Japan, history of
Copyright - 1993, William B. Hauser, Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.
Modern knowledge about the first peoples to inhabit the
Japanese archipelago has been pieced together from the
findings of archaeologists and anthropologists and from
the myths of ancient Japan. Although the date of the
first human habitation is not known, anthropologists have
identified one of the earliest cultures in Japan as the
Jomon culture, which dates from about 8000 BC. A hunting
and gathering culture, it used stone and bone tools and
made pottery of distinctive design. In the 3d century BC,
Jomon culture was disrupted by a new people, known as
Yayoi, who probably emigrated from continental Asia. They
introduced rice cultivation, primitive weaving, wheel-made
pottery, domesticated horses and cows, and simple iron
tools. Yayoi culture overlaid and fused with the earlier
Jomon culture.
Early historical period
The earliest written Japanese histories, the Kojiki
(Record of Ancient Matters, 712) and the Nihon shoki
(Chronicles of Japan, 720), include legends about the
origins of the Japanese people and attribute the
foundation of the state to a mythological emperor Jimmu in
660 BC. Another legend concerns the empress JINGO (AD
c.169-269), who allegedly conquered Korea. These records
provide more reliable chronicles of Japanese history from
the 5th century.
Yamato Period
Beginning in the 3d or 4th century AD a new culture
appeared--either from within Yayoi society or from the
Asian mainland. Its leaders left massive tombs with
pottery, figurines, armor, jewelry, weapons, and other
evidence that they were mounted warriors with long iron
swords and bows. From this culture emerged rulers from the
Yamato plain in the southern part of the main Japanese
island of Honshu; they claimed descent from the sun
goddess and achieved political unity--apparently in the
mid-4th century. By placing the sun goddess at the head
of the SHINTO deities the hereditary Yamato emperor
reinforced his leadership position. Initially, the
emperors ruled through alliances with other tribal
chieftains, but the latter were gradually subordinated by
a system of court ranking. This development was
influenced by Chinese concepts of statecraft, learned
through Japan's military endeavors in Korea. Japan also
adopted Chinese script, and BUDDHISM was introduced from
Korea about 538.
In the 6th century the centralized control of the Yamato
court began to break down. At the end of the century,
however, the regent Prince SHOTOKU TAISHI reasserted court
authority. He promulgated (604) a 17-article constitution
based on the Chinese political theory of centralized
imperial government, redefining the sovereign's position
in Chinese terms. Imperial authority was further asserted
by the Taika reforms of 646, by which, following Chinese
precedent, all land was claimed by the emperor and an
elaborate taxation system was initiated. In 702 the Taiho
Laws, comprising new civil and penal codes, were
promulgated.
Nara Period
The first permanent capital was built at NARA in 710. In
the following century tribal elites were replaced by a
hereditary court aristocracy, and status became the basis
for official influence. Japan was thus transformed from a
tribal into an aristocratic culture. Court patronage made
Buddhism a major force, which in turn reinforced state
power. Nara was the center not only of government but of
the major Buddhist temples; in 752 the statue of the
Great Buddha (Daibutsu) was dedicated there. Buddhist
priestly intrusion in state affairs provoked a reaction,
however. Finally, Emperor KAMMU (r. 781-806) asserted
imperial independence and established a new capital at
Heian (modern KYOTO) in 794.
Heian and the Fujiwaras
In Heian, safe from Buddhist interference, imperial
authority increased; however, the simplification of
government that accompanied the move to Heian allowed the
Fujiwara family to assert great influence. The Fujiwara
had the privilege of intermarriage with the imperial
house, and many emperors were married to Fujiwara women or
were their sons. Fujiwara men proved capable
administrators, and they used their family ties to
dominate the government. In 858, Fujiwara Yoshifusa
(804-72) had his grandson, the infant Emperor Seiwa,
placed on the throne and made himself regent. Until the
end of the 11th century the Fujiwara used the position of
regent to dominate the emperors, adults as well as
children.
Under imperial patronage two new Buddhist sects emerged in
Heian. Tendai and Shingon, more Japanese in spirit than
earlier Buddhist sects, ended the monopoly of the Nara
Buddhist establishment. A reassertion of tribal, or clan,
authority also accompanied the move to Heian. The
imperial land system established by the Taika reforms
decayed, and land increasingly fell into private hands.
Aristocrats and religious institutions assembled huge
tax-free estates (shoen). Private armies were created,
and a class of rural warriors (SAMURAI) emerged.
Notable among the samurai class were the Taira and
Minamoto families. Initially local military leaders, both
clans were drawn into court politics. In 1156 they
applied military force to settle a court dispute, and a
war in 1159-60 left the Taira as the effective rulers.
The Taira dominated court politics by force and by marital
ties with the imperial line. In 1180, Taira Kiyomori
placed his grandson Antoku on the throne, briefly reviving
the Fujiwara practice of using the regency to dominate the
government.
The Shogunates
In 1180 the Minamoto revolted against the Taira and in the
Gempei War (1180-85) defeated them and established the
Kamakura shogunate, the first of the military governments
that would rule Japan until 1868. (See SHOGUN.)
Kamakura Period
The shogun Minamoto YORITOMO (r. 1192-99) assigned
military governors and military land stewards to
supplement the civil governors and estate officials.
While establishing military authority, however, Yoritomo
failed to ensure the effective succession of his own
family. His sons were first dominated, then eliminated,
by the Hojo clan, which from 1203 held the position of
shikken (shogunal regent).
After 1221, when the retired emperor Go-Toba failed in his
attempt to overthrow the shogunate, military authority was
increased. Warriors, while largely illiterate and
unskilled in administration, proved effective governors.
The Hojo upheld the military virtues on which the
shogunate had been founded and proved apt successors to
Yoritomo.
In 1274 and 1281 the shogunate was tested by two Mongol
invasions (see MONGOLS). The Japanese warriors, assisted
by storms that came to be described as divine winds
(kamikaze), drove away the invaders. The Kamakura period
was also one of spiritual awakening. Buddhism was
simplified, and new sects--PURE LAND BUDDHISM, True Pure
Land, and Lotus (see NICHIREN)--guaranteed salvation to
all believers.
By the early 14th century, however, political and social
stability were breaking down. In 1334 the Kamakura
shogunate was destroyed when Emperor Go-Daigo reasserted
imperial authority (the Kemmu Restoration). Many powerful
military families such as the Ashikaga flocked to assist
the emperor. He failed to reward them properly, however,
and in 1336 he was driven from Kyoto and replaced by
another puppet emperor. Go-Daigo established a rival court
in Yoshino, and for 56 years there were two imperial
courts.
Ashikaga Period
In 1338, Ashikaga Takauji was made shogun, creating the
Ashikaga shogunate. The Ashikaga reached the height of
their power under the third shogun, Yoshimitsu (r.
1368-94). He controlled the military aspirations of his
subordinates and ended (1392) the schism within the
imperial house.
The shogunate rested on an alliance with local military
leaders (shugo), who gradually became powerful regional
rulers. The great shugo, however, became increasingly
involved in the politics of the shogunate, and by the
mid-15th century many had lost control of their provincial
bases. Their weakness became apparent in the Onin War of
1467-77. Beginning as a dispute over the shogunal
succession, it turned into a general civil war in which
the great shugo exhausted themselves fighting in and
around Kyoto, while the provinces fell into the hands of
other shugo and eventually under the control of new lords
called daimyo. The war effectively destroyed Ashikaga
authority. The shogun Yoshimasa (r. 1440-73) simply
turned his back on the troubles; he retired (1473) to his
estate on the outskirts of Kyoto, where he built the
Silver Pavilion (Ginkaku) and became the patron of a
remarkable artistic flowering.
The Onin War marked the beginning of a century of warfare
called the "Epoch of the Warring Country." In the
provinces new feudal lords, the daimyo, arose.
Independent of imperial or shogunal authority, their power
was based on military strength. They defined their domains
as the area that could be defended from military rivals.
Ties were fixed by vassalage, and land holdings were
guaranteed in return for military service. The daimyo
concentrated their vassals in castle towns and left the
villagers to administer themselves and pay taxes. The
castle towns became market and handicraft industrial
centers, and a new style of urban life began to develop.
This was the Japan found by the Europeans who began to
visit the country after 1543. The Portuguese began trade
in 1545, and in 1549 the Jesuit missionary Saint FRANCIS
XAVIER introduced Roman Catholicism. Christianity
conflicted with feudal loyalties, however, and was
completely banned after 1639. At that point all
Europeans, except the Dutch, were also excluded from Japan.
Period of Unification
Between 1560 and 1600, Japan was reunified by a succession
of three great daimyo: Oda NOBUNAGA, Toyotomi HIDEYOSHI,
and Tokugawa IEYASU. Nobunaga began the military process
in 1560 and by 1568 had extended his influence to Kyoto.
He set up a puppet shogun and established control over
central Japan. After Nobunaga's death (1582) during a
rebellion, Hideyoshi continued the military unification of
the country, completing the process in 1590. The use of
firearms (supplied initially by the Europeans), the
construction of fortified castles, the disarmament of the
peasants, and a major land survey were the chief tools of
pacification. When Hideyoshi died in 1598, centralized
authority was secure, and the warrior class had been
segregated from other members of society.
The third great unifier, Tokugawa Ieyasu, was a military
leader who emerged as the guarantor of Hideyoshi's young
heir, Hideyori. In 1600, Ieyasu defeated his military
rivals at Sekigahara and asserted his predominance. He
was appointed shogun in 1603, but in 1605 he turned that
office over to his son and devoted the rest of his life to
consolidating Tokugawa control. In 1615, Hideyori was
attacked and finally eliminated, and when Ieyasu died the
following year, the Tokugawa held unchallenged feudal
supremacy over the whole country.
Tokugawa Period
From their castle town of Edo (modern TOKYO), the TOKUGAWA
ruled Japan as shoguns until 1867. A careful distribution
of land among their vassal daimyo, relatives, and outside
daimyo ensured their control of the major cities--Kyoto,
OSAKA, and NAGASAKI--and the chief mines. Thus they
controlled the main economic centers and strategic
military points, while unrelated daimyo administered some
250 autonomous domains. The daimyo spent half their time
in Edo attending the shogun and left their families as
hostages when they returned to their domains.
The Tokugawa period saw the flowering of urban culture and
a monetized commodity economy. Edo had a population of
over 1 million, and both Kyoto and Osaka had more than
400,000 people. The samurai stood at the top of a legally
established four-class system. From illiterate warriors
they were transformed into military bureaucrats who served
both the shogunal and daimyo governments. Below them were
the peasants, artisans, and merchants. Although despised,
merchants became essential to urban life. A national
market system developed for textiles, food products,
handicrafts, books, and other goods. Osaka was the center
of the national rice market, where daimyo exchanged their
rice for cash to support their Edo residences and the
traveling back and forth to their domains. After 1639 the
Tokugawa pursued a policy of almost total seclusion from
the outside world. Nagasaki, where the Chinese and the
Dutch were allowed trading quarters (the Dutch on an
offshore island), was the only point of contact with
foreign countries.
By the 19th century considerable ferment existed in
Japanese society. Peasant uprisings had become
commonplace, and the samurai and even the daimyo were
badly indebted to the merchant class. Thus the old
socioeconomic system had virtually collapsed, while the
shogunal government displayed increasing extravagance and
inefficiency. In the early 1840s the national government
attempted a series of reforms to improve economic
conditions, but they were largely ineffectual. The
shogunate, therefore, was already in a discredited
position when U.S. Commodore Matthew PERRY forced Japan to
abandon its seclusionist policy in 1854.
With the arrival of Perry's ships the Tokugawa shogun
turned to the daimyo for advice and thereby undermined
shogunal control over foreign policy. The imperial house,
long excluded from politics, was drawn into the
controversy, and the slogan "revere the emperor, expel the
barbarians" was soon heard in the expanding political
debate. In 1858 the shogun signed disadvantageous
commercial treaties with the United States and several
European countries. Tokugawa leadership was questioned,
and numerous samurai attacks were made on the foreigners
now allowed to enter Japan. By 1864 most activists
realized that the foreigners' military power prevented
their exclusion, and they turned against the Tokugawa
instead. Samurai from the domains of Satsuma, Choshu,
Tosa, and Hizen played major roles in pushing for
reforms. In 1867 they finally forced the resignation of
the shogun, and imperial government was restored under the
young Meiji emperor in 1868 (see MEIJI RESTORATION).
Modern Japan
The Meiji Period
In less than half a century Japan was transformed from a
secluded feudal society into an industrialized world
power. During the Meiji period, corresponding to the reign
(1868-1912) of Emperor Meiji, centralized bureaucracy
replaced the balance of power between the Tokugawa and the
autonomous domains. A conscript army replaced the
military authority of the samurai. Restrictions on
residence and employment were abolished, and people
flocked to Edo, now renamed Tokyo and adopted as the
imperial capital. The government imported foreign
advisors and technology for industrial, commercial, and
educational purposes. Official missions were sent to
examine modern Western societies. Adopting the slogan
"rich country, strong army," Japan determined to gain a
position of equality with the West.
Government stability was crucial to this objective. In
1873 a new tax system provided a secure revenue base and
abolished the feudal land system. In 1877 the conscript
army defeated a major samurai revolt led by SAIGO
TAKAMORI, a leading figure in the imperial restoration.
Inflation reduced the value of government revenues, and
between 1881 and 1885 a rigorous deflation policy
initiated by MATSUKATA MASAYOSHI stabilized the currency.
Education was basic to Japan's emergence. Beginning with
40 percent male and 15 percent female literacy, the Meiji
government required primary education for all children and
established (1872) a centralized school system.
In 1881 domestic political pressure forced the
oligarchical government to promise a constitution by 1889
and representative government by 1890. The statesman ITO
HIROBUMI took charge of drafting the new constitution. A
cabinet was established in 1885, a peerage was created,
and in 1889 the constitution was promulgated as a gift
from the emperor.
Japan thus became a constitutional monarchy, with a
bicameral legislature (Diet) composed of a house of peers
and an elected lower house. Suffrage was very limited,
however; only 1 percent of the population was eligible to
vote in the 1890 election. Moreover, the prime minister
and cabinet were responsible only to the emperor, who was
still regarded as a divine figure. Representative
government evolved slowly, but the Diet had some control
of the budget and gradually increased its authority.
Conflict between the Diet and the government leaders
ceased during the SINO-JAPANESE WAR of 1894-95, in which
Japan displayed its military superiority over the Chinese
and secured control of Korea. The victory added to
Japanese prestige, and in 1902, Japan concluded an
alliance with Britain as an equal power.
In 1904-05, Japan and Russia fought over Manchuria and
Korea. Victorious in this RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR, the Japanese
added southern Sakhalin to their empire of Taiwan and the
Ryukyu Islands; and in 1910 they formally annexed Korea.
By 1905, therefore, Japan was a major military power in
East Asia and an industrialized nation. When Japan
entered World War I as an ally of Britain, the strains of
industrialization were apparent in Japanese society.
World War I and the Interwar Years
During World War I, Japan seized several of the German
holdings in East Asia, including Chinese territory on the
Shandong peninsula. When the Chinese demanded its return,
the Japanese government responded with the Twenty-one
Demands of January 1915, forcing Chinese acceptance of
extended Japanese influence in China. In 1917, Japan
extracted further concessions of rights in Manchuria and
Inner Mongolia, setting the stage for its later open
aggression against China.
In 1918, HARA TAKASHI became prime minister in the first
cabinet based on a party majority in the Diet. Although
the political parties were essentially controlled by
business interests (see ZAIBATSU), they were a major step
toward more democratic forms of government--a trend that
was continued by the expansion of the electorate in 1925
to include all males over 25.
Although repressive toward the growing labor movement, the
party governments of the 1920s and after attempted modest
reforms, cutting back the army and enacting some social
legislation. They also pursued a less aggressive foreign
policy than that of prewar Japan. At the WASHINGTON
CONFERENCE of 1921-22, Japan signed a naval arms
limitation treaty that replaced the Anglo-Japanese
alliance and established a balance of power in the
Pacific. In 1930 further naval limitations were agreed to
at the London Naval Conference.
The Japanese military felt, however, that the politicians
were compromising the nation's security and the emperor's
right to supreme command. As the World Depression of the
1930s set in, the discontented began to rally to the cry
of the militarists that the civilian governments were
corrupt and that military expansion and the acquisition of
new markets and sources of raw materials would cure Japan
's economic ills. Right-wing terrorism increased (3 of
Japan's 11 prime ministers between 1918 and 1932 were
assassinated), and in 1931 Japanese officers in Manchuria
acted without government authorization in precipitating
the Mukden Incident and occupying Manchuria. Unable to
stop the army, the civilian government accepted the
establishment of the puppet state of MANCHUKUO in February
1932. Three months later military and civilian
bureaucrats replaced party politicians in leading the
government. From then until August 1945, the succession
of cabinets and the young emperor HIROHITO, who had
succeeded to the throne in 1926, were essentially the
tools of the military extremists.
World War II
Japanese economic and political penetration of northern
China proceeded against minimal Chinese resistance until
1937. In July 1937, however, the Second Sino-Japanese War
began with a clash at the Marco Polo bridge near Beijing
(Peking). By 1940 the Japanese controlled eastern China
and had established a puppet regime at Nanjing (Nanking).
In the same year Japan allied with the Axis powers of
Germany and Italy, which were already at war in Europe.
Having occupied the northern part of French Indochina in
1940, Japanese troops moved into southern Indochina in
July 1941. The United States and Britain reacted to this
move by imposing a total trade embargo on Japan. Faced
with economic strangulation, Japan had the choice of
withdrawing from Indochina, and possibly China, or
continuing its expansion in order to secure oil supplies
from the Dutch East Indies. The latter alternative would
mean war with the United States, and Prime Minister KONOE
FUMIMARO negotiated to avoid that contingency. In October
1941, however, Konoe was replaced by the more militant
Gen. TOJO HIDEKI. On Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese forces
launched simultaneous attacks on PEARL HARBOR in Hawaii,
the Philippines, Hong Kong, and Malaya. The United States
immediately declared war, and WORLD WAR II entered its
worldwide phase.
At first the Japanese forces achieved great success,
conquering the Philippines, the Dutch East Indies, Malaya
and Singapore, and Burma. The tide turned in June 1942,
however, with the defeat of a Japanese fleet by the U.S.
Navy at Midway Island in the Pacific. A war of attrition
now began to force the Japanese back to their home
islands. Japanese merchant shipping was disrupted, and
industrial production declined as industries and cities
were subjected to Allied bombing raids. Shortages of food
and supplies increased along with military defeats. The
atomic bombing of HIROSHIMA and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9
and the Soviet declaration of war on Aug. 8, 1945, were
the final blows. Emperor Hirohito intervened and ordered
the army to surrender unconditionally on Aug. 14, 1945.
Postwar Japan
The Allied occupation, under the command of U.S. Gen.
Douglas MACARTHUR, lasted from 1945 to 1952 and resulted
in political, social, and economic reforms. The emperor
denied his divinity and was placed in a symbolic role.
Government was democratized, and a new constitution with a
bill of rights went into effect in 1947. Women received
the vote and rights to property and divorce. The peerage
was abolished, war criminals punished, and a massive purge
of right-wing extremists (and later of Communists)
conducted. The great zaibatsu concentrations of economic
power were broken up, a major land reform was carried out,
and education was liberalized. Article 9 of the
constitution renounced the right to use force in foreign
policy.
As millions of soldiers and civilians were repatriated
from overseas, the devastated country experienced acute
shortages of food, housing, clothing, and other goods and
services. The government under YOSHIDA SHIGERU worked to
implement reforms and achieve economic recovery. The
outbreak of the Korean War (1950-53) aided that recovery
by increasing Japanese exports. It also prompted the
United States to press for rapid conclusion of a Japanese
peace treaty. In 1951, Japan signed not only a peace
treaty but a mutual defense treaty with the United
States. It resumed full sovereignty in 1952 but continued
to be very much under U.S. protection.
From 1954 until 1972 the Japanese economy expanded
rapidly; the gross national product increased at a rate of
over 10 percent annually. Building on its prewar
industrial base, Japan imported modern technology and
machinery. Factories were replaced, and economic
development was the main focus of national policy.
Central planning helped the government control the
structure of the economy. Labor, resources, and capital
were used where the growth potential was greatest, and by
the early 1970s Japan was the world's largest producer of
ships and a leader in the production of cars, steel, and
electronic equipment.
The 1972 return to Japan of Okinawa, which had been under
U.S. occupation since 1945, signaled the end of Japanese
subordination to the United States. Japan handled the
U.S. rapprochement with Communist China by establishing
its own diplomatic ties with that long-time enemy in
1972. Highly dependent on imported petroleum, Japan also
weathered the crisis caused by Arab cutbacks in oil
exports in the 1970s.
The Liberal-Democrats, the conservative party that has
dominated Japanese politics since 1954, has emphasized
economic growth. Scandals led to the resignations of
Prime Ministers TANAKA KAKUEI (in 1974) and TAKESHITA
NOBORU and Uno Sosuki (in 1989). The party lost its
majority in the upper house of parliament in July 1989,
although it regained control in February 1990 elections
under Prime Minister KAIFU TOSHIKI. In October 1991,
after Kaifu lost the support of Takeshita, he was replaced
as party leader and prime minister by MIYAZAWA KIICHI. The
death of long-reigning Hirohito in January 1989 marked the
end of an era; he was succeeded by his son AKIHITO.
In the 1980's and into the 1990s, Japan played an
increasingly visible role in global affairs, becoming the
world's largest provider of development aid in 1988. It
has been the leading exporter of manufactured goods since
1985. Japan has close links to the United States and
Western Europe and is more dependent on Middle Eastern oil
than any other country. It gave financial aid to the
anti-Iraq coalition in the PERSIAN GULF WAR in 1991. In
1992, Japan agreed to send troops abroad for the first
time since World War II as part of UN peacekeeping
operations.
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