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The Tokugawa System
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Japanese pronunciation
a, i, u, e, o
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Japanese pronunciation
a = ă (ah) i = ē, u = oo e = ĕ (eh) o = ō ka, ki, ku, ke, ko ra, ri, ru, re, ro
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Long sounds Ō Ū
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Let’s practice! Tokugawa Ieyasu Fukuzawa Yūkichi Yamakawa Kikue Meiji
Geisha
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Japanese Names Family name comes first, given name second: Tokugawa Ieyasu Tokugawa Hidetada Tokugawa Iemitsu
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OUTLINE From Imperial State to Feudalism Process of Reunification
Systems of Control Rearrangement of domains Alternate Attendance System (sankin kōtai) Sakoku (“Closed Country”) Freezing of the Social Order
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The Imperial State Centralized form of government Headed by an emperor
Imperial capital in Kyoto
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Three Feudal Regimes Kamakura Ashikaga Tokugawa
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Shogun: “barbarian quelling generalissimo”
Bakufu = “tent government”
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What is Feudalism? A political system An economic system
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Warring States Period A century of warfare and disunity (late 15th to late 16th century) Daimyo: feudal lord Samurai: retainer Bushi: warrior
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Oda Nobunaga Began the unification process at the end of the warring states period
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Oda Nobunaga
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Toyotomi Hideyoshi “Sword hunts” to disarm the peasantry
Land surveys determine income from land Defines a daimyo as a lord with 10,000 koku of rice income First to use the “hostage system” (wife and heir) to control loyalty among followers
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Tokugawa Ieyasu
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Tokugawa Ieyasu (1542-1616) Battle of Sekigahara (1600)
Named shogun (1603) Establishes his capital in Edo Bakufu: tent government Shogunate: government of the shogun
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Tokugawa Systems of Control
Rearrangement of domains Alternate Attendance System (sankin kōtai) Sakoku (“Closed Country”) Freezing of the Social Order
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Rearrangement of Domains
Shinpan (Collateral) Fudai (Inner) Tozama (Outer)
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Alternate Attendance Sankin kotai
Daimyo must reside in Edo every other year Wives and children remain in Edo as “hostages” Half of all daimyo are in residence in Edo at any given time
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Daimyo Procession
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Main roads are Nakasendo (naka = middle) Tōkaido (tōkai = eastern ocean) These roads become national highways that promote travel and trade
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Sakoku (Closed Country)
Ban on Christianity Western powers excluded except for the Dutch on Dejima Nagasaki becomes Japan’s “window to the world”
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Freezing the Social Order: the Confucian Status System
Shi (samurai) Nō (peasants) Kō (artisans) Shō (merchants) [Eta]
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Main Philosophical and Religious Traditions
Confucianism (originated in China) Buddhism (originated in India, brought to Japan via China) Shinto (Japan’s indigenous religious tradition)
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Confucianism Supported officially by the bakufu
Emphasized strict hierarchy and maintenance of social order
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Confucian Five Relationships
Ruler/subject Parent/child Older sibling/younger sibling Husband/wife Friend/friend
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Summary: Four Tokugawa Methods of Control
Rearrangement of domains Alternate Attendance System (sankin kōtai) Sakoku (“Closed Country”) Freezing of the Social Order
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Periodization Early Modern Japan Tokugawa Period (feudal) 1600-1868
Meiji Period Taishō Period Shōwa Period Heisei Period
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