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205:) to quell the revolt. By that time, in Kyoto circulated a rumor that Mitsukane was insane. Whether the rumor had any basis is unclear but, in that case, it may well have been a consequence of his lack of success in defeating the shogunate. He died of natural causes at the age of 32. As his predecessors, he was buried at Kamakura's
99:. This because he realized the importance of the area to control the whole Kantō region. In August of the same year he stayed himself in Southern Mutsu, returning to Kamakura only four months later. This increased immensely the support given by the
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in 1398 at the age of 21 when he died during an epidemic. Like his father, Mitsukane aspired more or less openly to the shogunate and, like him and his successors, failed to obtain it. He died suddenly at the age of 32.
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Papinot, E. (1910). "Historical and
Geographical Dictionary of Japan." 1972 Printing. Charles E. Tuttle Company, Tokyo,
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In 1399, the year after taking power, Mitsukane dispatched his sons
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ruler instead of his son
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Shirakawa family to his brothers, and therefore to himself.
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Deputy). Being the eldest son, he succeeded his father
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378:(in Japanese). Vol. 1, page 169 (1983 ed.).
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442:A History of Japan (3-volume boxed set)
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387:(in Japanese). Tokyo: Chūkō Shinsho.
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469:People of Nanboku-chō-period Japan
440:Sansom, George (January 1, 1977).
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417:. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Ōraisha.
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413:Yasuda, Motohisa, ed. (1990).
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320:2007-09-30 at the
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165:In a Shinto prayer
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245:Kantō Kubō
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138:Ōei no Ran
64:Kantō kubō
315:Nengocalc
243:The five
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79:Biography
62:'s third
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37:Ashikaga
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446:ISBN
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132:応永の乱
101:Yūki
311:Ōei
187:Izu
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