations here on Our Skin. Listen to Our Skin on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.