The culture of the Kamakura period was based on the tradition of the national culture of the Heian era and was a mixture of the values of the emerging warriors and peasants. The Kamakura period overwhelmed political and military aspects; however, in terms of culture, it lagged behind the aristocratic culture of long - established tradition. Later, the new culture of unauthorized warrior readers gradually began to overtake the traditional culture.
The characteristic of this age culture was that it first had a commonality. This was because with the relative weakness of public servants and monks around Kyoto, their monopoly culture was open to warriors and peasants and regenerated as a commoner culture. The second was that the culture of samurai began to occur.
At that time, the public culture was so obsessed with tradition that the creative activities of the Heian period were hidden. On the other hand, Muga emphasizes actuality and created a culture full of life. Daedigi Namdaemun's Geumgang Historical Award was a typical example. The period of political upheaval from the end of the Heian period to the beginning of the Kamakura period was a time of great social change. At that time, the sect that formed …show more content…
In 1565, Ashikaga Yoshiteru Shugaku was assassinated by Matsunaga Hishihidea. Daimyo Oda Nobunaga, who was ambitious at this time, Ashikaga, Yoshiteru 's younger brother, was acceded as the 15th Shogun, but Yoshiaki was only a tool or puppet of Oda Nobunaga. Finally, in 1573, the shogunate collapses as Oda expelled Yoshiaki from Kyoto. Early Yoshiaki escaped to Shin-Koku and moved to western Japan in accordance with the Mori clan's suggestion of protecting him. After that, the Ashikaga clan survived to the 16th century, and the Kitsuregawa clan developed into a Daimyo