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(→‎Trivia: add Logo seen on the shoulders)
Tag: Visual edit
(No - this is the symbol of the Hojo clan, which predates TLoZ by more than 600 years. Undo revision 209965 by Venz412 (talk))
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* Hojo Tokimune carries a [[wikipedia:Katana|katana]] that he draws when denouncing or going to war with a player and sheathes when defeated.
 
* Hojo Tokimune carries a [[wikipedia:Katana|katana]] that he draws when denouncing or going to war with a player and sheathes when defeated.
 
* Hojo Tokimune's leader ability references [[wikipedia:Kamikaze (typhoon)|the two storms that repelled the Mongolian fleets that attacked Japan in 1274 and 1281]], while his leader agenda is named after [[wikipedia:Bushido|the samurai code of conduct]].
 
* Hojo Tokimune's leader ability references [[wikipedia:Kamikaze (typhoon)|the two storms that repelled the Mongolian fleets that attacked Japan in 1274 and 1281]], while his leader agenda is named after [[wikipedia:Bushido|the samurai code of conduct]].
* On the shoulder sides of Hojo is a Triforce logo, from the Legend of Zelda game series.
 
   
 
== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==

Revision as of 02:32, 26 January 2020

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"The only reason a warrior is alive is to fight, and the only reason a warrior fights is to win."
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Hojo Tokimune (5 June 1251 – 20 April 1284) was the eighth shikken of the Kamakura shogunate. He leads the Japanese in Civilization VI.

With Hojo in charge, the "way of the warrior" for Japan is to build a nice, compact coastal empire and mix in religious and cultural development with military advancement.

Intro

The great wave of Buddhism follows you, Shikken of Japan, Hojo Tokimune. Your people truly understand what it is to practice balance, and even your finest samurai will be well-learned and spiritually apt. Be strong, embrace the divine wind, and you will reach enlightenment.

In-Game

Hojo Tokimune's unique agenda is called Bushido. He prefers civilizations with both a strong military and Faith Faith or Culture Culture. He dislikes civilizations with a strong military with weak Faith Faith and Culture Culture.

His leader ability is called Divine Wind. His land units receive +5 Strength Combat Strength in land tiles adjacent to Coast; his naval units receive +5 Strength Combat Strength in shallow water tiles. He also builds Encampment, Holy Site, and Theater Square districts in half the time. In Gathering Storm, besides all of the above bonuses, they are immune to Hurricane damage, and units of civilizations who are at war with Hojo also receive double damage from Hurricanes while in Japanese territory.

Detailed Approach

Japan gets just as good an adjacency bonus from placing Holy Sites and Campuses next to each other as from putting them up against Mountains. So finding good terrain is not a worry for Japan, but instead they can rely on a dense urban layout. Hojo thrives along the coast where his land and naval forces are more effective - watch out for them on water maps! Although they might appear as just a military power, under Hojo's leadership Japan can compete in religion or culture effectively. By the 20th century, their Electronics Factories can kick in and make them a threat to win by culture.

Lines

Hojo Tokimune is voiced by Yoshi Ando. He speaks what appears to be a classical form of Japanese, hence the final n (represented as ん) being transcribed as む (mu).

Voiced

Agenda-based Approval: You build your empire as the Rising Sun: powerful and brilliant. (爾は日出の如く強く輝く帝の國を築かむや。 / Nanji wa Hinode no gotoku tsuyoku kagayaku mikado no kuni o kizukan ya.)

Agenda-based Disapproval: To follow Bushido is to train the mind, the body, and the soul...but where can your people do so? (體、心、魂を鍛へむ者武士道なり。爾の民は、焉にてそれを為さむや。 / Karada, Kokoro, Tamashī o kitaen mono Bushidō nari. Nanji no tami wa, izuku nite sore o nasan ya.)

Attacked: The Divine Wind will protect us and you will fall, like the others. (神風我らを守り、己は嘗ての敵の如く滅亡せるらむ。 / Kamikaze warera o mamori, onore wa katsute no teki no gotoku metsubō seru ran.)

Declares War: I will not allow the Empire to suffer you any longer. The time has come to end this charade! (これまでたり。この愚かなる芝居を終はらせむ! / Koremade tari. Kono orokanaru shibai wo owarasen!)

Defeated: Please end this dishonor to my family...to my people. (北条家たり、我が民の絆をなかけ給ひそ。 / Hōjō ke tari, waga tami no kizuna o na kake tamai so.)
[Note: It seems that he wanted to say not "Hōjō ke tari", but "Hōjō ke yabure tari" (北条家敗れたり). This changes the translation of the line to "House of Hōjō has been defeated. Please do not break bonds of our people."]

Greeting: Hello, I am Hojo Tokimune of Japan, a humble disciple of Bushido. (いかがある。我は日本國の武士道の信仰者、北条時宗。 / Ikaga aru. Ware wa Nihon-koku no bushidō no shinkō-sha, Hōjō Tokimune.

Unvoiced

Delegation: We have sent you a delegation with gifts of yosegi-zukuri, some of our greatest works.

Accepts a Delegation: Your delegation arrived, and we are humbled by your generosity.

Denounced by Player: Empty words are no threat. Show me action, purpose, discipline!

Denounces Player: You are a foolish, simple leader. And your people should know the truth.

Invitation to Capital: I would like to exchange information about our capitals. Ours is as the Pure Land. What is yours like?

Invitation to City: I would be honored if you joined me for the ōban in our nearby city. You do like jellyfish aemono, yes?

Civilopedia entry

Born the eldest son of Tokiyori, fifth shikken (regent) of the Kamakura shogunate and de facto ruler of Japan, Tokimune was from birth acknowledged to be the tokuso (head) of the clan Hojo and rigorously groomed to be his father’s successor. At the not-so-tender age of 18, in 1268 AD he became shikken himself. By the time of his death at the age of 34, Tokimune would have reshaped Japan to its core.

Immediately upon his ascension to shikken-hood, Tokimune was faced with a national crisis. The Mongol emperor of China, Kublai Khan, sent an envoy with the demand that Japan enter into a “tributary relationship” with the Mongols or face invasion and conquest. While many in the Japanese government, including members of the royal family, urged that a compromise be reached, the teen regent defiantly rejected the Mongol demand and sent the emissaries back (in what shape is not recorded).

Four more times the demand was made by Mongol emissaries over the next four years, each time with a similar response from Tokimune. Anticipating Mongol impatience, he dispatched a Japanese force to the southern island of Kyushu to be ready for an invasion. In 1274 it came, as some 25 thousand Mongol and Korean troops seized the small, outlying islands. A divine wind forced the Mongol fleet to return home, and the threat was over … for now.

Despite the invasion, Kublai was a reasonable man, and dispatched five more envoys to negotiate tribute yet again in 1275. They refused to depart without a reply, so Tokimune had them brought to the city of Kamakura and beheaded. In 1279, five more were sent, and they suffered a similar fate. The imperial court, seeing the kana on the wall, ordered all the temples and shrines to begin praying for a victory over the Mongols. Tokimune set about fortifying the shore at likely invasion sites.

In the summer of 1281, a far more serious force than before – reportedly some 140 thousand Mongols and allies in around 4000 ships – arrived offshore and squared off with the entire Japanese army and navy under Tokimune. Defeated in landings on Tsushima and Shikano islands, the Mongols finally gained a foothold on Iki, but later withdrew to the island of Hirato. Three days later, the Japanese attacked the invader’s fleet, causing considerable losses and consternation – enough so that most of the Mongol commanders sailed back to China, leaving about 100 thousand leaderless troops behind. In August came the famed kamikaze (typhoon) that pummeled the Mongol ships for two days, sinking most of them (including the flagship with the Korean admiral aboard). Shortly thereafter Tokimune’s samurai annihilated the 100 thousand.

Japan was saved, never to be threatened again by invasion until the end of the Second World War. Tokimune could turn his attention to other matters … like practicing Zen meditation and building Buddhist shrines and monasteries, such as the one at Engaku-ji as a memorial to those samurai who had died defeating the Mongols. As a teen and young man, he had been an advocate of the Ritsu sect of Buddhism, but converted to Zen at some point before the invasion. So committed to his faith was he that Tokimune on the day of his death “took the tonsure and became a Zen monk” (perhaps a little late to find true enlightenment).

Thanks in part to the victory over the Mongols under Tokimune’s guidance, Zen Buddhism began to spread among the samurai class with some rapidity. Some may have truly believed in the teachings; others likely took it up to curry favor with the shikken. This heretofore trivial faith spread first through Kamakura, the seat of Hojo power, and thence to the imperial capital of Kyoto. Tokimune also linked Zen with the “moral” code of bushido (a modern term for an old philosophy) that stressed frugality, martial arts, loyalty and “honor unto death.” Born from neo-Confucianism, bushido under Tokimune was mixed with elements of Shinto and Zen, adding a dose of wisdom and serenity to the otherwise violent code. Eventually, under the later Tokugawa shogunate, some of these teachings of bushido would be formalized in Japanese feudal law.

Besides dedicating shrines to the samurai who had fallen stemming the Mongol horde, Tokimune began several initiatives to help them in more pragmatic ways, although he died before most were implemented (his son, Sadatoki would finish these). Land grants (shōen) were given to the kyunin (officers) and myoshu (land holders) who had not yet been rewarded, and the land that they had sold or pawned to bring troops would be returned to them without penalty; a special commission tokusei no ontsukai (“agents of virtuous rule”) was to see to the details. Another edict insured that shrine lands that had been pawned would be returned to the Zen monasteries at no cost as an expression of gratitude for the prayers said at the time of the invasions.

But, in the midst of all this largess, Hojo Tokimune died suddenly of an unknown cause after falling ill in 1284 AD. Tokimune had rendered heroic service to Japan, and was idolized for it. But the massive expenditures in fighting off the invasion and spreading Zen weakened the Kanakura shogunate and the Hojo clan (he spent a lot of the family fortune on those shrines), to the point where they would decline and be replaced by the Kenmu Restoration fifty years later and the Ashikaga shogunate shortly after that.

Trivia

Gallery

Videos

CIVILIZATION_VI_-_First_Look-_Japan

CIVILIZATION VI - First Look- Japan

Related achievements

Meiji Restoration
Meiji Restoration
Playing as Japan, have a district with 6 adjacent unpillaged districts.
The Meiji Restoration was when Japan embarked on industrialization after being visited by Europeans with superior technology.
Katsu!
Katsu!
Win a regular game as Hojo Tokimune
Legend has it that Hojo Tokimune, after meditating to deal with cowardice prior to a Mongol invasion, exclaimed this to his master as a show of courage.