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Japan/China SSWH15c, d.

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Presentation on theme: "Japan/China SSWH15c, d."— Presentation transcript:

1 Japan/China SSWH15c, d

2 Japanese Feudalism Feudal warfare swept Japan in the 1400s
Emperor ruled in Heian as rival clans fought for the countryside People pledged loyalty to clans rather than the central government Emperor was just a figurehead of government; real power belonged to the shogun Shogun – supreme military commander

3 Japanese Shogunates Minamoto Yoritomo appointed shogun in 1192
Sets up the Kamakura Shogunate Kamakura Shogunate falls after failed Mongol invasions Oda Nobunaga united central Japan by 1582 by using military force Tokugawa Shogunate established centralized feudalism Led to strict feudal relationships, central authority and economic prosperity Daimyo forced to split time between their homes and the capital of Edo (Tokyo) Daimyos’ families had to live in Edo full-time; allowed shogun power over the whole family Daimyos could not marry or even repair their castles without permission from the shogun

4 Japanese Isolation Tokugawas closed Japan to foreigners and forbade Japanese people to travel outside the country for 200 years. During isolation: Internal commerce expanded and cities grew BUT… Daimyo suffer financial hardship (wealth was in land rather than cash) Samurai lacked money to live as well as urban merchants Merchants resented their place at the bottom of the social ladder Peasants suffered heavy taxes Almost NO ONE was happy with the system of isolationism By the 1800s, shoguns were no longer powerful and corruption was common

5 Japan Opens Up Imperialism (the building of empires) was rampant throughout the rest of the world. Japanese officials feared imperialism would reach Japan Commodore Matthew Perry sails to Tokyo and demands Japan to open up trade with America (1853) Treaty of Kanagawa (1854) – Japanese shogun agrees to open two ports for American ships

6 Meiji Restoration Emperor Mutsuhito comes to power in 1867 and takes the name Meiji (“enlightened rule”) Leads the Meiji Restoration ( ) Strengthened Japan by modernizing, industrializing and learning Western ideas Adopt a German model of government All citizens are equal before the law Emperor still had absolute authority Emperor Meiji

7 Russo-Japanese War As Japan’s military grew, the country’s desire for imperialism increased. Imperialist rivalries developed between China, Russia and Japan with sights on Korea Korea practiced limited isolationism and maintained contact with China and Japan First Sino-Japanese War – Japan defeats China for control of Korea Russo-Japanese War (1905) – Japan defeats Russia in Manchuria First time an Asian country humbled a European country!

8 YOUR ASSIGNMENT: Create a timeline of events using all of the dates listed in this lecture. For each date, describe what happened and why that event was important in Japan’s history. If the event affected Japan’s relationship with Western Powers (Great Britain, France, Russia, the US, etc.), explain the significance of that event. YOUR ASSIGNMENT WILL BE DUE AT THE END OF CLASS. FAILURE TO COMPLETE THIS ASSIGNMENT FULLY BY THE END OF CLASS OR FAILURE TO SUBMIT IT WILL RESULT IN LOSING 10 pts OFF YOUR DAILY ESSENTIALS PARTICIPATION GRADE!!!


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