Date post: | 13-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | cameron-richardson |
View: | 223 times |
Download: | 2 times |
1
The Emergence of Japan
World History
2
Emergence
of Japan
Geography
Early Japan
Nara & Heian Periods
Rise of the Shogun
Social structure & daily life
Religion
3
Geography
Archipelago of 4000 islands (4 main ones) with 12% arable land
146,000 square miles (size of Montana or California)
Few natural resources
Temperate climate, & mountainous; prone to earthquakes, floods, typhoons, & volcanic eruptions
Geographically isolated; ocean/seas provided food and protection (harvest sea urchins)
4
Early Japan
Kyushu 1st island inhabited; tribal society of farmers with an aristocratic classCreation myth – sun goddess call Amaterasu (each emperor claimed to be a descendant)Yamato clan rules Japan (A.D. 400), & emperor is a ceremonial religious figurePrince Shotoku rules Japan (A.D. 593) – writes a constitution & converts to BuddhismCentralized political system & sent missions to China (constant threat)Chinese culture influences Japan: Confucianism, written characters, Buddhism, civil service, and government
5
Nara & Heian Period
Capital moved to Nara (710)Calligraphy, literature (Tale of the Genji – 1st novel), & poetryAristocracy dominates with the Fujiwara clan becoming powerfulCapital moved to Heian (Kyoto) in 794 – becomes the imperial capitalBushi maintained own militaryRise of samurai w/feudalism (lesser nobility and military retainers) - lived by Bushido (w/seppuku) and were loyal military retainers/lesser nobilityTaika reforms - attempt to revamp imperial administration along Chinese lines (eventually rejected)
6
Rise of the ShogunMinamoto Yoritomo becomes 1st shogun (Kamakura) in Tokyo; eventually overthrown after establishing bakufuDecline of imperial power; Mongols invade in 1274 & 1281 (with 150,000); typhoon destroys fleet (twice); “divine wind” or kamikaze protects Japanese peopleGempei Wars (1100s) – peasants vs. samurai & Minamoto vs. Taira; countryside destroyedDaimyo’s (warlords each with a kingdom - #300) power grows; collects taxes for irrigation – have castles or fortresses like in EuropeCivil war (1467-1477); shogunate collapses
7
Social Structure & Daily LifeFarming society; the masses were peasant farmers who became serfs
Merchants and artisan guilds arose (for men and women)
Traded paper, pearls, lumber, gold, painted fans, iron casting, porcelain, silk, books, swords, etc.
Japanese elite enjoyed life of leisure & court ritual
Early art imitated Chinese art, but then became uniquely Japanese (tea ceremony and decorative gardens)
8
Religion
Worshipped nature spirits (animism) or kami - evolves into Shinto
Divinity of the emperor - serves as a figurehead from Kyoto
Buddhism arrives from China (6th cent.) & mixes with Shinto
Most Japanese become Shinto & Buddhist – can be both
Zen Buddhism becomes most popular
9
Korea
Most profoundly influenced by China (& longest)
Descended from hunting & herding peoples of eastern Siberia & Manchuria
Earliest Korean kingdom – Choson in the north
Koguryo people established independent kingdom in north
Kingdoms of Silla and Paekche fight wars w/Koguryo – weakens each other & Tang dynasty conquers (allied w/Silla)
10
KoreaChinese withdraw in 668 – Silla left in power & Korea remains independent until 20th century (off & on)Sinification (adoption of Chinese culture) hits Korea – Buddhism, Chinese writing; also porcelain (celadon) & printing, but became better than ChineseTribute system used by Chinese instead of invasion – Korea sent embassies, kowtowed, offered gifts to Chinese - (ensured peace)Had access to Chinese learning, art , & manufactured goods
11
Vietnam
Conquered by China in 2nd centuryMaintained unique identity & culture – dressed differently, language, village autonomy, nuclear family; women had greater freedom & influence than in ChinaConsidered “barbarians” by ChineseConquered by the Han Chinese – assimilation & diffusion through Chinese troops and administrators (bureaucracy, agriculture, schools, & military)
12
Vietnam
Revolts – Trung sisters in 39 C.E. – women were hostile to Confucian ideals939 C.E. win independence & remains so until the French in 19th century (Mongol & Ming try, but fail)Expansion & division – north vs. south, Nguyen vs. Trinh, defeated Khmer & Cham neighbors