"Ikko-ikki y sohei en la era Sengoku." Topic
3 Posts
All members in good standing are free to post here. Opinions expressed here are solely those of the posters, and have not been cleared with nor are they endorsed by The Miniatures Page.
Please don't call someone a Nazi unless they really are a Nazi.
For more information, see the TMP FAQ.
Back to the Classical Asian Warfare Message Board Back to the Wargaming en Lengua Espaņola Message Board
Areas of InterestGeneral Ancients Medieval Renaissance
Featured Hobby News Article
Featured Link
Featured Ruleset
Featured Showcase Article
Featured Workbench ArticlePainting a wargaming army is a completely different beast from painting a single miniature for display.
Featured Profile Article
|
Tango01 | 18 Apr 2020 9:57 p.m. PST |
"In 1465, the Enryakuji Temple on Mount Hiei (north of Kyoto) dispatched a Sohei force to destroy the Honganji Temple of Otani (in Kyoto). The Honganji was reduced to ashes, and the monshu (priest / supreme abbot) Rennyo had to flee, being pursued by the Enryakuji's forces. Enryakuji, which at the peak of its power could have close to 3,000 affiliated temples, was one of the most powerful temples / monasteries of the orthodox Tendai Buddhist school. For his part, the Honganji belonged to the Jodo Shinshu Buddhist School. The official motive for the attack on Honganji was that the "populist" school disrupted the country's and social order. Deep down, it seems that the large increase in followers of the Honganji, thanks to the intense work of Rennyo, a charismatic revitalizer of Jodo Shinshu, threatened some of the sources of financing for the Enryakuji in the areas near Kyoto. The accusations do not appear to have greatly impressed another of the large Tendai sects, that of the Miidera temple, which offered to host the relics of Shinran (founder of the Jodo Shinshu) while Rennyo escaped; Of course, Miidera and Enryakuji were traditional arch-rivals, and Miidera himself had been burned up to 4 times in the 11th century by the Sohei of Enryakuji…" OT From here link Amicalement Armand
|
Costanzo1 | 20 Apr 2020 2:32 a.m. PST |
|
Tango01 | 20 Apr 2020 11:57 a.m. PST |
Glad you enjoyed it my friend!. (smile) Amicalement Armand |
|