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HIS 105 Chapter 9. Japan: Early History to 1467. Japan. East of China 4 main islands and other smaller ones Formed by volcanic eruptions Mountainous Only small area good for agriculture Wet rice is the staple crop. Japan. Poor in natural resources
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HIS 105Chapter 9 Japan: Early History to 1467
Japan • East of China • 4 main islands and other smaller ones • Formed by volcanic eruptions • Mountainous • Only small area good for agriculture • Wet rice is the staple crop
Poor in natural resources • Beauty of their islands reflected in their art, architecture, and religion • Ancestors of the Japanese migrated to the islands about 5000 B.C.E. probably from Polynesia and S.E. Asia
Jomon Culture • Migrants • Present 8000 – 300 B.C.E. • Hunter/gatherers • Distinctive cord pattern pottery
Many other settlers came in from Korea and Manchuria and blended into a homogeneous society with a distinctive language, culture, and appearance • They drove the previous inhabitants, the Ainus, north where only a few exist today
Yayoi Culture (300 B.C.E – 300 C.E.) • Wet rice introduced from Asian mainland • Had wheel-turned pottery • Had bronze ware (bells) • Divided into clans • Households were matriarchal • Had a clan deity and rigid social classes • Women had strong position in society: • Shamans • Empresses
Yamato State ( 300 – 600 C.E.) • Gained dominance over other clans • Imperial cult developed around the sun goddess (land of the rising sun) and Shintoism • 4th century- Yamato controlled southern islands and parts of Korea • Had contact with China through trade and migrants
Introduction of Chinese script made it possible for Japanese to learn from Chinese texts • Buddhism introduced in the 6th century and existed side-by-side with Shintoism • Shintoism • Animistic worship of the forces of nature • It included a great leader could be worshiped after death
Mt. Fuji was holy • Each clan had a nature as its personal deity • Emperors seen as descendents of sun goddess so were living gods
7th century – Yamato tried to style government after Chinese model • This ushered in a 2nd major turning point for Japanese – the spread of Chinese culture • Took place from 7th to 12th centuries • Occurred in 3 stages: • Learning about China • Introducing Chinese institutions • Trying to make Chinese ways Japanese ways
Japan remained politically independent but heavily influenced by China • Many copied ways , in the end, did not work in Japan: • Government became to heavy • Landlords resisted changes to more central control • Many Chinese laws made no sense in Japan
There was a rising opposition to outside influences • However, a distinctive Japanese culture resulted
Change in Capitals • New capital established at Nara in 710 styled after the Chinese • In 794, the capital moved to Heian (Kyoto) • Much later the capital moved to Edo or Tokyo in 1869 • All capitals were laid out quite elaborately and those in government lived luxuriously
Peasants lived in pit houses in small villages • They worked on paddy rice farms • Used slash and burn techniques when preparing land for cultivation • There were also Buddhist temples
Heian rulers followed both Shintoism and Confucius • Japanese believed they had only one dynasty in their history – all were descendents of the sun goddess
Heian Rulers • By 12th century • All land belonged to the emperor • It was redistributed every 6 years • Taxes were levied on people, not land Things were all very stable until the end of Heian rule when taxes were placed on grain and landholdings became hereditary
Samurai • 792, the court began to rely on mounted warriors • They became the official troops of the emperor • They did not pay taxes • They were known as the samurai from the word samurau meaning “ to serve “
They were the military of Japan until the 15th and 16th centuries when the “ foot soldier “ came into practice • Samurai paid for their own equipment and training, so many came from rich families • They were to preserve local order and to help collect taxes
Government • Slowly changed from Chinese model in 9th century • New agencies emerged • Audit officers who tried to keep an eye on revenues • Bureau of Archivists who recorded imperial decrees • Police Commissioners who were responsible for law and order
The Court • Emperor • Had the power to appoint • Some families gained great influence through marriage to the emperor: the Fujiwara family • Emperor Shirakawa believed an emperor should govern and he did from 1072-1086; then he stepped down but continued to rule for another 43 years • Other emperors followed his example
Culture • In Nara and early Heian Japan, culture was based in Shintoism and in village folkways • Court culture was still based in Chinese ways and teachings • Those in the court would read and write in Chinese and felt those who couldn’t were beneath them • 760 – Japanese began writing their own stories in Japanese for a change • Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves
Chinese characters were used as phonetic symbols in that book of 4,516 poems • In 951 – a new alphabet or script, kana, was introduced for the Japanese • Many of the great writings during the Heian period were done by women • Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu in 1010 was the world’s first novel • showed sensitivity, character development, and life
Buddhism • Present in Nara Japan • Mahayana Buddhism • Had monks and monasteries living away from society • Received money from the state • Popular in Japan first because of its rituals, gods, demons, angels, and its art • Later because of its philosophy
Not seen as foreign • Was felt deeply by Japanese • Shintoism was almost absorbed by Buddhism in the late Heian period
Feudal Rule • 1185 – capital was moved to Kyoto and civil rule was replaced by military rule called “tent government” or bakufu • This rule introduced the Shogun who was technically under the emperor • This brought about social reorganization
Taira rule in Kyoto was defeated by Minamoto Yoritomo (1147-1199) in 1185 • It was a national victory • His soldiers were now his vassals • He had military governors in each province and military stewards on former Taira estates • Any money went to the stewards or to Kyoto
This was the start of Feudal Japan • After Yoritomo’s death in 1199, there was chaos • In 1266 Kubla Khan demanded that Japan submit to his rule • He brought in 30,000 troops in 1274, was victorious but then left • 1281- he returned with 140,000 troops in an amphibious operation
It didn’t look good for Japan until the kamikaze (divine winds) hit sinking a good part of the Mongol fleet; the rest turned around and left
Women • Some became prominent like Yoritomo’s widow, Nun Shogun, who ruled after his death • Some became writers • There was that sun goddess connected to the royal family • For a time, women could inherit property • That changed as the warrior state appeared
Ashikaga Takauji • 1331 – another emperor felt the emperor should rule • Ashikaga Takauji was sent to put down this emperor’s revolt, but he turned on Kyoto and destroyed the Kamakura government • After the revolt ended in 1336, a multi-state system emerged • Each state was run by a different warrior group
Ashikaka set up his own bakufu with its own organization • Vassals on the land became known as Daimyos owing lyalty to the Shogun
Statistics • 1200 – Japan had 6 million people • 1600 – Japan had 12 million • Better agricultural techniques • New strains of rice • Iron tools • Peasants became self-sufficient • Barter system
By 15th century, military weapons, sake, lumber, vegetable oil salt, sea products were sold • Copper coins and market places appeared and permanent towns
Buddhism • Pure Land Buddhism • Emerged around 10th century • A variety of Japanese Buddhism that said the true teachings of Buddha had been lost and that only faith was necessary for salvation • It remains dominant in Japan today
Zen Buddhism • Included meditation • Monks stressed a return to the “uncluttered mind”, the one with intuitive understanding • The most Chinese of Japanese sects • Religious experience counts more than words • Influenced the arts