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Shogun Avatar: The Worship of Tokugawa Ieyasu in Early Modern Japan Kindle Edition

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Management number 219243494 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price $10.18 Model Number 219243494
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Shogun Avatar explores the transformation of Japan’s first shogun, Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543–1616), from warlord to deity. Although deifications had become largely obsolete, Ieyasu’s death in 1616 triggered a remarkable series of events: He was declared a Shintō god, or Great Bright Kami, but almost immediately the proclamation was revoked, and his body exhumed and relocated. Ieyasu was then re-deified as an avatar, that is, a Shintō god who was also a buddha’s earthly emanation. His new status allowed Ieyasu to be receptive to prayers while drawing on the higher power of Buddhism.Under the supervision of the great Tendai monk Tenkai (1536–1643), a shrine-temple mausoleum befitting the Lord Avatar was constructed at Nikkō, near Edo in eastern Japan. This project revitalized the region following years of civil war and initiated decades of construction that would result in one of the grandest Buddhist complexes in the country. Timon Screech examines the theological foundations, architectural innovations, and artistic achievements of both Ieyasu's original and final burial sites, together with their ritual and ongoing meanings. He traces the political tensions between the shogunate and the Kyoto court that prompted Ieyasu's grandson Tokugawa Iemitsu (1604–1651) to launch Nikkō’s massive reconstruction in 1636. The expanded complex attracted not only worshippers but also crowds of sightseers, establishing a tradition that continues today. Screech follows Nikkō's evolution over 250 years as it became central to shogunal authority and samurai identity. Tokugawa descendants and regional lords established branch shrine-temples throughout Japan to promote worship of the Lord Avatar, seeking his divine guidance during the turbulent later Edo period, when pressures from foreign nations both heightened the need for and challenged the efficacy of his protection.The last shogun surrendered to Imperial Japan in 1868, but Nikkō endures and remains one of Japan’s prime religious sites and visitor destinations. Shogun Avatar reveals how this sacred complex has continuously reinvented its meaning while maintaining its significance across the centuries. Read more

ISBN13 979-8880703746
Language English
Publisher University of Hawaii Press
Print length 376 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Publication date November 30, 2026

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