1 / 19

Japanese History to 1467 AD

Japanese History to 1467 AD. Japanese Origins. Humans: 30,000 BC Pottery: 10,000 BC Jomon style (cords) Pottery: 8,000 Hunter-Gatherer with Horticulture Yayoi Culture: 300 BC --Agriculture, Bronze, Iron From Korea. The Yamato State. 300-600 AD: Rise of Yamato State

mahdis
Download Presentation

Japanese History to 1467 AD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Japanese History to 1467 AD

  2. Japanese Origins • Humans: 30,000 BC • Pottery: 10,000 BC • Jomon style (cords) Pottery: 8,000 • Hunter-Gatherer with Horticulture • Yayoi Culture: 300 BC --Agriculture, Bronze, Iron From Korea

  3. The Yamato State • 300-600 AD: Rise of Yamato State • Regional Aristocrats Pledge to Yamato Plains Great King • Western Honshu and Northern Kyuushu • Extended Family--Uji + He (workers) • Korean Cultural Influence • Confucianism: 513 AD • Buddhism: 538 AD

  4. Religion • Shinto: Way of the Gods • Reverence of Natural Features • Anthropomorphization of Spirits (Kami) • Yamato Clan Goddess --> Ruler of the Kami • Writing + Buddhism Forces Codification of Shinto--Kojiki (680 AD) and Nihon Shoki (720 AD)

  5. Nara (710 to 794 AD) and Heian Japan (795-1185 AD) • Adoption of Chinese Culture • ‘Wa’ to ‘Nihon’ • Taika Reforms (Emperor Temmu, 680s) • Chinese Law Code • Tang Style Government • Land Survey and Census • Creation of Nara (710 AD) • Heian Capital (Kyoto, 794 AD)

  6. Nara and Heian Society • Tiny Super-Rich Elite Live High Life • Most are dirt poor peasants in pit houses • Tiny Government (6,000 govern 4-5 million) • Fujiwara Clan (856 AD - 1068 AD) • Equal Field System: In theory, reallotment every 6 years. In practice, rich monopolize land increasingly

  7. Rise of the Samurai • End of Conscript Armies: 792 AD • Samurai--Mounted Tax-Exempt Warriors • Bow is Primary Weapon • Regional coalitions of Samurai Arise • 1156 AD--Taira Kiyomori seizes the capital

  8. Aristocratic Culture and Buddhism • Aristocrats = under 1/10th of 1% of population • Education Based on Chinese Culture • Japanese Poetry • Rise of Kana phonetic Script • Women Dominate Japanese Literature

  9. Japanese Literary Women • Sei Shonagon (c. 966-1017) • Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon (1001-10 AD) • The Tale of Genji, Murasaki Shikubu, 1010 AD • Aristocratic Culture, Love, Intrigue, and LOTS OF LETTER AND POETRY WRITING

  10. Nara and Heian Buddhism • State Supported Temples • Tendai Sect (805 AD) • Ability to gain enlightenment inherent in all things • The world expresses Dharma • Thus art is a contemplation of dharma • Army of Warrior Monks

  11. Nara and Heian Buddhism (II) • The Shingon Sect • Kukai (774-835 AD) • All Buddhas reflect the COSMIC Buddha • Enlightenment flows from your spirit potential, your Buddha Nature • Shingon = ‘True Word’ or ‘Mantra’ • Esoteric Sect

  12. Early Feudalism / Samurai Rule • Fall of Civilian Rule in 12th century • Bakufu (Tent Government) and Shogun • Kamakura Era (1185-1331 AD) • Minamoto Yoritomo (1147-1199) • Shoguns soon become puppets of Hojo Family • Kamikaze weather defeats Mongols • Is this a Feudal State?

  13. Ashikaga Era (1336-1467 AD) • Emperor Go-Daigo and the Kemmu Restoration (1331-6 AD) • Ashikaga Takuji takes over • Kyoto area Bakufu • Served by regional Daimyos (lords) • Semi-Feudal

  14. The Onin War (1467-77 AD) • Economic Distress + Succession Dispute • Shogunate is now impotent • Daimyos lose control to lesser Daimyos • Spiral of collapse

  15. Agriculture, Commerce, Guilds • Rise of primogeniture weakens women’s position • 1200 AD: 6 million --> 1600 AD: 12 Million • Better farming • Shogunate: Commercialization of Economy

  16. Buddhism • Pure Land Buddhism: FAITH WILL SAVE! • Honen (1133-1212 AD): Faith in Name of Amida Buddha will save • Shinran (1173-1262 AD): Pure Faith will save; rules of monasticism unnecessary • Congregational system • Militarized by 15th century

  17. Nichiren Buddhism • Nichiren (1222-82) and the Lotus Sutra (1st century AD) • All have innate Buddha nature and can achieve enlightenment now • All other forms of Buddhism = WRONG • Emphasis on Ecstatic States and Recitation of Lotus Sutra • Daily religious practice (Gongyo)

  18. Zen Buddhism • From Song Dynasty China • Return to the ‘original mind’ • Experience > Words and Intellectual Argument • Rigid obedience + schedules • Koans: Parables for intuition

  19. The No Play • Musical Theatre; Male Actors in Masks • Chanted words; stylized action • Each performance is unique; actors practice alone but perform together • One Actor, Many Characters • ‘Invisible’ Stage Hands

More Related