After capturing a great number of manors …
Years: 1580 - 1580
After capturing a great number of manors and temple estates, Nobunaga has established his hold on the samurai and the wealthier farmers by investing them with the newly won estates.
He thus has gained a firm political and economic basis, which he has strengthened by reducing even further the traditional influence of the Buddhist temples.
Once established in Kyoto, he had extended his protection to the Jesuit missionaries and assisted them in building a church in the capital and a seminary in Azuchi.
He does so not only because of his interest in European culture but because he regards the encouragement of Christianity as a further means of restraining the influence of the Buddhist temples.
As a nonbeliever, Nobunaga’s attitude toward Christianity is frankly political.
Locations
People
Groups
- Buddhists, Zen or Chán
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Protestantism
- Jesuits, or Order of the Society of Jesus
- Japan, Azuchi-Momoyama Period
