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Major Japanese Periods:
Heian Period: 800 CE – 1200 CE
Fragmentation
Tokugawa Period: 1600 - 1850
Meiji
Japanese Periods
Heian period: 794 – 1185 CE
Kamakura Shogunate: 1185 – 1333 CE
Fragmentation (weak shogunate): 1333 - 1603 CE
Tokugawa Shogunate: 1603 - 1868 CE
Meiji Japan: 1868 – 1945 CE
Current government: 1945 - Today
600 CE – 1450 CE
Early Japan
• Early Japan = organized around family-based clans that controlled
certain regions
• Each family descended from a different common ancestor
• Each clan worshipped this ancestor as a special kami = spirit
• Shinto = belief that kamis live within all people, animals, and nature
Modeling after China
• As these clans began to unify into a Japanese “state”, Japan began
to model itself after China in some ways
• Elements adopted from China:
• Buddhism and Confucianism
• Chinese-style court rituals and court rankings
• Chinese calendar
• Chinese-based taxation systems
• Chinese-style law codes and government departments
• Chinese-style writing system
• Unlike Korea and Vietnam –
Japan is physically separated
from China
• Result = Japan was never
successfully invaded or
conquered by China
• Result = any Chinese cultural
elements adopted by Japan =
100% voluntary
• Result = Japan will retain a
very unique & distinct culture
Modeling after China
Heian Japan
• Heian Period = 800 – 1200
• Capital of Japan = Heian (later
renamed Kyoto)
• Focus of this period = pursuit of
beauty
• Japanese influenced by Chinese art,
literature, calligraphy, poetry, etc.
• Spent hours each day writing
letters and poems
• Rise of literature  ex: The Tale of
Genji
Heian Japan
• In their “search for beauty” during the Heian period,
governmental responsibilities were neglected
• Centralized government broke down
• Emperor lost power
• Gave way to “feudal” Japan
Feudal Japan Hierarchy
Mikado = emperor
Very little power; figurehead
Shoguns = generals and powerful
lords
Most political and military power
Daimyos = local lords
Owned estates
Had private armies
Always fighting each
other
Samurai = warriors
Loose-fitting armor
Fought with swords AND on horseback
with bows & arrows
Peasants  worked on the land; paid heavy taxes;
received protection in return
Code of Bushido =
samurai code of
honor Seppuku =
ritualistic
suicide 
belly-slashing
Japanese Women
• Escaped the more oppressive features of Chinese Confucian culture;
could:
• Inherit property
• Live apart from their husbands
• Get divorced easily
• Remarry if widowed or divorced
1450 - 1750
Japan and the Europeans
• When European merchants first
arrived in Japan (1500s)  Japan
= tied down with interior
conflicts between competing
daimyos (feudal lords), each with
his own band of samurai
• Result = it was easy for the
Europeans to stay there
• European ideas taken by the
Japanese = shipbuilding skills,
military technology, geographic
knowledge, commercial
opportunities, and religious
ideas
The Tokugawa Shogunate
• 1600 – 1850 = Japan unified and
ruled by the Tokugawa
Shogunate
• Shogun = military ruler
• Emperor at this time = basically
powerless
• Chief task = prevent return of
civil war among the 260 daimyo
• Feudal lords  each with their
own band of samurai
• Shoguns brought peace to Japan
for more than 2 centuries
Lineage of the Tokugawa Shoguns
Tokugawa and the Europeans
• Early 1600s = Japan
unified politically by
military commanders
• Now led by the lead
commander = shogun
• From the Tokugawa clan
• Set up the Tokugawa
Shogunate
• Shoguns began to see
Europeans as a threat to
Japan’s new unity
Tokugawa Ieyasu
Japan and the Europeans
• Result = Japan did the following:
• Expelled Christian missionaries
• Violently suppressed the practice of
Christianity
• Included: Torture and execution of
missionaries and converts
• Forbade Japanese people from travelling
abroad
• Banned European traders from entering
Japan
• Result = Japan became isolated from
the world of European commerce for 2
centuries (1650-1850)
• Maintained trading ties with only China
and Korea
Painting of Japanese authorities
The Tokugawa Background
• System devised to keep the daimyo
in check = “attendance-in-turn”
• Daimyo required to build second
homes in Edo (the capital) and live
there every other year
• When they left for their rural
residences, their families had to stay
behind as hostages
• Daimyo still enjoyed independence in
their own domains  own law codes,
militaries, tax systems, currencies,
etc.
• Japan was peaceful…but not truly
unified
“A Daimyo Paying a State Visit”
Silver and Japan
• Japan put its silver-
generated profits to good
use:
• Shoguns used it to defeat
rival feudal lords and unify
Japan
• Shoguns worked with
merchant class to develop a
market-based economy
• Invested in agricultural and
industrial enterprises
• Protected and renewed
Japan’s dwindling forests
Procession of Japanese shoguns in 17th century
Silver and Japan
• Simultaneously = millions
of families (in 18th century)
took steps to have fewer
children
• Results for Japan = slowing
of population growth;
prevention of ecological
crisis; bustling,
commercialized economy
• Laid the groundwork for
Japan’s Industrial
Revolution in the 19th
century
1750 - 1900
Economic and Urban Changes
• Centuries of peace allowed for
economic growth,
commercialization, and urban
development
• By 1750 = most people in Japan
lived in large towns or cities
• Emerging capitalism  markets
linked urban and rural areas
• Encouragement of education =
produced a very literate
population
Japanese Teahouse during the Edo Period
Economic and Urban Changes
• Merchants = thrived in this
commercial economy
• Had wealth, but no status  still
considered the lowest in society
according to the Confucian
hierarchy
• Many daimyo and samurai =
found it necessary to borrow
money from these “social
inferiors”
• Had high status, but no wealth
Japanese Merchants
Economic and Urban Changes
• Peasants supposed to: devote
themselves to farming, live
simply, and avoid luxuries
• Many peasants ignored this
“law” and moved to the cities
to become artisans or
merchants
• Ignored their “status” and
imitated their superiors 
example: used umbrellas instead
of straw hats in the rain
Japanese Peasants
The Tokugawa Shogunate:
Losing Control
• In addition to these economic
and social changes, other
factors contributed to
Shogunate’s loss of control in
the early 1800s:
• Corrupt and harsh officials
• Severe famine in the 1830s that
the shogunate could not deal
with effectively
• Expressions of frustration from
the poor  peasant uprisings
and urban riots
Japanese Peasant Infantry
American Intrusion of Japan
• Since the early 1600s = Japan had
deliberately limited its contact with
the West
• Expulsion of European missionaries
• Harsh suppression of Christianity
• Japanese forbidden from leaving
• Only 1 port where the Dutch were
allowed to trade
• Early 1800s = European countries
and the U.S. were “knocking on
Japan’s door” to persuade them to
reopen contact with the West
• All were turned away
• Even shipwrecked sailors were jailed
or executed
Nagasaki Bay
Dutch Port during Japanese
Isolationism
American Intrusion of Japan
• 1853 = U.S. Commodore
Matthew Perry “opened” Japan
• Commodore Perry demanded:
• Humane treatment of castaways
• Right of American ships to refuel
and buy supplies
• Opening of Japanese ports for
trade
• He was authorized to use force if
necessary, but Commodore Perry
approached the Japanese with
gifts and a white flag
• War was avoided
Commodore Perry Lands in Japan
American Intrusion of Japan
• Japan agreed to a series of
unequal treaties with the U.S.
and different Western powers
• They knew what happened to
China when it resisted European
demands – did not want that
outcome
• Results of this decision:
• Loss of support for the ruling
shogunate
• Brief civil war
• 1868 = political takeover by a
group of samurai from southern
Japan  called the Meiji
Restoration “Eejanaika”
Dancing on the Eve of the Meiji Restoration
The Meiji Restoration
• Goals of the Meiji Restoration:
• Save Japan from foreign domination
• Transform and modernize Japanese society
by drawing upon Western achievements and
ideas
• This transformation becomes possible
due to:
• No massive violence or destruction in Japan
as in China (Taiping Rebellion)
• Less pressure from Western powers than in
China and the Ottoman Empire
• Japan = less sought after by Europeans because
its location wasn’t very strategic and it didn’t
have as many people or riches
• U.S. ambitions in the Pacific = deflected by the
Civil War and its aftermath
Emperor Meiji
(1867-1912)
Modernization Japanese Style
• First task = true national
unity = required an attack on
the power and privileges of
the daimyo and samurai
• Ended the semi-independent
domains of the daimyo
• Replaced with governors
appointed by and responsible
to the national government
• National government (not
local authorities) now:
collected taxes and raised a
national army Japanese Color Woodblock Print of Meiji
Dignitaries (1877)
Modernization Japanese Style
• Development of a nation-
wide economy
• Dismantling of old Confucian-
based social order with its
special privileges for certain
classes
• All Japanese became legally
equal
• Official missions to Europe
and the U.S. to learn about
the West
A Meeting of Japan, China, and the West
Modernization Japanese Style
• Japan borrowed many ideas from
the West and combined these
foreign elements with Japanese
elements
• Goal = modernize and maintain
unique culture
• Ex: Constitution of 1889 included a
parliament, political parties and
democratic ideals, BUT the
constitution was presented as a
gift from a scared emperor
descended from the Sun Goddess
• Ex: Modern education system
included Confucian principles
The Meiji Emperor Proclaiming the Meiji
Constitution in 1889
Japan’s State-Guided Industrialization Program
• Government set up a
number of enterprises and
later sold them to private
investors
• Used own resources when
industrializing
• Became a major exporter of
textiles and was able to
produce its own
manufactured goods
Painting of a Western-Style Japanese
Factory from the 1880s
Japan’s State-Guided Industrialization Program
•The Japanese
government also:
• Built railroads
• Created a postal system
• Established a national
currency
• Set up a national banking
system Japanese Steam Train (1872)
Social Results of Industrialization
• Many peasant families slid
into poverty  taxed too
much to pay for Japan’s
modernization
• Protests with attacks on
government offices and
bankers’ homes
• Low pay and terrible
working conditions for
factory workers (mainly
women)
Female Workers in a Japanese Bamboo Basket
Factory (1904)
Social Results of Industrialization
• Anarchist and
socialist ideas
developed among
intellectuals
• Efforts to create
unions and organize
strikes  met with
harsh opposition
1900 - Present
Japan’s Experience with Europe
• Very different than China and
the Ottoman Empire
• Did not succumb to Western
domination
• Was able to turn itself into a
powerful, modern, united,
industrialized nation
• Joined the “imperialism
bandwagon” and created its own
East Asian empire
Japan and the World
• Western powers revised the
unequal treaties they had with
Japan
• Anglo-Japanese Treaty (1902) =
acknowledged Japan as an
equal player among the “Great
Powers” of the world
• Became a military competitor
and imperialist power in East
Asia
Japanese Imperialism
• Japan led successful wars
against:
• China (1894-1895) 
gained colonial control of
Taiwan and Korea
• Russia (1904-1905) 
gained a territorial
foothold in Manchuria
• Japan = first Asian state
to defeat a major
European power
Japanese Empire 1942
The Occupation
• 1945 - 1952
• Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP) - General Douglas
MacArthur
• Two main tasks:
• demilitarization
• democratization
Demilitarization
• Purged almost all wartime officers and politicians
• Disbanded almost all militaristic associations and parties
• Prosecuted almost all war criminals
• The issue of Yasukuni Shrine
• Dismantled almost all war industries
The "Peace Clause"
• Article 9 in the 1947 constitution:
• “the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of
the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling
international disputes
• “land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never
be maintained”

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shogans

  • 1. Major Japanese Periods: Heian Period: 800 CE – 1200 CE Fragmentation Tokugawa Period: 1600 - 1850 Meiji Japanese Periods Heian period: 794 – 1185 CE Kamakura Shogunate: 1185 – 1333 CE Fragmentation (weak shogunate): 1333 - 1603 CE Tokugawa Shogunate: 1603 - 1868 CE Meiji Japan: 1868 – 1945 CE Current government: 1945 - Today
  • 2. 600 CE – 1450 CE
  • 3. Early Japan • Early Japan = organized around family-based clans that controlled certain regions • Each family descended from a different common ancestor • Each clan worshipped this ancestor as a special kami = spirit • Shinto = belief that kamis live within all people, animals, and nature
  • 4. Modeling after China • As these clans began to unify into a Japanese “state”, Japan began to model itself after China in some ways • Elements adopted from China: • Buddhism and Confucianism • Chinese-style court rituals and court rankings • Chinese calendar • Chinese-based taxation systems • Chinese-style law codes and government departments • Chinese-style writing system
  • 5. • Unlike Korea and Vietnam – Japan is physically separated from China • Result = Japan was never successfully invaded or conquered by China • Result = any Chinese cultural elements adopted by Japan = 100% voluntary • Result = Japan will retain a very unique & distinct culture Modeling after China
  • 6. Heian Japan • Heian Period = 800 – 1200 • Capital of Japan = Heian (later renamed Kyoto) • Focus of this period = pursuit of beauty • Japanese influenced by Chinese art, literature, calligraphy, poetry, etc. • Spent hours each day writing letters and poems • Rise of literature  ex: The Tale of Genji
  • 7. Heian Japan • In their “search for beauty” during the Heian period, governmental responsibilities were neglected • Centralized government broke down • Emperor lost power • Gave way to “feudal” Japan
  • 8. Feudal Japan Hierarchy Mikado = emperor Very little power; figurehead Shoguns = generals and powerful lords Most political and military power Daimyos = local lords Owned estates Had private armies Always fighting each other Samurai = warriors Loose-fitting armor Fought with swords AND on horseback with bows & arrows Peasants  worked on the land; paid heavy taxes; received protection in return Code of Bushido = samurai code of honor Seppuku = ritualistic suicide  belly-slashing
  • 9. Japanese Women • Escaped the more oppressive features of Chinese Confucian culture; could: • Inherit property • Live apart from their husbands • Get divorced easily • Remarry if widowed or divorced
  • 11. Japan and the Europeans • When European merchants first arrived in Japan (1500s)  Japan = tied down with interior conflicts between competing daimyos (feudal lords), each with his own band of samurai • Result = it was easy for the Europeans to stay there • European ideas taken by the Japanese = shipbuilding skills, military technology, geographic knowledge, commercial opportunities, and religious ideas
  • 12. The Tokugawa Shogunate • 1600 – 1850 = Japan unified and ruled by the Tokugawa Shogunate • Shogun = military ruler • Emperor at this time = basically powerless • Chief task = prevent return of civil war among the 260 daimyo • Feudal lords  each with their own band of samurai • Shoguns brought peace to Japan for more than 2 centuries Lineage of the Tokugawa Shoguns
  • 13. Tokugawa and the Europeans • Early 1600s = Japan unified politically by military commanders • Now led by the lead commander = shogun • From the Tokugawa clan • Set up the Tokugawa Shogunate • Shoguns began to see Europeans as a threat to Japan’s new unity Tokugawa Ieyasu
  • 14. Japan and the Europeans • Result = Japan did the following: • Expelled Christian missionaries • Violently suppressed the practice of Christianity • Included: Torture and execution of missionaries and converts • Forbade Japanese people from travelling abroad • Banned European traders from entering Japan • Result = Japan became isolated from the world of European commerce for 2 centuries (1650-1850) • Maintained trading ties with only China and Korea Painting of Japanese authorities
  • 15. The Tokugawa Background • System devised to keep the daimyo in check = “attendance-in-turn” • Daimyo required to build second homes in Edo (the capital) and live there every other year • When they left for their rural residences, their families had to stay behind as hostages • Daimyo still enjoyed independence in their own domains  own law codes, militaries, tax systems, currencies, etc. • Japan was peaceful…but not truly unified “A Daimyo Paying a State Visit”
  • 16. Silver and Japan • Japan put its silver- generated profits to good use: • Shoguns used it to defeat rival feudal lords and unify Japan • Shoguns worked with merchant class to develop a market-based economy • Invested in agricultural and industrial enterprises • Protected and renewed Japan’s dwindling forests Procession of Japanese shoguns in 17th century
  • 17. Silver and Japan • Simultaneously = millions of families (in 18th century) took steps to have fewer children • Results for Japan = slowing of population growth; prevention of ecological crisis; bustling, commercialized economy • Laid the groundwork for Japan’s Industrial Revolution in the 19th century
  • 19. Economic and Urban Changes • Centuries of peace allowed for economic growth, commercialization, and urban development • By 1750 = most people in Japan lived in large towns or cities • Emerging capitalism  markets linked urban and rural areas • Encouragement of education = produced a very literate population Japanese Teahouse during the Edo Period
  • 20. Economic and Urban Changes • Merchants = thrived in this commercial economy • Had wealth, but no status  still considered the lowest in society according to the Confucian hierarchy • Many daimyo and samurai = found it necessary to borrow money from these “social inferiors” • Had high status, but no wealth Japanese Merchants
  • 21. Economic and Urban Changes • Peasants supposed to: devote themselves to farming, live simply, and avoid luxuries • Many peasants ignored this “law” and moved to the cities to become artisans or merchants • Ignored their “status” and imitated their superiors  example: used umbrellas instead of straw hats in the rain Japanese Peasants
  • 22. The Tokugawa Shogunate: Losing Control • In addition to these economic and social changes, other factors contributed to Shogunate’s loss of control in the early 1800s: • Corrupt and harsh officials • Severe famine in the 1830s that the shogunate could not deal with effectively • Expressions of frustration from the poor  peasant uprisings and urban riots Japanese Peasant Infantry
  • 23. American Intrusion of Japan • Since the early 1600s = Japan had deliberately limited its contact with the West • Expulsion of European missionaries • Harsh suppression of Christianity • Japanese forbidden from leaving • Only 1 port where the Dutch were allowed to trade • Early 1800s = European countries and the U.S. were “knocking on Japan’s door” to persuade them to reopen contact with the West • All were turned away • Even shipwrecked sailors were jailed or executed Nagasaki Bay Dutch Port during Japanese Isolationism
  • 24. American Intrusion of Japan • 1853 = U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry “opened” Japan • Commodore Perry demanded: • Humane treatment of castaways • Right of American ships to refuel and buy supplies • Opening of Japanese ports for trade • He was authorized to use force if necessary, but Commodore Perry approached the Japanese with gifts and a white flag • War was avoided Commodore Perry Lands in Japan
  • 25. American Intrusion of Japan • Japan agreed to a series of unequal treaties with the U.S. and different Western powers • They knew what happened to China when it resisted European demands – did not want that outcome • Results of this decision: • Loss of support for the ruling shogunate • Brief civil war • 1868 = political takeover by a group of samurai from southern Japan  called the Meiji Restoration “Eejanaika” Dancing on the Eve of the Meiji Restoration
  • 26. The Meiji Restoration • Goals of the Meiji Restoration: • Save Japan from foreign domination • Transform and modernize Japanese society by drawing upon Western achievements and ideas • This transformation becomes possible due to: • No massive violence or destruction in Japan as in China (Taiping Rebellion) • Less pressure from Western powers than in China and the Ottoman Empire • Japan = less sought after by Europeans because its location wasn’t very strategic and it didn’t have as many people or riches • U.S. ambitions in the Pacific = deflected by the Civil War and its aftermath Emperor Meiji (1867-1912)
  • 27. Modernization Japanese Style • First task = true national unity = required an attack on the power and privileges of the daimyo and samurai • Ended the semi-independent domains of the daimyo • Replaced with governors appointed by and responsible to the national government • National government (not local authorities) now: collected taxes and raised a national army Japanese Color Woodblock Print of Meiji Dignitaries (1877)
  • 28. Modernization Japanese Style • Development of a nation- wide economy • Dismantling of old Confucian- based social order with its special privileges for certain classes • All Japanese became legally equal • Official missions to Europe and the U.S. to learn about the West A Meeting of Japan, China, and the West
  • 29. Modernization Japanese Style • Japan borrowed many ideas from the West and combined these foreign elements with Japanese elements • Goal = modernize and maintain unique culture • Ex: Constitution of 1889 included a parliament, political parties and democratic ideals, BUT the constitution was presented as a gift from a scared emperor descended from the Sun Goddess • Ex: Modern education system included Confucian principles The Meiji Emperor Proclaiming the Meiji Constitution in 1889
  • 30. Japan’s State-Guided Industrialization Program • Government set up a number of enterprises and later sold them to private investors • Used own resources when industrializing • Became a major exporter of textiles and was able to produce its own manufactured goods Painting of a Western-Style Japanese Factory from the 1880s
  • 31. Japan’s State-Guided Industrialization Program •The Japanese government also: • Built railroads • Created a postal system • Established a national currency • Set up a national banking system Japanese Steam Train (1872)
  • 32. Social Results of Industrialization • Many peasant families slid into poverty  taxed too much to pay for Japan’s modernization • Protests with attacks on government offices and bankers’ homes • Low pay and terrible working conditions for factory workers (mainly women) Female Workers in a Japanese Bamboo Basket Factory (1904)
  • 33. Social Results of Industrialization • Anarchist and socialist ideas developed among intellectuals • Efforts to create unions and organize strikes  met with harsh opposition
  • 35. Japan’s Experience with Europe • Very different than China and the Ottoman Empire • Did not succumb to Western domination • Was able to turn itself into a powerful, modern, united, industrialized nation • Joined the “imperialism bandwagon” and created its own East Asian empire
  • 36. Japan and the World • Western powers revised the unequal treaties they had with Japan • Anglo-Japanese Treaty (1902) = acknowledged Japan as an equal player among the “Great Powers” of the world • Became a military competitor and imperialist power in East Asia
  • 37. Japanese Imperialism • Japan led successful wars against: • China (1894-1895)  gained colonial control of Taiwan and Korea • Russia (1904-1905)  gained a territorial foothold in Manchuria • Japan = first Asian state to defeat a major European power
  • 39. The Occupation • 1945 - 1952 • Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP) - General Douglas MacArthur • Two main tasks: • demilitarization • democratization
  • 40. Demilitarization • Purged almost all wartime officers and politicians • Disbanded almost all militaristic associations and parties • Prosecuted almost all war criminals • The issue of Yasukuni Shrine • Dismantled almost all war industries
  • 41. The "Peace Clause" • Article 9 in the 1947 constitution: • “the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes • “land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained”