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19.3 – Japan Returns to Isolation

19.3 – Japan Returns to Isolation. New Feudalism. 1467: Civil war spins Japan in chaos = violence 1467-1568: “Warring States” period Samurai Daimyo rule states Emperor = figurehead System resembles Europe Castles, serfs , local armies, tribute, etc. New Leaders.

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19.3 – Japan Returns to Isolation

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  1. 19.3 – Japan Returns to Isolation

  2. New Feudalism • 1467: Civil war spins Japan in chaos = violence • 1467-1568: “Warring States” period • Samurai Daimyo rule states • Emperor = figurehead • System resembles Europe • Castles, serfs, local armies, tribute, etc.

  3. New Leaders • Oda Nobunaga – seizes Kyoto in 1568 • Works to eliminate rivals & Buddhist monasteries • First to effectively use firearms • Commits seppuku (suicide) in 1582 • Toyotomi Hideyoshi • Nobunaga’s best general • 1590: Controls most of Japan through force & alliances • 1592: Invades Korea

  4. Tokugawa • 1600: Tokugawa Ieyasu unites Japan • 1693: Becomes Shogun & moves capital to Edo (Tokyo) • Rebellion still prevalent; daimyo must spend time between Edo & homes • Policy brings back central government • Founds Tokugawa Shogunate (lasts until 1867)

  5. Tokugawa Society • Tokugawa shoguns bring stability & prosperity • Wealth, food, & population rise • Structure: • Shogun, daimyo, samurai, peasants, artisans, then merchants • Practice Confucian ideas • Focused on agriculture • Peasants faced heavy taxes • Mid-1700s: Japan shifting to an urban society

  6. Tokugawa Culture • Maintain traditions • Samurai attend nohs • Ceremonial tragic dramas • Paintings of classical literature were popular • New styles of entertainment developed • Haikus were very popular • P. 544

  7. European Contact • Initially, Europeans were welcomed • 1543: Portuguese reach Japan • Introduce many new goods • Tobacco, firearms, etc. • Firearms = completely change of Japan • Many forts constructed to combat cannons

  8. Missionaries • 1549: Christian missionaries arrive • Associated w/ European traders = acceptance • Conversions upset Ieyasu • Bans Christianity in 1612 • 1637: Rebellion put down • Christians held responsible & persecuted • European missionaries exiled or killed • All forced to practice Buddhism

  9. Isolation • Persecution of Christians = control of foreign ideas • 1639: “Closed country policy” • Nagasaki remained open to foreign trade • Only Dutch & Chinese allowed • Trade monopoly for shogunate • Remains closed for nearly 200 years • Japanese forbidden to leave as well

  10. QAR • Which contribution by a daimyo was the most significant and WHY? • What happened during the period of the “warring states?” • What was the structure of society in Tokugawa Japan? • What were the new styles of drama, art, and literature in Tokuagwa Japan?

  11. QAR 5. Why do you think that the emperor has less power than the Shogun? 6. Why did the Japanese policy towards Christians change from acceptance to repression? 7. Do you think that Japan’s closed country policy effectively Western ideas and customs out of Japan?

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