Career
These battles took place mostly in Kyoto, but also across the Hosokawa family"s holdings, and other territories. In 1473, both Yamana and Hosokawa died, but Ōuchi refused to lay down his arms until the Shogunal succession was decided. He even refused a direct order from the Shogun himself.
Finally in 1475, after most other daimyo had submitted to the Shogun"s rule, Ōuchi did the same, and returned to his home in Kyoto.
There, he destroyed his own home, and possibly the Shogun"s Nijō Palace as well, blaming it on ashigaru in his diary. Ōuchi then left the city, establishing himself in his family"s ancestral domains of Yamaguchi and seeking to recreate the depth of Kyoto culture there.
He decorated his castle lavishly with artwork imported from China and of Korea, as well as Japanese art He also invited a number of famous artists to his home, including Sesshū, who painted the Long Scroll (Chōkan) for him in 1486.