Mongol
Invasions of Japan
The repulsions of two
Mongol invasions were momentous events in Japanese
history. Japanese relations with China had been
terminated in the mid-ninth century after the
deterioration of late Tang China and the turning inward
of the Heian court. Some commercial contacts were
maintained with southern China in later centuries, but
Japanese pirates made the open seas dangerous. At a time
when the bakufu had little interest in foreign
affairs and ignored communications from China and Koryo
(as Korea was then known), news arrived in 1268 of a new
Mongol regime in Beijing. Its leader, Khubilai Khan,
demanded that the Japanese pay tribute to the new Yuan
Dynasty (1279-1368) and threatened reprisals if they
failed to do so. Unused to such threats, Kyoto raised
the diplomatic counter of Japan's divine origin,
rejected the Mongol demands, dismissed the Korean
messengers, and started defensive preparations. After
further unsuccessful entreaties, the first Mongol
invasion took place in 1274. More than 600 ships carried
a combined Mongol, Chinese, and Korean force of 23,000
troops armed with catapults, combustible missiles, and
bows and arrows. In fighting, these soldiers grouped in
close cavalry formations against samurai, who were
accustomed to one-on-one combat. Local Japanese forces
at Hakata, on northern Kyushu, defended against the
superior mainland force, which, after one day of
fighting was decimated by the onslaught of a sudden
typhoon. Khubilai realized that nature, not military
incompetence, had been the cause of his forces' failure
so, in 1281, he launched a second invasion. Seven weeks
of fighting took place in northwestern Kyushu before
another typhoon struck, again destroying the Mongol
fleet.
Although Shinto
priests attributed the two defeats of the Mongols to a
"divine wind" (kamikaze), a sign of heaven's
special protection of Japan, the invasion left a deep
impression on the bakufu leaders. Long-standing
fears of the Chinese threat to Japan were reinforced,
and the Korean Peninsula became regarded as "an
arrow pointed at the heart of Japan." The Japanese
victory, however, gave the bushi a sense of
fighting superiority that remained with Japan's soldiers
until 1945. The victory also convinced the bushi
of the value of the bakufu form of government.
The
Mongol war had been a drain on the economy, and new
taxes had to be levied to maintain defensive
preparations for the future. The invasions also caused
disaffection among those who expected recompense for
their help in defeating the Mongols. There were no lands
or other rewards to be given, however, and such
disaffection, combined with overextension and the
increasing defense costs, led to a decline of the
Kamakura bakufu. Additionally, inheritances had
divided family properties, and landowners increasingly
had to turn to moneylenders for support. Roving bands of
ronin further threatened the stability of the bakufu.
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