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Minamoto no Makoto

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Name
  
Minamoto Makoto


Died
  
868 AD

Minamoto no Makoto

Minamoto no Makoto (源 信, 810 – February 13, 868) was the seventh son of the Japanese Emperor Saga, and was the first courtier to be given the name Minamoto. Initially an honorary name given to a number of unrelated courtiers by a number of different Emperors, the Minamoto clan would grow to be an integrated clan family, one of the most powerful and most important in all of Japanese history.

Minamoto no Makoto Minamoto no Makoto Wikipedia

Makoto, also known as Kitabe-daijin, was the brother of Emperor Nimmyō, Minamoto no Tokiwa, and Minamoto no Tōru. He received the name "Minamoto" in 814.

Minamoto no Makoto FileBan Dainagon Ekotoba Minamoto no Makotojpg Wikimedia Commons

Towards the end of his life, in 866, the main gate (Ōtemmon) of the Imperial Palace was destroyed by a fire; in one of the Heian period's more famous events of court intrigues, Makoto was accused by his political rival Tomo no Yoshio of having set the blaze. This came to be known as the "Ōtenmon Conspiracy" (応天門の変, Ōtemmon no Hen); with the help of his powerful connections at court, Makoto was able to successfully argue his innocence. It was later discovered that Ban Tomo set the fire himself.

References

Minamoto no Makoto Wikipedia