Shôshi (988-1074) was Michinaga's eldest daughter by his wife Rinshi. Her father plunged her into a political marriage to Emperor Ichijô when she was eleven years old, arranging it so that her brilliant court entrance took place on the same day that her cousin, Empress Teishi, gave birth to a son. These two women, Shôshi and Teishi, are often described as Ichijô's rival empresses, but the rivalry was exclusively a reflection of the political ambitions of the men behind them—Teishi's brother Korechika, and Shôshi's father Michinaga. Regardless of how he felt about his extremely young new empress, there are many indications that the emperor chafed under her father's thumb. Still, Michinaga did everything in his power to entice Ichijô to favor his daughter. To that end he furnished her apartments with the most splendid and lavish works of art, and invited ladies with literary reputations to join her salon—including, most famously, Murasaki Shikibu, whose tales of Genji were the talk of the court. What better way to lure the emperor than by spinning tales that intrigued and entertained like those of Scheherezade? The more time the emperor spent in Shôshi's apartments, the more likely it was that Michinaga would eventually be rewarded with an imperial grandson. And thus it happened, although it was nine years before Shôshi became pregnant.