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| Chūnagon | |
|---|---|
| Name | Chūnagon |
| Native name | 中納言 |
| Formation | Asuka period |
| Jurisdiction | Imperial Court of Japan |
| Type | Court counsellor |
Chūnagon is a classical court rank and office within the Imperial Court of Japan, originating in the Asuka and Nara periods and formalized under the ritsuryō codes. It functioned as a mid-level councillorship between senior ministers and lower officials at the Heian period court, and persisted with modifications through the Kamakura period, Muromachi period, and into the early Edo period. The office appears in chronicles such as the Nihon Shoki and the Shoku Nihongi, and is discussed in legal compendia including the Yōrō Code and administrative manuals like the Engishiki.
The establishment of the office aligns with reforms modeled on Tang dynasty institutions during the Taika Reform, with courtiers adopting ranks similar to those of Chang'an bureaucracy and the Ritsuryō system. Early holders are recorded in the Kojiki-era genealogies and the Seven-Branched Sword era elite lists; prominence increased during the Nara period when the Dajō-daijin and Sadaijin offices expanded their staffs. The Heian consolidation of court culture at Heian-kyō saw Chūnagon become a stable component of the Daijō-kan apparatus, interacting frequently with ministers like the Udaijin and offices such as the Kurōdo-dokoro and Shikibukai. During the Kamakura shogunate the role adapted under military rule, intersecting with families like the Fujiwara clan, Taira clan, and later the Minamoto clan. In the Meiji Restoration reforms many classical offices, including Chūnagon, were abolished or transformed into modern equivalents under the Daijō-kan Seido reorganization and the creation of the Kazoku peerage.
Chūnagons served as intermediaries between the principal ministers—Daijō-daijin, Sadaijin, Udaijin—and departmental heads such as the Hyōbu-shō, Jibu-shō, Osaragi no Kōri administrators, and the Shikibu-shō. They participated in council deliberations recorded in court diaries like the Midō Kanpakuki and Honchō Seiki, drafted edicts, supervised protocols for ceremonies at Kōfuku-ji and Tōdai-ji, and managed petitions directed to the Emperor and regents such as the Sesshō and Kampaku. In wartime or during crises noted in the Gempei War or Jōkyū War, Chūnagon liaised with military governors like the Shugo and with provincial governors from houses such as the Taira of Ise.
Within the Daijō-kan hierarchy Chūnagon ranked below the Dainagon and above the Sangi, with multiple grades sometimes existing concurrently. The office fit into the broader court nobility system dominated by lineages including the Fujiwara clan, Minamoto clan, Taira clan, Abe clan, and Tachibana clan. Chūnagons attended formal councils alongside holders of the Kugyō titles and collaborated with bureau chiefs from the Ministry of the Center, Ministry of Civil Administration, and the Bureau of Palace Kitchens. Documents such as the Rokuhara Tandai reports and the Gukanshō commentary reference interactions between Chūnagons and figures like the Kugyō and the Sesshō.
Appointments were typically made by the Emperor or by regents like the Sesshō and Kampaku, often influenced by powerful families such as the Fujiwara no Michinaga line and by warrior houses including the Ashikaga shogunate leadership during later centuries. Promotion to Chūnagon could follow service as Sangi or as provincial governors in provinces like Ōmi Province or Mutsu Province. Tenure varied: some Chūnagons served brief terms recorded in court chronicles like the Nihon Kiryaku, while eminent nobles held the post for decades, as documented in diaries by Fujiwara no Michinaga, Fujiwara no Teika, and Murasaki Shikibu.
Court dress for Chūnagon paralleled protocols for high courtiers described in treatises such as the Eiga Monogatari and illustrated in the Shoso-in collections. Attire included formal robes of the sokutai style, caps like the kanmuri, and rank badges signifying status similar to garments used by Sadaijin and Udaijin. Insignia sometimes incorporated colored cords and regulated garments per the Taihō Code and the Engishiki regulations; ceremonial accoutrements were displayed at events in Kamo Shrine and Ise Grand Shrine rites.
Prominent holders include early nobles found in the Shoku Nihongi annals, and literary figures referenced by Murasaki Shikibu and Sei Shōnagon in the Genji monogatari milieu. Specific names of influential courtiers appear across sources like the Nihon Shoki, Azuma Kagami, and diaries of the Heian court, reflecting connections to families including the Fujiwara and Minamoto. Chūnagons involved in major events are mentioned alongside actors of the Hōgen Rebellion, Heiji Rebellion, and the Gempei War, often interacting with commanders such as Minamoto no Yoritomo and statesmen like Kujō Kanezane.
The office features in classical Japanese literature and performing arts, from references in the Tale of Genji to portrayals in Noh and Kabuki dramas centered on court life and political intrigue. Museums such as the Tokyo National Museum and collections like the Shōsōin treasure house preserve garments and documents illuminating the Chūnagon milieu. Modern scholarship in journals published by institutions such as Kyoto University and the International Research Center for Japanese Studies examines Chūnagon in studies of the Ritsuryō state, aristocratic networks, and the transition to samurai rule during the Kamakura period.
Category:Japanese court titles