1 / 13

Medieval Japan

Medieval Japan. 14.1 Early Japan. Places and People . Vocabulary. Japan Hokkaido Honshu Shikoku Kyushu Jomon Yayoi Jimmu Shotoku. clan constitution animism shrine. Early Japan. Japan’s Geography Chain of islands; Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu

faraji
Télécharger la présentation

Medieval Japan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medieval Japan

  2. 14.1 Early Japan Places and People Vocabulary • Japan • Hokkaido • Honshu • Shikoku • Kyushu • Jomon • Yayoi • Jimmu • Shotoku • clan • constitution • animism • shrine

  3. Early Japan • Japan’s Geography • Chain of islands; Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu • Mountains formed by volcanic eruptions • Very little farmland • Coastal villages were settled with desire to fish for a living • Merchants traveled easy by water for trade • Pacific Ocean isolated Japan from outside influences

  4. The First Settlers • First inhabitants = 30,000-10,000 B.C.; when Asia and Japan were once connected • Nomads developed the Jomon culture about 5000 B.C. • The Yayoi appeared around 300 B.C. – skilled farmers, potters, and metal workers • Yayoi lived in clans; warrior chiefs headed the clans • Yayoi buried their dead in large mounds called kofun • Japanese myth – two gods created Japan, their children were the first Japanese people. • Yamato clan ruled Japan in the A.D. 500’s; Yamato leader Jimmu founded a line of rulers

  5. Prince Shotoku Reforms • Shotoku, Yamato prince, took charge of Japan for empress Suiko. • Created a constitution which set rules for officials based on the ideas of Confucius • Sent officials and students to schools in China • ordered Buddhist temples and monasteries be built in Japan • Horyuji, oldest Buddhist temple, oldest surviving wooden building • The Great Change, A.D. 646, divided Japan into provinces – Gov’t officials were responsible for collecting taxes

  6. What is Shinto? • Animism – all natural things are alive and have spirits. • Kami – nature spirits • Shrines – holy places; place where people worshipped

  7. Shoguns and Samurai People and Places Vocabulary • Heian • Kamakura • MinamotoYoritomo • Ashikaga Takauji • samurai • shogun • daimyo • vassal • feudalism

  8. Nara Japan • Nara Period – time (early 700’s) when the capital was located in Nara, Japan • Emperors organized government into ranks • Government jobs were given to nobles of powerful families – jobs were then passed to official’s son • Census – tax purposes • Buddhism popular during this period

  9. The Rise of the Shogun • Heian – capital city of Japan in 704 (now called Kyoto) • Weak emperors caused a decline in Japan’s government • Powerful noble seized control – built armies of samurai to protect their lands • Bushido – code of conduct – loyalty, courage and honor – samurai • TairavsMinamoto = Gempei War (civil war) • Minamoto clan prevailed and Yoritomo was appointed shogun

  10. Daimyo Divide Japan • Ashikaga named himself shogun after a rebellion against the emperor • Daimyo controlled territories after the shoguns took over – protection by samurai armies created by daimyos • Feudalism developed – vassals gave oath of loyalty • Onin War (1467-1477)– war of Japanese warriors fighting one another for control • Ashikaga shogunate fell in 1567

  11. Life in Japan Vocabulary People and Places • sect • martial arts • meditation • calligraphy • tanka • guild • Kyoto • MurasakiShikibu

  12. Japanese Religion and Culture • Practiced both Shinto and Buddhism • Different sects of Buddhism – Pure Land Buddhism of Mahayana Buddhism, Zen Buddhism of Buddhism from China • Art of the middle ages – wood coated in lacquer, landscape paintings, origami, tea ceremonies • Architecture – Shinto shrines followed Japanese style; Buddhist shrines followed China • Tanka – oldest form of poetry • Noh plays – taught Buddhist beliefs; actors performed in robes and masks

  13. Economy and Society • Most people in Japan remained poor • Farmers – grew rice, wheat, barley, millet; made advances in irrigation • Artisans – made weapons, armor, and tools for merchants to sell; also made pottery, paper, textiles, lacquered items • Families – included grandparents, parents, children – men headed the family; women expected to obey father, husband and sons. • Marriages arranged by parents.

More Related