Ōchō

Period of Japanese history (1311–1312 CE) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ōchō (応長) was a Japanese era name (年号, nengō; "year name") after Enkyō and before Shōwa. This period spanned 11 months from April 1311 through February 1312.[1] The reigning emperor was Hanazono-tennō (花園天皇).[2]

LocationJapan
Quick facts 応長, Location ...
Ōchō
応長
April 1311  February 1312
Enkyō Shōwa class-skin-invert-image
Kaō (signature) of Emperor Hanazono
LocationJapan
MonarchEmperor Hanazono
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Change of era

  • 1311 Ōchō gannen (応長元年): The new era name was created to mark an event or series of events. The previous era ended and the new one commenced in Enkyō 4. The era name is derived from the Old Book of Tang (10th century AD) and combines the characters ("balanced, fitting, suitable") and ("growing, increasing").

Events of the Ōchō era

Initially, former-Emperor Fushimi administered the court up through the time he took the tonsure as a Buddhist monk,[3] which happened after this nengō ended.[4]

Notes

References

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