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Ch. 7

Ch. 7. Japan and the Two Koreas. Japan. Section 1. Japan’s Land.

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Ch. 7

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  1. Ch. 7 Japan and the Two Koreas

  2. Japan Section 1

  3. Japan’s Land • Japan experiences thousands of earthquakes a year. Because it is along the Ring of Fire, the area around the Pacific Ocean where the earths crust often shifts. People in Japan also have to deal with tsunamis. These huge sea waves, created by undersea earthquakes, cause much destruction along Japan’s Pacific coast. • Japan is an archipelago, or a group of islands, off the coast of eastern Asia between the Sea of Japan (between Japan and Korea) and the Pacific Ocean. Four main islands and thousands of smaller ones make up Japan’s land area. The four largest islands are Hokkaido (northern most island)Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu. • The islands are actually peaks of volcanic mountains. Mount Fuji is the highest peak. Japan is covered by rugged mountains and steep, forested hills. • Tokyo, the capital, lies on the Kanto Plain on Honshu. • Ocean currents and winds affect Japan’s climate. The climate differs in the north and south.

  4. Japan’s Economy • Japan’s industries benefit from a highly skilled workforce. • Japan is an industrial giant. They import raw materials and export manufactured goods. Japan’s modern factories use new technology and robots to make their products quickly and carefully. These products include automobiles and other vehicles. Japan’s factories also produce consumer goods like electronic equipment, watches, small appliances, and calculators. • Farmland is limited. Japan’s farmers use fertilizers and modern machinery to produce high crop yields. They also practice intensive cultivation–they grow crops on every available piece of land. The chief crop is rice. • Japan imports more fish than any other country.

  5. Japan’s History and Government • The Japanese trace their ancestry to various clans, or groups of related families, that lived on the islands as early as the late A.D. 400s. • Japan was ruled by emperors who modeled society on the Chinese way of life. In the 790s, the power of Japanese emperors began to decline. From the late 1100s to the 1860s, Japan was ruled by shoguns, or military leaders, and powerful land-owning warriors known as the samurai. • In the late 1800s, Japanese leaders began to use western ideas to modernize the country. By the 1900s, Japan was the leading military power in Asia.

  6. Japan’s History and Government • During World War II, Japan attacked the United States. Later, by dropping atomic bombs on two of its cities, the United States forced Japan to surrender. One being Hiroshima. • Japan’s democracy is in the form of a constitutional monarchy. The emperor is the official head of state, but elected officials run the government. Voters elect representatives to the national legislature. The political party with the most members chooses a prime minister to lead the government.

  7. Japans’ People and Culture • Although about the size of California, Japan has nearly one-half the population of the entire United States.The four large cities of Tokyo, Yokohama, Nagoya, and Osaka form a megalopolis, or a huge urban area made up of several large cities and communities near them. • Many Japanese practice two religions–Shinto and Buddhism. • Japan’s religions have influenced the country’s arts. Many paintings portray the beauty of nature, often with a few simple brush strokes. Some even include verses of poetry. Haiku is a well-known Japanese form of poetry. • Historical plays in Japanese are called Kabuki. • A popular Japanese sport is sumo, an ancient form of wrestling. • Many Japanese are enthusiastic about baseball.

  8. The Koreas Section 2

  9. Divided Country • The Korean Peninsula juts out from northern China, between the Sea of Japan and the Yellow Sea. Today the peninsula is divided into two nations–Communist North Korea and non-Communist South Korea. • China ruled Korea until the A.D. 300s. From A.D. 668 to 935, a single kingdom called Silla united much of the peninsula. Other dynasties, or ruling families, followed the Silla. • In 1910 Japan conquered Korea and made it a part of the Japanese Empire. The Japanese governed Korea until 1945. • After World War II, troops from the Communist Soviet Union took over the northern half of Korea. American troops occupied the southern half. Korea eventually divided along the 38th parallel. • The government owns and runs the factories and farms. • In 1950 North Korea, hoping to unite the country under communism, attacked South Korea. The United Nations, led by the United States, rushed to support South Korea. The Korean War ended in 1953 without a peace treaty or a victor.

  10. South Korea: the capital is Seoul • Monsoons affect South Korea’s climate. A monsoon is the seasonal wind that blows over Asia for months at a time. During the summer, a monsoon from the south brings hot, humid weather. In the winter a monsoon blows in from the north, bringing cold, dry weather. • Manufacturing and trade dominate the economy. South Korea is a leading exporter of ships, cars, textiles, computers, and electronic appliances. • The major crops are rice, barley, onions, potatoes, cabbage, apples, and tangerines. • The people of the two Koreas belong to the same Korean ethnic group. • Christianity, Buddhism, and Confucianism are South Korea’s major religions.

  11. North Korea • North Korea is slightly larger than South Korea. It is separate from China by the Yalu River. Capital is Pyongyang. • North Korea is economically poor. The North Korean government owns and runs factories and farms. It spends much money on the military. • North Korean farms do not grow enough food to feed the country. • A lack of fertilizer recently produced famines, or severe food shortages.

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