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The Sengoku period, spanning roughly from 1467 to 1615, represents one of the most tumultuous and transformative eras in Japanese history, a time when the collapse of central authority unleashed a century and a half of almost continuous warfare that would fundamentally reshape the political, social, and cultural landscape of Japan. This age of warring states began with the dissolution of effective Ashikaga shogunal control and the outbreak of the Onin War, which devastated the imperial capital of Kyoto and demonstrated that the traditional mechanisms of governance could no longer maintain order across the archipelago. The resulting power vacuum created opportunities for regional strongmen, ambitious generals, and innovative leaders to carve out independent domains through military conquest and political maneuvering, ushering in an era of unprecedented social mobility and political experimentation.
The origins of the Sengoku period can be traced to the gradual weakening of Ashikaga authority that had characterized the later Muromachi period, as the shogunate's ability to control the powerful shugo daimyo who governed the provinces steadily eroded throughout the 15th century. The Ashikaga shoguns had never achieved the same level of centralized control as their Kamakura predecessors, relying instead on a complex system of alliances and compromises with regional powerholders who maintained significant autonomy within their domains. This decentralized structure proved increasingly unstable as economic changes, social tensions, and succession disputes created opportunities for ambitious lords to challenge central authority and expand their own power at the expense of their neighbors.