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Edo period

The Edo period (江戸時代, Edo jidai) or Tokugawa period (徳川時代, Tokugawa jidai) is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan, when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country's 300 regional daimyo. Emerging from the chaos of the Sengoku period, the Edo period was characterized by economic growth, strict social order, isolationist foreign policies, a stable population, perpetual peace, and popular enjoyment of arts and culture. The period derives its name from Edo (now Tokyo), where on March 24, 1603, the shogunate was officially established by Tokugawa Ieyasu. The period came to an end with the Meiji Restoration and the Boshin War, which restored imperial rule to Japan.

Consolidation of the shogunate

The Edo period or Tokugawa period is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan, when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country's regional daimyo.[1]

A revolution took place from the time of the Kamakura shogunate, which existed with the Tennō's court, to the Tokugawa, when the samurai became the unchallenged rulers in what historian Edwin O. Reischauer called a "centralized feudal" form of shogunate. Instrumental in the rise of the new bakufu was Tokugawa Ieyasu, the main beneficiary of the achievements of Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi.[2] Already a powerful daimyo (feudal lord), Ieyasu profited by his transfer to the rich Kantō area. He maintained two million koku of land, a new headquarters at Edo, a strategically situated castle town (the future Tokyo), and also had an additional two million koku of land and thirty-eight vassals under his control. After Hideyoshi's death, Ieyasu moved quickly to seize control from the Toyotomi clan.[citation needed]

Ieyasu's victory over the western daimyo at the Battle of Sekigahara (October 21, 1600, or in the Japanese calendar on the 15th day of the ninth month of the fifth year of the Keichō era) gave him control of all Japan. He rapidly abolished numerous enemy daimyo houses, reduced others, such as that of the Toyotomi, and redistributed the spoils of war to his family and allies. Ieyasu still failed to achieve complete control of the western daimyo, but his assumption of the title of shōgun helped consolidate the alliance system. After further strengthening his power base, Ieyasu installed his son Hidetada (1579–1632) as shōgun and himself as retired shōgun in 1605. The Toyotomi were still a significant threat, and Ieyasu devoted the next decade to their eradication. In 1615, the Tokugawa army destroyed the Toyotomi stronghold at Osaka.

The Tokugawa (or Edo) period brought 250 years of stability to Japan. The political system evolved into what historians call bakuhan, a combination of the terms bakufu and han (domains) to describe the government and society of the period.[3] In the bakuhan, the shōgun had national authority and the daimyo had regional authority. This represented a new unity in the feudal structure, which featured an increasingly large bureaucracy to administer the mixture of centralized and decentralized authorities. The Tokugawa became more powerful during their first century of rule: land redistribution gave them nearly seven million koku, control of the most important cities, and a land assessment system reaping great revenues.[citation needed]

The feudal hierarchy was completed by the various classes of daimyo. Closest to the Tokugawa house were the shinpan, or "related houses". They were twenty-three daimyo on the borders of Tokugawa lands, all directly related to Ieyasu. The shinpan held mostly honorary titles and advisory posts in the bakufu. The second class of the hierarchy were the fudai, or "house daimyo", rewarded with lands close to the Tokugawa holdings for their faithful service. By the 18th century, 145 fudai controlled much smaller han, the greatest assessed at 250,000 koku. Members of the fudai class staffed most of the major bakufu offices. Ninety-seven han formed the third group, the tozama (outside vassals), former opponents or new allies. The tozama were located mostly on the peripheries of the archipelago and collectively controlled nearly ten million koku of productive land. Because the tozama were least trusted of the daimyo, they were the most cautiously managed and generously treated, although they were excluded from central government positions.[citation needed]

The Tokugawa shogunate not only consolidated their control over a reunified Japan, they also had unprecedented power over the emperor, the court, all daimyo and the religious orders. The emperor was held up as the ultimate source of political sanction for the shōgun, who ostensibly was the vassal of the imperial family. The Tokugawa helped the imperial family recapture its old glory by rebuilding its palaces and granting it new lands. To ensure a close tie between the imperial clan and the Tokugawa family, Ieyasu's granddaughter was made an imperial consort in 1619.[citation needed]

A code of laws was established to regulate the daimyo houses. The code encompassed private conduct, marriage, dress, types of weapons and numbers of troops allowed; required feudal lords to reside in Edo every other year (the sankin-kōtai system); prohibited the construction of ocean-going ships; proscribed Christianity; restricted castles to one per domain (han) and stipulated that bakufu regulations were the national law. Although the daimyo were not taxed per se, they were regularly levied for contributions for military and logistical support and for such public works projects as castles, roads, bridges and palaces. The various regulations and levies not only strengthened the Tokugawa but also depleted the wealth of the daimyo, thus weakening their threat to the central administration. The han, once military-centered domains, became mere local administrative units. The daimyo did have full administrative control over their territory and their complex systems of retainers, bureaucrats and commoners. Loyalty was exacted from religious foundations, already greatly weakened by Nobunaga and Hideyoshi, through a variety of control mechanisms.[citation needed]

Foreign trade relations

 
The San Juan Bautista is represented in Claude Deruet's painting of Hasekura Tsunenaga in Rome in 1617, as a galleon with Hasekura's flag (red manji on orange background) on the top mast.

Like Hideyoshi, Ieyasu encouraged foreign trade but also was suspicious of outsiders. He wanted to make Edo a major port, but once he learned that the Europeans favored ports in Kyūshū and that China had rejected his plans for official trade, he moved to control existing trade and allowed only certain ports to handle specific kinds of commodities.

 
Bird's-eye view of Nagasaki bay, with the island Dejima at mid-left (1833)

The beginning of the Edo period coincides with the last decades of the Nanban trade period during which intense interaction with European powers, on the economic and religious plane, took place. It is at the beginning of the Edo period that Japan built its first ocean-going warships, such as the San Juan Bautista, a 500-ton galleon-type ship that transported a Japanese embassy headed by Hasekura Tsunenaga to the Americas and then to Europe. Also during that period, the bakufu commissioned around 720 Red Seal Ships, three-masted and armed trade ships, for intra-Asian commerce. Japanese adventurers, such as Yamada Nagamasa, used those ships throughout Asia.

 
Itinerary and dates of the travels of Hasekura Tsunenaga

The "Christian problem" was, in effect, a problem of controlling both the Christian daimyo in Kyūshū and their trade with the Europeans. By 1612, the shōgun's retainers and residents of Tokugawa lands had been ordered to forswear Christianity. More restrictions came in 1616 (the restriction of foreign trade to Nagasaki and Hirado, an island northwest of Kyūshū), 1622 (the execution of 120 missionaries and converts), 1624 (the expulsion of the Spanish), and 1629 (the execution of thousands of Christians). Finally, the Closed Country Edict of 1635 prohibited any Japanese from traveling outside Japan or, if someone left, from ever returning. In 1636, the Dutch were restricted to Dejima, a small artificial island—and thus, not true Japanese soil—in Nagasaki's harbor.

The shogunate perceived Christianity to be an extremely destabilizing factor, and so decided to target it. The Shimabara Rebellion of 1637–1638, in which discontented Catholic samurai and peasants rebelled against the bakufu—and Edo called in Dutch ships to bombard the rebel stronghold—marked the end of the Christian movement. During the Shimabara Rebellion an estimated 37,000 people (mostly Christians) were massacred.[4] In 50 years, the Tokugawa shoguns reduced the amount of Christians to near zero in Japan.[4] However, some Christians survived by going underground, the so-called Kakure Kirishitan. Soon thereafter, the Portuguese were permanently expelled, members of the Portuguese diplomatic mission were executed, all subjects were ordered to register at a Buddhist or Shinto temple, and the Dutch and Chinese were restricted, respectively, to Dejima and to a special quarter in Nagasaki. Besides small trade of some outer daimyo with Korea and the Ryukyu Islands, to the southwest of Japan's main islands, by 1641, foreign contacts were limited by the policy of sakoku to Nagasaki.

The last Jesuit was either killed or reconverted by 1644[5] and by the 1660s, Christianity was almost completely eradicated, and its external political, economic, and religious influence on Japan became quite limited.[6] Only China, the Dutch East India Company, and for a short period, the English, enjoyed the right to visit Japan during this period, for commercial purposes only, and they were restricted to the Dejima port in Nagasaki. Other Europeans who landed on Japanese shores were put to death without trial.

Society

 
The house of the merchant (Fukagawa Edo Museum 2013-10-29 at the Wayback Machine)
 
Social classes during the Edo period (Tokugawa shogunate).

During the Tokugawa period, the social order, based on inherited position rather than personal merits, was rigid and highly formalized. At the top were the emperor and court nobles (kuge), together with the shōgun and daimyo. Below them the population was divided into four classes in a system known as mibunsei (身分制): the samurai on top (about 5% of the population) and the peasants (more than 80% of the population) on the second level. Below the peasants were the craftsmen, and even below them, on the fourth level, were the merchants.[7] Only the peasants lived in the rural areas. Samurai, craftsmen and merchants lived in the cities that were built around daimyo castles, each restricted to their own quarter. Edo society had an elaborate social structure, in which every family knew its place and level of prestige.[8]

At the top were the Emperor and the court nobility, invincible in prestige but weak in power. Next came the shōgun, daimyo and layers of feudal lords whose rank was indicated by their closeness to the Tokugawa. They had power. The daimyo comprised about 250 local lords of local "han" with annual outputs of 50,000 or more bushels of rice. The upper strata was much given to elaborate and expensive rituals, including elegant architecture, landscaped gardens, Noh drama, patronage of the arts, and the tea ceremony.[9]

Then came the 400,000 warriors, called "samurai", in numerous grades and degrees. A few upper samurai were eligible for high office; most were foot soldiers. Since there was very little fighting, they became civil servants paid by the daimyo, with minor duties. The samurai were affiliated with senior lords in a well-established chain of command. The shogun had 17,000 samurai retainers; the daimyo each had hundreds. Most lived in modest homes near their lord's headquarters, and lived off of hereditary rights and stipends. Together these high status groups comprised Japan's ruling class making up about 6% of the total population.

After a long period of inner conflict, the first goal of the newly established Tokugawa government was to pacify the country. It created a balance of power that remained (fairly) stable for the next 250 years, influenced by Confucian principles of social order. Most samurai lost their direct possession of the land: the daimyo took over their land. The samurai had a choice: give up their sword and become peasants, or move to the city of their feudal lord and become a paid retainer. Only a few land samurai remained in the border provinces of the north, or as direct vassals of the shōgun, the 5,000 so-called hatamoto. The daimyo were put under tight control of the shogunate. Their families had to reside in Edo; the daimyo themselves had to reside in Edo for one year and in their province (han) for the next. This system was called sankin-kōtai.[10]

Lower orders divided into two main segments—the peasants—80% of the population—whose high prestige as producers was undercut by their burden as the chief source of taxes. They were illiterate and lived in villages controlled by appointed officials who kept the peace and collected taxes. The family was the smallest legal entity, and the maintenance of family status and privileges was of great importance at all levels of society. The individual had no separate legal rights. The 1711 Gotōke reijō was compiled from over 600 statutes promulgated between 1597 and 1696.[11]

Outside the four classes were the so-called eta and hinin, those whose professions broke the taboos of Buddhism. Eta were butchers, tanners and undertakers. Hinin served as town guards, street cleaners, and executioners. Other outsiders included the beggars, entertainers, and prostitutes. The word eta literally translates to "filthy" and hinin to "non-humans", a thorough reflection of the attitude held by other classes that the eta and hinin were not even people.[12] Hinin were only allowed inside a special quarter of the city. Other persecution of the hinin included disallowing them from wearing robes longer than knee-length and the wearing of hats.[12] Sometimes eta villages were not even printed on official maps. A sub-class of hinin who were born into their social class had no option of mobility to a different social class whereas the other class of hinin who had lost their previous class status could be reinstated in Japanese society.[12] In the 19th century the umbrella term burakumin was coined to name the eta and hinin because both classes were forced to live in separate village neighborhoods.[13] The eta, hinin and burakumin classes were officially abolished in 1871.[12] However, their cultural and societal impact, including some forms of discrimination, continues into modern times.[13]

 
Edo, 1865 or 1866. Photochrom print. Five albumen prints joined to form a panorama. Photographer: Felice Beato.

Economic development

 
Scaled pocket plan of Edo

The Edo period passed on a vital commercial sector to be in flourishing urban centers, a relatively well-educated elite, a sophisticated government bureaucracy, productive agriculture, a closely unified nation with highly developed financial and marketing systems, and a national infrastructure of roads. Economic development during the Tokugawa period included urbanization, increased shipping of commodities, a significant expansion of domestic and, initially, foreign commerce, and a diffusion of trade and handicraft industries. The construction trades flourished, along with banking facilities and merchant associations. Increasingly, han authorities oversaw the rising agricultural production and the spread of rural handicrafts.[14]

Population

 
A set of three ukiyo-e prints depicting Osaka's bustling shipping industry. by Gansuitei Yoshitoyo. 1854–1859.

By the mid-18th century, Edo had a population of more than one million, likely the biggest city in the world at the time.[15] Osaka and Kyoto each had more than 400,000 inhabitants. Many other castle towns grew as well. Osaka and Kyoto became busy trading and handicraft production centers, while Edo was the center for the supply of food and essential urban consumer goods. Around the year 1700, Japan was perhaps the most urbanized country in the world, at a rate of around 10–12%.[15] Half of that figure would be samurai, while the other half, consisting of merchants and artisans, would be known as chōnin.[15]

In the first part of the Edo period, Japan experienced rapid demographic growth, before leveling off at around 30 million.[16] Between the 1720s and 1820s, Japan had almost zero population growth, often attributed to lower birth rates in response to widespread famine (Great Tenmei famine 1782-1788), but some historians have presented different theories, such as a high rate of infanticide artificially controlling population.[17] At around 1721, the population of Japan was close to 30 million and the figure was only around 32 million around the Meiji Restoration around 150 years later.[18][15] From 1721, there were regular national surveys of the population until the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate.[16] In addition, regional surveys, as well as religious records initially compiled to eradicate Christianity, also provide valuable demographic data.[16]

Economy and financial services

 
Nihonbashi Fish Market Prosperity (Edo period) by Utagawa Kuniyasu

The Tokugawa era brought peace, and that brought prosperity to a nation of 31 million, 80% of them rice farmers. Rice production increased steadily, but population remained stable. Rice paddies grew from 1.6 million chō in 1600 to 3 million by 1720.[19] Improved technology helped farmers control the all-important flow of water to their paddies. The daimyos operated several hundred castle towns, which became loci of domestic trade.

The system of sankin kōtai meant that daimyos and their families often resided in Edo or travelled back to their domains, giving demand to an enormous consumer market in Edo and trade throughout the country.[18][20] Samurai and daimyos, after prolonged peace, are accustomed to more elaborate lifestyles.[21] To keep up with growing expenditures, the bakufu and daimyos often encouraged commercial crops and artifacts within their domains, from textiles to tea.[21] The concentration of wealth also led to the development of financial markets.[18] As the shogunate only allowed daimyos to sell surplus rice in Edo and Osaka, large-scale rice markets developed there.[18] Each daimyo also had a capital city, located near the one castle they were allowed to maintain.[15] Daimyos would have agents in various commercial centers, selling rice and cash crops, often exchanged for paper credit to be redeemed elsewhere.[15] Merchants invented credit instruments to transfer money, and currency came into common use. In the cities and towns, guilds of merchants and artisans met the growing demand for goods and services.[22]

The merchants benefited enormously, especially those with official patronage. However, the Neo-Confucian ideology of the shogunate focused the virtues of frugality and hard work; it had a rigid class system, which emphasized agriculture and despised commerce and merchants.[15] A century after the Shogunate's establishment, problems began to emerge.[15] The samurai, forbidden to engage in farming or business but allowed to borrow money, borrowed too much, some taking up side jobs as bodyguards for merchants, debt collectors, or artisans.[15] The bakufu and daimyos raised taxes on farmers, but did not tax business, so they too fell into debt, with some merchants specializing in loaning to daimyos.[21] Yet it was inconceivable to systematically tax commerce, as it would make money off "parasitic" activities, raise the prestige of merchants, and lower the status of government.[15] As they paid no regular taxes, the forced financial contributions to the daimyos were seen by some merchants as a cost of doing business.[21] The wealth of merchants gave them a degree of prestige and even power over the daimyos.[21][23]

By 1750, rising taxes incited peasant unrest and even revolt. The nation had to deal somehow with samurai impoverishment and treasury deficits. The financial troubles of the samurai undermined their loyalties to the system, and the empty treasury threatened the whole system of government. One solution was reactionary—cutting samurai salaries and prohibiting spending for luxuries.[15] Other solutions were modernizing, with the goal of increasing agrarian productivity.[15] The eighth Tokugawa shogun, Yoshimune (in office 1716–1745) had considerable success, though much of his work had to be done again between 1787 and 1793 by the shogun's chief councilor Matsudaira Sadanobu (1759–1829).[21] Other shoguns debased the coinage to pay debts, which caused inflation.[21] Overall, while commerce (domestic and international) was vibrant and sophisticated financial services had developed in the Edo period, the shogunate remained ideologically focused on honest agricultural work as the basis of society and never sought to develop a mercantile or capitalistic country.[15]

By 1800, the commercialization of the economy grew rapidly, bringing more and more remote villages into the national economy. Rich farmers appeared who switched from rice to high-profit commercial crops and engaged in local money-lending, trade, and small-scale manufacturing. Wealthy merchants were often forced to "lend" money to the shogunate or daimyos (often never returned).[15] They often had to hide their wealth, and some sought higher social status by using money to marry into the samurai class.[15] There is some evidence that as merchants gained greater political influence in the late Edo period, the rigid class division between samurai and merchants began to break down.[15]

A few domains, notably Chōsū and Satsuma, used innovative methods to restore their finances, but most sunk further into debt. The financial crisis provoked a reactionary solution near the end of the "Tempo era" (1830-1843) promulgated by the chief counselor Mizuno Tadakuni. He raised taxes, denounced luxuries and tried to impede the growth of business; he failed and it appeared to many that the continued existence of the entire Tokugawa system was in jeopardy.[24]

Agriculture

Rice was the base of the economy. About 80% of the people were rice farmers.[25] Rice production increased steadily, but population remained stable, so prosperity increased. Rice paddies grew from 1.6 million chō in 1600 to 3 million by 1720.[19] Improved technology helped farmers control the all-important flow of irrigation to their paddies. The daimyo operated several hundred castle towns, which became loci of domestic trade.

Large-scale rice markets developed, centered on Edo and Ōsaka.[22] In the cities and towns, guilds of merchants and artisans met the growing demand for goods and services. The merchants, while low in status, prospered, especially those with official patronage.[21] Merchants invented credit instruments to transfer money, currency came into common use, and the strengthening credit market encouraged entrepreneurship.[26] The daimyo collected the taxes from the peasants in the form of rice. Taxes were high, often at around 40%-50% of the harvest.[21] The rice was sold at the fudasashi market in Edo. To raise money, the daimyo used forward contracts to sell rice that was not even harvested yet. These contracts were similar to modern futures trading.

It was during the Edo period that Japan developed an advanced forest management policy. Increased demand for timber resources for construction, shipbuilding and fuel had led to widespread deforestation, which resulted in forest fires, floods and soil erosion. In response the shōgun, beginning around 1666, instituted a policy to reduce logging and increase the planting of trees. The policy mandated that only the shōgun and daimyo could authorize the use of wood. By the 18th century, Japan had developed detailed scientific knowledge about silviculture and plantation forestry.[27]

Artistic and intellectual development

Education

 
Terakoya, private educational school

The first shogun Ieyasu set up Confucian academies in his shinpan domains and other daimyos followed suit in their own domains, establishing what's known as han schools (藩校, hankō).[15][21] Within a generation, almost all samurai were literate, as their careers often required knowledge of literary arts.[15] These academies were staffed mostly with other samurai, along with some buddhist and shinto clergymen who were also learned in Neo-Confucianism and the works of Zhu Xi.[15] Beyond kanji (Chinese characters), the Confucian classics, calligraphy, basic arithmetics, and etiquette,[21] the samurai also learned various martial arts and military skills in schools.[15]

The chōnin (urban merchants and artisans) patronized neighborhood schools called terakoya (寺子屋, "temple schools").[15] Despite being located in temples, the terakoya curriculum consisted of basic literacy and arithmetic, instead of literary arts or philosophy.[15] High rates of urban literacy in Edo contributed to the prevalence of novels and other literary forms.[21] In urban areas, children are often taught by masterless samurai, while in rural areas priests from Buddhist temples or Shinto shrines often did the teaching.[21] Unlike in the cities, in rural Japan, only children of prominent farmers would receive education.[21]

In Edo, the shogunate set up several schools under its direct patronage, the most important being the neo-Confucian Shōheikō (昌平黌) acting as a de facto elite school for its bureaucracy but also creating a network of alumni from the whole country. Besides Shoheikō, other important directly-run schools at the end of the shogunate included the Wagakukōdansho (和学講談所, "Institute of Lectures of Japanese classics"), specialized in Japanese domestic history and literature, influencing the rise of kokugaku, and the Igakukan (医学間, "Institute of medicine"), focusing on Chinese medicine.[28]

One estimate of literacy in Edo suggest that up to a third of males could read, along with a sixth of women.[15] Another estimate states that 40% of men and 10% of women by the end of the Edo period were literate.[29] According to another estimate, around 1800, almost 100% of the samurai class and about 50% to 60% of the chōnin (craftsmen and merchants) class and nōmin (peasants) class were literate.[30] Some historians partially credited Japan's relatively high literacy rates for its fast development after the Meiji Restoration.[21]

As the literacy rate was so high that many ordinary people could read books, books in various genres such as cooking, gardening, travel guides, art books, scripts of bunraku (puppet theatre), kibyōshi (satirical novels), sharebon (books on urban culture), kokkeibon (comical books), ninjōbon (romance novel), yomihon and kusazōshi were published. There were 600 to 800 rental bookstores in Edo, and people borrowed or bought these woodblock print books. The best-selling books in this period were Kōshoku Ichidai Otoko (Life of an Amorous Man) by Ihara Saikaku, Nansō Satomi Hakkenden by Takizawa Bakin and Tōkaidōchū Hizakurige by Jippensha Ikku and these books were reprinted many times.[31][30][32][33]

Philosophy and religion

 
Wadokei, Japanese-made clockwatch, 18th century

The flourishing of Neo-Confucianism was the major intellectual development of the Tokugawa period.[15] Confucian studies had long been kept active in Japan by Buddhist clerics, but during the Tokugawa period, Confucianism emerged from Buddhist religious control. This system of thought increased attention to a secular view of man and society. The ethical humanism, rationalism, and historical perspective of neo-Confucian doctrine appealed to the official class. By the mid-17th century, neo-Confucianism was Japan's dominant legal philosophy and contributed directly to the development of the kokugaku (national learning) school of thought.

 
Karakuri puppet Moji-kaki doll made by Tanaka Hisashige. Using mechanical power, a puppet dips a brush into ink and writes a character on paper. 19th century

Advanced studies and growing applications of neo-Confucianism contributed to the transition of the social and political order from feudal norms to class- and large-group-oriented practices. The rule of the people or Confucian man was gradually replaced by the rule of law. New laws were developed, and new administrative devices were instituted. A new theory of government and a new vision of society emerged as a means of justifying more comprehensive governance by the bakufu. Each person had a distinct place in society and was expected to work to fulfill his or her mission in life. The people were to be ruled with benevolence by those whose assigned duty it was to rule. Government was all-powerful but responsible and humane. Although the class system was influenced by neo-Confucianism, it was not identical to it. Whereas soldiers and clergy were at the bottom of the hierarchy in the Chinese model, in Japan, some members of these classes constituted the ruling elite. Members of the samurai class adhered to bushi traditions with a renewed interest in Japanese history and cultivation of the ways of Confucian scholar-administrators. A distinct culture known as chōnindō ("the way of the townspeople") emerged in cities such as Osaka, Kyoto, and Edo. It encouraged aspiration to bushido qualities—diligence, honesty, honor, loyalty, and frugality—while blending Shinto, neo-Confucian, and Buddhist beliefs. Study of mathematics, astronomy, cartography, engineering, and medicine were also encouraged. Emphasis was placed on quality of workmanship, especially in the arts.

 
Kaitai Shinsho, Japan's first treatise on Western anatomy, published in 1774

Buddhism and Shinto were both still important in Tokugawa Japan. Buddhism, together with neo-Confucianism, provided standards of social behavior. Although Buddhism was not as politically powerful as it had been in the past, Buddhism continued to be espoused by the upper classes. Proscriptions against Christianity benefited Buddhism in 1640 when the bakufu ordered everyone to register at a temple. The rigid separation of Tokugawa society into han, villages, wards, and households helped reaffirm local Shinto attachments. Shinto provided spiritual support to the political order and was an important tie between the individual and the community. Shinto also helped preserve a sense of national identity.

Shinto eventually assumed an intellectual form as shaped by neo-Confucian rationalism and materialism. The kokugaku movement emerged from the interactions of these two belief systems. Kokugaku contributed to the emperor-centered nationalism of modern Japan and the revival of Shinto as a national creed in the 18th and 19th centuries. The Kojiki, Nihon Shoki, and Man'yōshū were all studied anew in the search for the Japanese spirit. Some purists in the kokugaku movement, such as Motoori Norinaga, even criticized the Confucian and Buddhist influences—in effect, foreign influences—for contaminating Japan's ancient ways. Japan was the land of the kami and, as such, had a special destiny.[34]

During the period, Japan studied Western sciences and techniques (called rangaku, "Dutch studies") through the information and books received through the Dutch traders in Dejima. The main areas that were studied included geography, medicine, natural sciences, astronomy, art, languages, physical sciences such as the study of electrical phenomena, and mechanical sciences as exemplified by the development of Japanese clockwatches, or wadokei, inspired by Western techniques. Among those who studied mechanical science at that time, Tanaka Hisashige, the founder of Toshiba, is worthy of special mention. Because of the technical originality and sophistication of his Myriad year clock and karakuri puppet, they are difficult to restore even today, and are considered to be a highly mechanical heritage prior to Japan's modernization.[35][36][37]

Art, culture and entertainment

In the field of art, the Rinpa school became popular. The paintings and crafts of the Rinpa school are characterized by highly decorative and showy designs using gold and silver leaves, bold compositions with simplified objects to be drawn, repeated patterns, and a playful spirit. Important figures in the Rinpa school include Hon'ami Kōetsu, Tawaraya Sōtatsu, Ogata Kōrin, Sakai Hōitsu and Suzuki Kiitsu. Other than the Rinpa school, Maruyama Ōkyo and Itō Jakuchū are famous for their realistic painting techniques. They produced their works under the patronage of wealthy merchants newly emerging from the economic development of this period. Following the Azuchi-Momoyama period, the painters of the Kano school drew pictures on the walls and fusumas of castles and temples with the support of powerful people.[38]

 
Mounting for wakizashi decorated with lacquer of maki-e technique. 18th century

Due to the end of the period of civil war and the development of the economy, many crafts with high artistic value were produced. Among the samurai class, arms came to be treated like works of art, and Japanese sword mountings and Japanese armour beautifully decorated with lacquer of maki-e technique and metal carvings became popular. Each han (daimyo domain) encouraged the production of crafts to improve their finances, and crafts such as furnishings and inro beautifully decorated with lacquer, metal or ivory became popular among rich people. The Kaga Domain, which was ruled by the Maeda clan, was especially enthusiastic about promoting crafts, and the area still boasts a reputation that surpasses Kyoto in crafts even today.[39][40]

For the first time, urban populations had the means and leisure time to support a new mass culture. Their search for enjoyment became known as ukiyo (the floating world), an ideal world of fashion, popular entertainment, and the discovery of aesthetic qualities in objects and actions of everyday life. This increasing interest in pursuing recreational activities helped to develop an array of new industries, many of which could be found in an area known as Yoshiwara. The district was known for being the center of Edo's developing sense of elegance and refinement.[41] Established in 1617 as the city's shogunate-sanctioned prostitution district, it kept this designation about 250 years. Yoshiwara was home to mostly women who, due to unfortunate circumstances, found themselves working in this secluded environment.

Professional female entertainers (geisha), music, popular stories, Kabuki (theater) and bunraku (puppet theater), poetry, a rich literature, and art, exemplified by beautiful woodblock prints (known as ukiyo-e), were all part of this flowering of culture. Literature also flourished with the talented examples of the playwright Chikamatsu Monzaemon (1653–1724) and the poet, essayist, and travel writer Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694).

 
The Great Wave off Kanagawa, full-colour ukiyo-e woodblock print, Hokusai, c. 1829–1832

Ukiyo-e is a genre of painting and printmaking that developed in the late 17th century, at first depicting the entertainments of the pleasure districts of Edo, such as courtesans and kabuki actors. Harunobu produced the first full-colour nishiki-e prints in 1765, a form that has become synonymous to most with ukiyo-e. The genre reached a peak in technique towards the end of the century with the works of such artists as Kiyonaga and Utamaro. As the Edo period came to an end a great diversity of genres proliferated: warriors, nature, folklore, and the landscapes of Hokusai and Hiroshige. The genre declined throughout the rest of the century in the face of modernization that saw ukiyo-e as both old-fashioned and laborious to produce compared to Western technologies. Ukiyo-e was a primary part of the wave of Japonisme that swept Western art in the late 19th century.

The Edo period was characterized by an unprecedented series of economic developments (despite termination of contact with the outside world) and cultural maturation, especially in terms of theater, music, and other entertainment. For example, a poetic meter for music called kinsei kouta-chō was invented during this time[42] and is still used today in folk songs. Music and theater were influenced by the social gap between the noble and commoner classes, and different arts became more defined as this gap widened. Several different types of kabuki emerged. Some, such as shibaraku, were only available at a certain time of year, while some companies only performed for nobles. Fashion trends, satirization of local news stories, and advertisements were often part of kabuki theater, as well.[43] Along with kabuki, storytelling entertainments were popular among the common people, and people enjoyed rakugo, a comical story, and kōdan, a historical story, in a dedicated theater called yose.[44] The most popular sport was sumo.

Eating out became popular due to urbanization. Particularly popular among ordinary people were stalls serving fast food such as soba, sushi, tempura, and unagi, tofu restaurants, teahouses and izakaya (Japanese-style pubs). A number of ryotei also opened to serve high-class food. People enjoyed eating at restaurants by buying books that listed restaurant ratings that imitated sumo rankings.[45][46]

Gardening were also popular pastimes for the people of the time. Especially in Edo, residences of daimyo (feudal lords) of each domain were gathered, and many gardeners existed to manage these gardens, which led to the development of horticultural techniques. Among people, cherry blossoms, morning glories, Japanese irises and chrysanthemums were especially popular, and bonsai using deep pots became popular. Not only did people buy plants and appreciate flowers, but they were also enthusiastic about improving the varieties of flowers, so specialized books were published one after another. For example, Matsudaira Sadatomo produced 300 varieties of iris and published a technical book.[47]

Traveling became popular among people because of the improvement of roads and post towns. The main destinations were famous temples and Shinto shrines around the country, and eating and drinking at the inns and prostitution were one of the main attractions. And what people admired most was the visit to Ise Grand Shrine and the summit of Mount Fuji, which are considered the most sacred places in Japan. The Ise Grand Shrine in particular has been visited by an enormous number of visitors, and historical documents record that 3.62 million people visited the shrine in 50 days in 1625 and 1.18 million people visited it in three days in 1829 when the grand festival held every 20 years (Shikinen Sengu) was held. It was a once-in-a-lifetime event for people living in remote areas, so they set up a joint fund for each village, saved their travel expenses, and went on a group trip. Local residents of Ise Grand Shrine and Mount Fuji used to send specialized advertising personnel to various parts of Japan to solicit trips to local areas to make money from tourism.[48][49]

Fashion

 
Outer kimono for a young woman (uchikake), 1840–1870, Khalili Collection of Kimono

Clothing acquired a wide variety of designs and decorative techniques, especially for kimono worn by women.[50] The main consumers of kimono were the samurai who used lavish clothing and other material luxuries to signal their place at the top of the social order.[51] Driven by this demand, the textile industry grew and used increasingly sophisticated methods of weaving, dyeing, and embroidery.[51] Over this period, women adopted brighter colours and bolder designs, whereas women's and men's kimono had been very similar.[52] The rise of a merchant class fuelled more demand for elaborate costumes. While ordinary kimono would usually be created by women at home, luxurious silk kimono were designed and created by specialist artists who were usually men.[53]

 
Inro and Netsuke, 18th century
 
Ladies fashion in 1700s by Utagawa Toyokuni

A kind of kimono specific to the military elite is the goshodoki or "palace court style", which would be worn in the residence of a military leader (a shōgun or daimyo). These would have landscape scenes, among which there are other motifs usually referencing classic literature.[54] Samurai men would dress with a more understated design with geometrical designs concentrated around the waist.[55] The yogi, or sleeping kimono, is a thickly wadded form of wearable bedding, usually with simple designs.[56]

A style called tsuma moyō had rich decoration from the waist down only, and family emblems on the neck and shoulders. These would be worn by women of the merchant class.[57] The kimono of merchant-class women were more subdued than those of the samurai, but still with bold colours and designs representing nature.[58] Red was a popular colour for wealthy women, partly because of its cultural association with youth and passion, and partly because the dye – derived from safflower[59] – was very expensive, so a bright red garment was an ostentatious display of wealth.[60] Indian fabrics, brought to Japan by Dutch importers, were received with enthusiasm and found many uses.[61] Japanese designers started printing designs that were influenced by the Indian patterns.[62] Some garments used fabric imported from Britain or France. Ownership of these exotic textiles signified wealth and taste, but they were worn as undergarments where the designs would not be seen.[63]

Inro and netsuke became popular as accessories among men. Originally, inro was a portable case to put a seal or medicine, and netsuke was a fastener attached to the case, and both were practical tools. However, from the middle of the Edo period, products with high artistic value appeared and became popular as male accessories. Especially samurai and wealthy merchants competed to buy inro of high artistic value. At the end of the Edo period, the artistic value of inro further increased and it came to be regarded as an art collection.[64][65]

End of the shogunate

Decline of the Tokugawa

 
Dai-Roku Daiba (第六台場) or "No. 6 Battery", one of the original Edo-era battery islands
 
One of the cannons of Odaiba, now at the Yasukuni Shrine. 80-pound bronze, bore: 250mm, length: 3830mm

The end of this period is specifically called the late Tokugawa shogunate. The cause for the end of this period is controversial but is recounted as the forcing of Japan's opening to the world by Commodore Matthew Perry of the US Navy, whose armada (known by Japanese as "the black ships") fired weapons from Edo Bay. Several artificial land masses were created to block the range of the armada, and this land remains in what is presently called the Odaiba district.

The Tokugawa did not eventually collapse simply because of intrinsic failures. Foreign intrusions helped to precipitate a complex political struggle between the bakufu and a coalition of its critics. The continuity of the anti-bakufu movement in the mid-19th century would finally bring down the Tokugawa. Historians consider that a major contributing factor to the decline of the Tokugawa was "poor management of the central government by the shōgun, which caused the social classes in Japan to fall apart".[attribution needed][66] From the outset, the Tokugawa attempted to restrict families' accumulation of wealth and fostered a "back to the soil" policy, in which the farmer, the ultimate producer, was the ideal person in society.

The standard of living for urban and rural dwellers alike grew significantly during the Tokugawa period. Better means of crop production, transport, housing, food, and entertainment were all available, as was more leisure time, at least for urban dwellers. The literacy rate was high for a preindustrial society (by some estimates the literacy rate in the city of Edo was 80 percent), and cultural values were redefined and widely imparted throughout the samurai and chōnin classes. Despite the reappearance of guilds, economic activities went well beyond the restrictive nature of the guilds, and commerce spread and a money economy developed. Although government heavily restricted the merchants and viewed them as unproductive and usurious members of society, the samurai, who gradually became separated from their rural ties, depended greatly on the merchants and artisans for consumer goods, artistic interests, and loans. In this way, a subtle subversion of the warrior class by the chōnin took place.

A struggle arose in the face of political limitations that the shōgun imposed on the entrepreneurial class. The government ideal of an agrarian society failed to square with the reality of commercial distribution. A huge government bureaucracy had evolved, which now stagnated because of its discrepancy with a new and evolving social order. Compounding the situation, the population increased significantly during the first half of the Tokugawa period. Although the magnitude and growth rates are uncertain, there were at least 26 million commoners and about four million members of samurai families and their attendants when the first nationwide census was taken in 1721. Drought, followed by crop shortages and starvation, resulted in twenty great famines between 1675 and 1837. During the Tokugawa period, there were 154 famines, of which 21 were widespread and serious.[67]

The Great Tenmei famine (1782 until 1788) was the worst famine in the Edo period.[68] Many crops were damaged due to bad weather, serious cold and the 1783 eruption of Mount Asama.[69][68] A worsening factor of the Great Tenmei famine was a drop in global temperatures due to the eruption of the Icelandic volcano Laki in 1783.[68] The spread of the famine was largely due to mismanagement of the Shogunate and the clan.[68]

Peasant unrest grew, and by the late 18th century, mass protests over taxes and food shortages had become commonplace. Newly landless families became tenant farmers, while the displaced rural poor moved into the cities. As the fortunes of previously well-to-do families declined, others moved in to accumulate land, and a new, wealthy farming class emerged. Those people who benefited were able to diversify production and to hire laborers, while others were left discontented. Many samurai fell on hard times and were forced into handicraft production and wage jobs for merchants.

Although Japan was able to acquire and refine a wide variety of scientific knowledge, the rapid industrialization of the West during the 18th century created a material gap in terms of technologies and armament between Japan and the West, forcing it to abandon its policy of seclusion, which contributed to the end of the Tokugawa regime.

Western intrusions were on the increase in the early 19th century. Russian warships and traders encroached on Karafuto (called Sakhalin under Russian and Soviet control) and on the Kuril Islands, the southernmost of which are considered by the Japanese as the northern islands of Hokkaidō. A British warship entered Nagasaki harbour searching for enemy Dutch ships in 1808, and other warships and whalers were seen in Japanese waters with increasing frequency in the 1810s and 1820s. Whalers and trading ships from the United States also arrived on Japan's shores. Although the Japanese made some minor concessions and allowed some landings, they largely attempted to keep all foreigners out, sometimes using force. Rangaku became crucial not only in understanding the foreign "barbarians" but also in using the knowledge gained from the West to fend them off.

By the 1830s, there was a general sense of crisis. Famines and natural disasters hit hard, and unrest led to a peasant uprising against officials and merchants in Osaka in 1837. Although it lasted only a day, the uprising made a dramatic impression. Remedies came in the form of traditional solutions that sought to reform moral decay rather than address institutional problems. The shōgun's advisers pushed for a return to the martial spirit, more restrictions on foreign trade and contacts, suppression of rangaku, censorship of literature, and elimination of "luxury" in the government and samurai class. Others sought the overthrow of the Tokugawa and espoused the political doctrine of sonnō jōi (revere the emperor, expel the barbarians), which called for unity under imperial rule and opposed foreign intrusions. The bakufu persevered for the time being amidst growing concerns over Western successes in establishing colonial enclaves in China following the First Opium War of 1839–1842. More reforms were ordered, especially in the economic sector, to strengthen Japan against the Western threat.

Japan turned down a demand from the United States, which was greatly expanding its own presence in the Asia-Pacific region, to establish diplomatic relations when Commodore James Biddle appeared in Edo Bay with two warships in July 1846.

End of seclusion

 
Landing of Commodore Perry, Officers and Men of the Squadron To meet the Imperial Commissioners at Kurihama Yokosuka March 8th, 1854

When Commodore Matthew C. Perry's four-ship squadron appeared in Edo Bay in July 1853, the bakufu was thrown into turmoil. The chairman of the senior councillors, Abe Masahiro (1819–1857), was responsible for dealing with the Americans. Having no precedent to manage this threat to national security, Abe tried to balance the desires of the senior councillors to compromise with the foreigners, of the emperor who wanted to keep the foreigners out, and of the daimyo who wanted to go to war. Lacking consensus, Abe decided to compromise by accepting Perry's demands for opening Japan to foreign trade while also making military preparations. In March 1854, the Treaty of Peace and Amity (or Treaty of Kanagawa) opened two ports to American ships seeking provisions, guaranteed good treatment to shipwrecked American sailors, and allowed a United States consul to take up residence in Shimoda, a seaport on the Izu Peninsula, southwest of Edo. The Treaty of Amity and Commerce Between the U.S. and Japan (Harris Treaty), opening still more areas to American trade, was forced on the bakufu five years later.

The resulting damage to the bakufu was significant. The devalued price for gold in Japan was one immediate, enormous effect.[70] The European and American traders purchased gold for its original price on the world market and then sold it to the Japanese for triple the price.[70] Along with this, cheap goods from these developed nations, like finished cotton, flooded the market forcing many Japanese out of business.[70] Debate over government policy was unusual and had engendered public criticism of the bakufu. In the hope of enlisting the support of new allies, Abe, to the consternation of the fudai, had consulted with the shinpan and tozama daimyo, further undermining the already weakened bakufu. In the Ansei Reform (1854–1856), Abe then tried to strengthen the regime by ordering Dutch warships and armaments from the Netherlands and building new port defenses. In 1855, a naval training school with Dutch instructors was set up at Nagasaki, and a Western-style military school was established at Edo; by the next year, the government was translating Western books. Opposition to Abe increased within fudai circles, which opposed opening bakufu councils to tozama daimyo, and he was replaced in 1855 as chairman of the senior councilors by Hotta Masayoshi (1810–1864).

At the head of the dissident faction was Tokugawa Nariaki, who had long embraced a militant loyalty to the emperor along with anti-foreign sentiments, and who had been put in charge of national defense in 1854. The Mito school—based on neo-Confucian and Shinto principles—had as its goal the restoration of the imperial institution, the turning back of the West, and the founding of a world empire under the divine Yamato dynasty.

In the final years of the Tokugawas, foreign contacts increased as more concessions were granted. The new treaty with the United States in 1859 allowed more ports to be opened to diplomatic representatives, unsupervised trade at four additional ports, and foreign residences in Osaka and Edo. It also embodied the concept of extraterritoriality (foreigners were subject to the laws of their own countries but not to Japanese law). Hotta lost the support of key daimyo, and when Tokugawa Nariaki opposed the new treaty, Hotta sought imperial sanction. The court officials, perceiving the weakness of the bakufu, rejected Hotta's request and thus suddenly embroiled Kyoto and the emperor in Japan's internal politics for the first time in many centuries. When the shōgun died without an heir, Nariaki appealed to the court for support of his own son, Tokugawa Yoshinobu (or Keiki), for shōgun, a candidate favored by the shinpan and tozama daimyo. The fudai won the power struggle, however, installing Tokugawa Yoshitomi, arresting Nariaki and Keiki, executing Yoshida Shōin (1830–1859), a leading sonnō-jōi intellectual who had opposed the American treaty and plotted a revolution against the bakufu, and signing treaties with the United States and five other nations, thus ending more than 200 years of exclusion.

Recently[when?] some scholars[who?] have suggested that there were more events that spurred this opening of Japan. Yoshimune, eighth Tokugawa shōgun from 1716 to 1745, started the first Kyōhō reforms in an attempt to gain more revenue for the government.[71] In 1767, to 1786 Tanuma Okitsugu also initiated some unorthodox economic reforms to expand government income.[71] This led his conservative opponents to attack him and take his position as he was forced from government in disgrace.[71] Similarly, Matsudaira Sadanobu launched the Kansei Reforms in 1787–1793 to stabilize rice prices, cut government costs, and increase revenues.[71] The final economic reform of the Tenpō era of 1841–1843 had similar objectives. Most were ineffective and only worked in some areas. These economic failings would also have been a force in the opening of Japan, as Japanese businessmen desired larger markets. Some scholars also point to internal activism for political change. The Mito school had long been an active force in demanding political changes, such as restoring the powers of the Emperor. This anger can also be seen in the poetry of Matsuo Taseko (a woman who farmed silkworms in the Ina Valley) from Hirata Atsutane's School of National Learning:

"It is disgusting
the agitation over thread
In today's world
Ever since the ships
from foreign countries
came for the jeweled
silkworm cocoons
to the land of the gods and the Emperor
Peoples hearts
awesome though they are,
are being pulled apart
and consumed by rage."

— Matsuo Taseko, Gordon 2008, p. 52

This inspired many anti-Tokugawa activists as they blamed the bakufu for impoverishing the people and dishonoring the emperor.[72]

 
Tokugawa Yoshinobu in later life

Bakumatsu modernization and conflicts

During the last years of the bakufu, or bakumatsu, the bakufu took strong measures to try to reassert its dominance, although its involvement with modernization and foreign powers was to make it a target of anti-Western sentiment throughout the country.

The army and the navy were modernized. A naval training school was established in Nagasaki in 1855. Naval students were sent to study in Western naval schools for several years, starting a tradition of foreign-educated future leaders, such as Admiral Enomoto. French naval engineers were hired to build naval arsenals, such as Yokosuka and Nagasaki. By the end of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1867, the Japanese navy of the shōgun already possessed eight Western-style steam warships around the flagship Kaiyō Maru, which were used against pro-imperial forces during the Boshin War under the command of Admiral Enomoto. A French military mission was established to help modernize the armies of the bakufu.

 
Kanrin Maru, Japan's first screw-driven steam warship, 1855
 
Samurai in western clothing of the Tokugawa Shogunate Army (1866).

Revering the emperor as a symbol of unity, extremists wrought violence and death against the Bakufu and Han authorities and foreigners. Foreign naval retaliation in the Anglo-Satsuma War led to still another concessionary commercial treaty in 1865, but Yoshitomi was unable to enforce the Western treaties. A bakufu army was defeated when it was sent to crush dissent in the Satsuma and Chōshū Domains in 1866. Finally, in 1867, Emperor Kōmei died and was succeeded by his underaged son Emperor Meiji.

Tokugawa Yoshinobu reluctantly became head of the Tokugawa house and shōgun. He tried to reorganize the government under the emperor while preserving the shōgun's leadership role. Fearing the growing power of the Satsuma and Chōshū daimyo, other daimyo called for returning the shōgun's political power to the emperor and a council of daimyo chaired by the former Tokugawa shōgun. Yoshinobu accepted the plan in late 1867 and resigned, announcing an "imperial restoration". The Satsuma, Chōshū, and other han leaders and radical courtiers, however, rebelled, seized the imperial palace, and announced their own restoration on January 3, 1868.

Following the Boshin War (1868–1869), the bakufu was abolished, and Yoshinobu was reduced to the ranks of the common daimyo. Resistance continued in the North throughout 1868, and the bakufu naval forces under Admiral Enomoto Takeaki continued to hold out for another six months in Hokkaidō, where they founded the short-lived Republic of Ezo.

Events

  • 1600: Battle of Sekigahara. Tokugawa Ieyasu defeats a coalition of daimyo and establishes hegemony over most of Japan.
  • 1603: The emperor appoints Tokugawa Ieyasu as shōgun, who moves his government to Edo (Tokyo) and founds the Tokugawa dynasty of shōguns.
  • 1605: Tokugawa Ieyasu resigns as shōgun and is succeeded by his son Tokugawa Hidetada.
  • 1607: Korean Joseon dynasty sends an embassy to Tokugawa shogunate.
  • 1611: Ryūkyū Islands become a vassal state of Satsuma Domain.
  • 1614: Tokugawa Ieyasu bans Christianity from Japan.
  • 1615: Battle of Osaka. Tokugawa Ieyasu besieges Osaka Castle, all opposition from forces loyal to the Toyotomi family. Tokugawa authority becomes paramount throughout Japan.
  • 1616: Tokugawa Ieyasu dies.
  • 1620: After Ieyasu dies the peasants and chōnins increase in population
  • 1623: Tokugawa Iemitsu becomes the third shōgun.
  • 1633: Iemitsu forbids travelling abroad and reading foreign books.
  • 1635: Iemitsu formalizes the system of mandatory alternative residence (sankin-kōtai) in Edo.
  • 1637: Shimabara Rebellion (1637–38) mounted by overtaxed peasants.
  • 1638: Iemitsu forbids ship building.
  • 1639: Edicts establishing National Seclusion (Sakoku Rei) are completed. All Westerners except the Dutch are prohibited from entering Japan.
  • 1641: Iemitsu bans all foreigners, except Chinese, Koreans, and Dutch from Japan.
  • 1657: The Great Fire of Meireki destroys most of the city of Edo.
  • 1700: Kabuki and ukiyo-e become popular.[clarification needed]
  • 1707: Mount Fuji erupts.
  • 1774: The anatomical text Kaitai Shinsho, the first complete Japanese translation of a Western medical work, is published by Sugita Genpaku and Maeno Ryotaku.
  • 1787: Matsudaira Sadanobu becomes senior shogunal councillor and institutes the Kansei Reforms.
  • 1792: Russian envoy Adam Laxman arrives at Nemuro in eastern Ezo (now Hokkaidō).
  • 1804: Russian envoy Nikolai Rezanov reaches Nagasaki and unsuccessfully seeks the establishment of trade relations with Japan.
  • 1837: Rebellion of Ōshio Heihachirō.
  • 1841: Tenpō Reforms.
  • 1853: US Navy Commodore Matthew C. Perry's four-ship squadron appeared in Edo Bay (Tokyo Bay).
  • 1854: The US forces Japan to sign a trade agreement ("Treaty of Kanagawa") which reopens Japan to foreigners after two centuries.
  • 1855: Russia and Japan establish diplomatic relations.
  • 1860: Sakuradamon Incident.
  • 1864: British, French, Dutch and American warships bombard Shimonoseki and open more Japanese ports for foreigners.
  • 1868: Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigns, the Tokugawa dynasty ends, and the emperor (or "mikado") Meiji is restored, but with capital in Edo/Tokyo and divine attributes.

Era names

The imperial eras proclaimed during the Edo period were:[73]

Eras during the Edo period
Era name Japanese kanji Approximate years
Keichō 慶長 1596~1615
Genna 元和 1615~1624
Kan'ei 寛永 1624~1644
Shōhō 正保 1644~1648
Keian 慶安 1648~1652
Jōō 承応 1652~1655
Meireki 明暦 1655~1658
Manji 万治 1658~1661
Kanbun 寛文 1661~1673
Enpō 延宝 1673~1681
Tenna 天和 1681~1684
Jōkyō 貞享 1684~1688
Genroku 元禄 1688~1704
Hōei 宝永 1704~1711
Shōtoku 正徳 1711~1716
Kyōhō 享保 1716~1736
Genbun 元文 1736~1741
Kanpō 寛保 1741~1744
Enkyō 延享 1744~1748
Kan'en 寛延 1748~1751
Hōreki 宝暦 1751~1764
Meiwa 明和 1764~1772
An'ei 安永 1772~1781
Tenmei 天明 1781~1789
Kansei 寛政 1789~1801
Kyōwa 享和 1801~1804
Bunka 文化 1804~1818
Bunsei 文政 1818~1830
Tenpō 天保 1830~1844
Kōka 弘化 1844~1848
Kaei 嘉永 1848~1854
Ansei 安政 1854~1860
Man'en 万延 1860~1861
Bunkyū 文久 1861~1864
Genji 元治 1864~1865
Keiō 慶応 1865~1868

In popular culture

The Edo period is the setting of many works of popular culture. These include novels, comics, stageplays, films, television shows, animated works, and manga.

There is a cultural theme park called Edo Wonderland Nikko Edomura in the Kinugawa Onsen area of Nikkō, Tochigi, north of Tokyo.

See also

Citations

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  2. ^ "daimyo | Significance, History, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-10-03.
  3. ^ Hall & McClain 1991, pp. 128–182
  4. ^ a b . Facts and Details. August 26, 2014. Archived from the original on March 15, 2022.
  5. ^ Hall & McClain 1991, pp. 369–370
  6. ^ Hall & McClain 1991, p. 370
  7. ^ Beasley 1972, p. 22
  8. ^ Hall, John W. (Autumn 1974). "Rule by Status in Tokugawa Japan". Journal of Japanese Studies. 1 (1): 39–49. doi:10.2307/133436. JSTOR 133436.
  9. ^ Totman 2000, pp. 225–230.
  10. ^ Michael Wert, Samurai: A Concise History (2019).
  11. ^ Lewis 2003, pp. 31–32
  12. ^ a b c d Frédéric 2002, p. 313
  13. ^ a b Frédéric 2002, p. 93
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  17. ^ Flath 2000
  18. ^ a b c d Huang, Ray (2015). Capitalism and the 21st Century (Zi ben zhu yi yu er shi yi shi ji) (Di 1 ban ed.). Beijing. ISBN 978-7-108-05368-8. OCLC 953227195.
  19. ^ a b One chō, or chobu, equals 2.45 acres.
  20. ^ Constantine Nomikos Vaporis, Tour of Duty: Samurai, Military Service in Edo, and the Culture of Early Modern Japan (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2008), 26.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hane, Mikiso. Premodern Japan: A historical survey. Routledge, 2018.
  22. ^ a b Totman 2000, chapter 11.
  23. ^ Sakata Yoshio, Meiji Ishinshi [A history of the Meiji Restoration] (Tokyo: Miraisha, 1960), 19
  24. ^ McClain, James L. (2002). Japan, a modern history (1st ed.). New York, N.Y.: W.W. Norton & Co. pp. 5–108. ISBN 0-393-04156-5. OCLC 47013231.
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  28. ^ Kobayashi, Tetsuya (1976). Society, Schools, and Progress in Japan. Pergamon. pp. 14–. ISBN 9781483136226.
  29. ^ See Martha Tocco, “Norms and texts for women’s education in Tokugawa Japan.” In Ko, Haboush, and Piggott, Women and Confucian Cultures, 193–218.
  30. ^ a b . Konosuke Hashiguchi. (2013) Seikei University.
  31. ^ National Diet Library.
  32. ^ Mitsui Fudosan.
  33. ^ Keizaburo Seimaru. (2017) 江戸のベストセラー. Yosensha. ISBN 978-4800312556
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  35. ^ The Seiko Museum Ginza.
  36. ^ Yuji Kubota (2005)
  37. ^ Shobei Tamaya
  38. ^ January 15, 2019
  39. ^ Masayuki Murata. 明治工芸入門 p.104. p.120. Me no Me, 2017 ISBN 978-4907211110
  40. ^ Traditional Crafts of Kanazawa. 2022-01-17 at the Wayback Machine Kanazawa City.
  41. ^ Longstreet & Longstreet 1989, p. 2
  42. ^ Hoff, Frank (1978-06-01). Song, dance, storytelling: aspects of the performing arts in Japan. China-Japan Program, Cornell University. p. 130.
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General and cited sources

Attribution

  This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress Country Studies. Japan

Further reading

  • Guth, Christine (1996), Art of Edo Japan: the artist and the city 1615-1868, H.N. Abrams, ISBN 9780300164138
  • Haga, Tōru (2021), Pax Tokugawana: The Cultural Flowering of Japan, 1603–1853 (First English ed.), Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, ISBN 978-4-86658-148-4
  • Jansen, Marius B. (1986), Japan in transition, from Tokugawa to Meiji, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-05459-2
  • Roberts, Luke S. (2012), Performing the Great Peace: Political Space and Open Secrets in Tokugawa Japan, Hawaii: University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 978-0824835132

External links

  • Japanese Maps of the Tokugawa Era – A rich selection of rare Japanese maps from the UBC Library Digital Collections
  • Timeline – Japan: Memoirs of a Secret Empire
Preceded by History of Japan
Edo period
1603–1868
Succeeded by
Empire of Japan
1868–1945

period, 江戸時代, jidai, tokugawa, period, 徳川時代, tokugawa, jidai, period, between, 1603, 1867, history, japan, when, japan, under, rule, tokugawa, shogunate, country, regional, daimyo, emerging, from, chaos, sengoku, period, characterized, economic, growth, strict. The Edo period 江戸時代 Edo jidai or Tokugawa period 徳川時代 Tokugawa jidai is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country s 300 regional daimyo Emerging from the chaos of the Sengoku period the Edo period was characterized by economic growth strict social order isolationist foreign policies a stable population perpetual peace and popular enjoyment of arts and culture The period derives its name from Edo now Tokyo where on March 24 1603 the shogunate was officially established by Tokugawa Ieyasu The period came to an end with the Meiji Restoration and the Boshin War which restored imperial rule to Japan Contents 1 Consolidation of the shogunate 2 Foreign trade relations 3 Society 4 Economic development 4 1 Population 4 2 Economy and financial services 4 2 1 Agriculture 5 Artistic and intellectual development 5 1 Education 5 2 Philosophy and religion 5 3 Art culture and entertainment 5 4 Fashion 6 End of the shogunate 6 1 Decline of the Tokugawa 6 2 End of seclusion 6 3 Bakumatsu modernization and conflicts 7 Events 7 1 Era names 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Citations 11 General and cited sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksConsolidation of the shogunate EditMain article Tokugawa shogunate Tokugawa Ieyasu first shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate The Edo period or Tokugawa period is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country s regional daimyo 1 A revolution took place from the time of the Kamakura shogunate which existed with the Tennō s court to the Tokugawa when the samurai became the unchallenged rulers in what historian Edwin O Reischauer called a centralized feudal form of shogunate Instrumental in the rise of the new bakufu was Tokugawa Ieyasu the main beneficiary of the achievements of Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi 2 Already a powerful daimyo feudal lord Ieyasu profited by his transfer to the rich Kantō area He maintained two million koku of land a new headquarters at Edo a strategically situated castle town the future Tokyo and also had an additional two million koku of land and thirty eight vassals under his control After Hideyoshi s death Ieyasu moved quickly to seize control from the Toyotomi clan citation needed Ieyasu s victory over the western daimyo at the Battle of Sekigahara October 21 1600 or in the Japanese calendar on the 15th day of the ninth month of the fifth year of the Keichō era gave him control of all Japan He rapidly abolished numerous enemy daimyo houses reduced others such as that of the Toyotomi and redistributed the spoils of war to his family and allies Ieyasu still failed to achieve complete control of the western daimyo but his assumption of the title of shōgun helped consolidate the alliance system After further strengthening his power base Ieyasu installed his son Hidetada 1579 1632 as shōgun and himself as retired shōgun in 1605 The Toyotomi were still a significant threat and Ieyasu devoted the next decade to their eradication In 1615 the Tokugawa army destroyed the Toyotomi stronghold at Osaka The Tokugawa or Edo period brought 250 years of stability to Japan The political system evolved into what historians call bakuhan a combination of the terms bakufu and han domains to describe the government and society of the period 3 In the bakuhan the shōgun had national authority and the daimyo had regional authority This represented a new unity in the feudal structure which featured an increasingly large bureaucracy to administer the mixture of centralized and decentralized authorities The Tokugawa became more powerful during their first century of rule land redistribution gave them nearly seven million koku control of the most important cities and a land assessment system reaping great revenues citation needed The feudal hierarchy was completed by the various classes of daimyo Closest to the Tokugawa house were the shinpan or related houses They were twenty three daimyo on the borders of Tokugawa lands all directly related to Ieyasu The shinpan held mostly honorary titles and advisory posts in the bakufu The second class of the hierarchy were the fudai or house daimyo rewarded with lands close to the Tokugawa holdings for their faithful service By the 18th century 145 fudai controlled much smaller han the greatest assessed at 250 000 koku Members of the fudai class staffed most of the major bakufu offices Ninety seven han formed the third group the tozama outside vassals former opponents or new allies The tozama were located mostly on the peripheries of the archipelago and collectively controlled nearly ten million koku of productive land Because the tozama were least trusted of the daimyo they were the most cautiously managed and generously treated although they were excluded from central government positions citation needed The Tokugawa shogunate not only consolidated their control over a reunified Japan they also had unprecedented power over the emperor the court all daimyo and the religious orders The emperor was held up as the ultimate source of political sanction for the shōgun who ostensibly was the vassal of the imperial family The Tokugawa helped the imperial family recapture its old glory by rebuilding its palaces and granting it new lands To ensure a close tie between the imperial clan and the Tokugawa family Ieyasu s granddaughter was made an imperial consort in 1619 citation needed A code of laws was established to regulate the daimyo houses The code encompassed private conduct marriage dress types of weapons and numbers of troops allowed required feudal lords to reside in Edo every other year the sankin kōtai system prohibited the construction of ocean going ships proscribed Christianity restricted castles to one per domain han and stipulated that bakufu regulations were the national law Although the daimyo were not taxed per se they were regularly levied for contributions for military and logistical support and for such public works projects as castles roads bridges and palaces The various regulations and levies not only strengthened the Tokugawa but also depleted the wealth of the daimyo thus weakening their threat to the central administration The han once military centered domains became mere local administrative units The daimyo did have full administrative control over their territory and their complex systems of retainers bureaucrats and commoners Loyalty was exacted from religious foundations already greatly weakened by Nobunaga and Hideyoshi through a variety of control mechanisms citation needed Foreign trade relations EditMain article Sakoku The San Juan Bautista is represented in Claude Deruet s painting of Hasekura Tsunenaga in Rome in 1617 as a galleon with Hasekura s flag red manji on orange background on the top mast Like Hideyoshi Ieyasu encouraged foreign trade but also was suspicious of outsiders He wanted to make Edo a major port but once he learned that the Europeans favored ports in Kyushu and that China had rejected his plans for official trade he moved to control existing trade and allowed only certain ports to handle specific kinds of commodities Bird s eye view of Nagasaki bay with the island Dejima at mid left 1833 The beginning of the Edo period coincides with the last decades of the Nanban trade period during which intense interaction with European powers on the economic and religious plane took place It is at the beginning of the Edo period that Japan built its first ocean going warships such as the San Juan Bautista a 500 ton galleon type ship that transported a Japanese embassy headed by Hasekura Tsunenaga to the Americas and then to Europe Also during that period the bakufu commissioned around 720 Red Seal Ships three masted and armed trade ships for intra Asian commerce Japanese adventurers such as Yamada Nagamasa used those ships throughout Asia Itinerary and dates of the travels of Hasekura Tsunenaga The Christian problem was in effect a problem of controlling both the Christian daimyo in Kyushu and their trade with the Europeans By 1612 the shōgun s retainers and residents of Tokugawa lands had been ordered to forswear Christianity More restrictions came in 1616 the restriction of foreign trade to Nagasaki and Hirado an island northwest of Kyushu 1622 the execution of 120 missionaries and converts 1624 the expulsion of the Spanish and 1629 the execution of thousands of Christians Finally the Closed Country Edict of 1635 prohibited any Japanese from traveling outside Japan or if someone left from ever returning In 1636 the Dutch were restricted to Dejima a small artificial island and thus not true Japanese soil in Nagasaki s harbor The shogunate perceived Christianity to be an extremely destabilizing factor and so decided to target it The Shimabara Rebellion of 1637 1638 in which discontented Catholic samurai and peasants rebelled against the bakufu and Edo called in Dutch ships to bombard the rebel stronghold marked the end of the Christian movement During the Shimabara Rebellion an estimated 37 000 people mostly Christians were massacred 4 In 50 years the Tokugawa shoguns reduced the amount of Christians to near zero in Japan 4 However some Christians survived by going underground the so called Kakure Kirishitan Soon thereafter the Portuguese were permanently expelled members of the Portuguese diplomatic mission were executed all subjects were ordered to register at a Buddhist or Shinto temple and the Dutch and Chinese were restricted respectively to Dejima and to a special quarter in Nagasaki Besides small trade of some outer daimyo with Korea and the Ryukyu Islands to the southwest of Japan s main islands by 1641 foreign contacts were limited by the policy of sakoku to Nagasaki The last Jesuit was either killed or reconverted by 1644 5 and by the 1660s Christianity was almost completely eradicated and its external political economic and religious influence on Japan became quite limited 6 Only China the Dutch East India Company and for a short period the English enjoyed the right to visit Japan during this period for commercial purposes only and they were restricted to the Dejima port in Nagasaki Other Europeans who landed on Japanese shores were put to death without trial Society EditMain article Edo society The house of the merchant Fukagawa Edo Museum Archived 2013 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Social classes during the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate During the Tokugawa period the social order based on inherited position rather than personal merits was rigid and highly formalized At the top were the emperor and court nobles kuge together with the shōgun and daimyo Below them the population was divided into four classes in a system known as mibunsei 身分制 the samurai on top about 5 of the population and the peasants more than 80 of the population on the second level Below the peasants were the craftsmen and even below them on the fourth level were the merchants 7 Only the peasants lived in the rural areas Samurai craftsmen and merchants lived in the cities that were built around daimyo castles each restricted to their own quarter Edo society had an elaborate social structure in which every family knew its place and level of prestige 8 At the top were the Emperor and the court nobility invincible in prestige but weak in power Next came the shōgun daimyo and layers of feudal lords whose rank was indicated by their closeness to the Tokugawa They had power The daimyo comprised about 250 local lords of local han with annual outputs of 50 000 or more bushels of rice The upper strata was much given to elaborate and expensive rituals including elegant architecture landscaped gardens Noh drama patronage of the arts and the tea ceremony 9 Then came the 400 000 warriors called samurai in numerous grades and degrees A few upper samurai were eligible for high office most were foot soldiers Since there was very little fighting they became civil servants paid by the daimyo with minor duties The samurai were affiliated with senior lords in a well established chain of command The shogun had 17 000 samurai retainers the daimyo each had hundreds Most lived in modest homes near their lord s headquarters and lived off of hereditary rights and stipends Together these high status groups comprised Japan s ruling class making up about 6 of the total population After a long period of inner conflict the first goal of the newly established Tokugawa government was to pacify the country It created a balance of power that remained fairly stable for the next 250 years influenced by Confucian principles of social order Most samurai lost their direct possession of the land the daimyo took over their land The samurai had a choice give up their sword and become peasants or move to the city of their feudal lord and become a paid retainer Only a few land samurai remained in the border provinces of the north or as direct vassals of the shōgun the 5 000 so called hatamoto The daimyo were put under tight control of the shogunate Their families had to reside in Edo the daimyo themselves had to reside in Edo for one year and in their province han for the next This system was called sankin kōtai 10 Lower orders divided into two main segments the peasants 80 of the population whose high prestige as producers was undercut by their burden as the chief source of taxes They were illiterate and lived in villages controlled by appointed officials who kept the peace and collected taxes The family was the smallest legal entity and the maintenance of family status and privileges was of great importance at all levels of society The individual had no separate legal rights The 1711 Gotōke reijō was compiled from over 600 statutes promulgated between 1597 and 1696 11 Outside the four classes were the so called eta and hinin those whose professions broke the taboos of Buddhism Eta were butchers tanners and undertakers Hinin served as town guards street cleaners and executioners Other outsiders included the beggars entertainers and prostitutes The word eta literally translates to filthy and hinin to non humans a thorough reflection of the attitude held by other classes that the eta and hinin were not even people 12 Hinin were only allowed inside a special quarter of the city Other persecution of the hinin included disallowing them from wearing robes longer than knee length and the wearing of hats 12 Sometimes eta villages were not even printed on official maps A sub class of hinin who were born into their social class had no option of mobility to a different social class whereas the other class of hinin who had lost their previous class status could be reinstated in Japanese society 12 In the 19th century the umbrella term burakumin was coined to name the eta and hinin because both classes were forced to live in separate village neighborhoods 13 The eta hinin and burakumin classes were officially abolished in 1871 12 However their cultural and societal impact including some forms of discrimination continues into modern times 13 Edo 1865 or 1866 Photochrom print Five albumen prints joined to form a panorama Photographer Felice Beato Economic development Edit Scaled pocket plan of Edo The Edo period passed on a vital commercial sector to be in flourishing urban centers a relatively well educated elite a sophisticated government bureaucracy productive agriculture a closely unified nation with highly developed financial and marketing systems and a national infrastructure of roads Economic development during the Tokugawa period included urbanization increased shipping of commodities a significant expansion of domestic and initially foreign commerce and a diffusion of trade and handicraft industries The construction trades flourished along with banking facilities and merchant associations Increasingly han authorities oversaw the rising agricultural production and the spread of rural handicrafts 14 Population Edit A set of three ukiyo e prints depicting Osaka s bustling shipping industry by Gansuitei Yoshitoyo 1854 1859 By the mid 18th century Edo had a population of more than one million likely the biggest city in the world at the time 15 Osaka and Kyoto each had more than 400 000 inhabitants Many other castle towns grew as well Osaka and Kyoto became busy trading and handicraft production centers while Edo was the center for the supply of food and essential urban consumer goods Around the year 1700 Japan was perhaps the most urbanized country in the world at a rate of around 10 12 15 Half of that figure would be samurai while the other half consisting of merchants and artisans would be known as chōnin 15 In the first part of the Edo period Japan experienced rapid demographic growth before leveling off at around 30 million 16 Between the 1720s and 1820s Japan had almost zero population growth often attributed to lower birth rates in response to widespread famine Great Tenmei famine 1782 1788 but some historians have presented different theories such as a high rate of infanticide artificially controlling population 17 At around 1721 the population of Japan was close to 30 million and the figure was only around 32 million around the Meiji Restoration around 150 years later 18 15 From 1721 there were regular national surveys of the population until the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate 16 In addition regional surveys as well as religious records initially compiled to eradicate Christianity also provide valuable demographic data 16 Economy and financial services Edit Nihonbashi Fish Market Prosperity Edo period by Utagawa Kuniyasu The Tokugawa era brought peace and that brought prosperity to a nation of 31 million 80 of them rice farmers Rice production increased steadily but population remained stable Rice paddies grew from 1 6 million chō in 1600 to 3 million by 1720 19 Improved technology helped farmers control the all important flow of water to their paddies The daimyos operated several hundred castle towns which became loci of domestic trade The system of sankin kōtai meant that daimyos and their families often resided in Edo or travelled back to their domains giving demand to an enormous consumer market in Edo and trade throughout the country 18 20 Samurai and daimyos after prolonged peace are accustomed to more elaborate lifestyles 21 To keep up with growing expenditures the bakufu and daimyos often encouraged commercial crops and artifacts within their domains from textiles to tea 21 The concentration of wealth also led to the development of financial markets 18 As the shogunate only allowed daimyos to sell surplus rice in Edo and Osaka large scale rice markets developed there 18 Each daimyo also had a capital city located near the one castle they were allowed to maintain 15 Daimyos would have agents in various commercial centers selling rice and cash crops often exchanged for paper credit to be redeemed elsewhere 15 Merchants invented credit instruments to transfer money and currency came into common use In the cities and towns guilds of merchants and artisans met the growing demand for goods and services 22 Tokugawa coinage Ōban Koban Ichibuban 1601 1695 The merchants benefited enormously especially those with official patronage However the Neo Confucian ideology of the shogunate focused the virtues of frugality and hard work it had a rigid class system which emphasized agriculture and despised commerce and merchants 15 A century after the Shogunate s establishment problems began to emerge 15 The samurai forbidden to engage in farming or business but allowed to borrow money borrowed too much some taking up side jobs as bodyguards for merchants debt collectors or artisans 15 The bakufu and daimyos raised taxes on farmers but did not tax business so they too fell into debt with some merchants specializing in loaning to daimyos 21 Yet it was inconceivable to systematically tax commerce as it would make money off parasitic activities raise the prestige of merchants and lower the status of government 15 As they paid no regular taxes the forced financial contributions to the daimyos were seen by some merchants as a cost of doing business 21 The wealth of merchants gave them a degree of prestige and even power over the daimyos 21 23 By 1750 rising taxes incited peasant unrest and even revolt The nation had to deal somehow with samurai impoverishment and treasury deficits The financial troubles of the samurai undermined their loyalties to the system and the empty treasury threatened the whole system of government One solution was reactionary cutting samurai salaries and prohibiting spending for luxuries 15 Other solutions were modernizing with the goal of increasing agrarian productivity 15 The eighth Tokugawa shogun Yoshimune in office 1716 1745 had considerable success though much of his work had to be done again between 1787 and 1793 by the shogun s chief councilor Matsudaira Sadanobu 1759 1829 21 Other shoguns debased the coinage to pay debts which caused inflation 21 Overall while commerce domestic and international was vibrant and sophisticated financial services had developed in the Edo period the shogunate remained ideologically focused on honest agricultural work as the basis of society and never sought to develop a mercantile or capitalistic country 15 By 1800 the commercialization of the economy grew rapidly bringing more and more remote villages into the national economy Rich farmers appeared who switched from rice to high profit commercial crops and engaged in local money lending trade and small scale manufacturing Wealthy merchants were often forced to lend money to the shogunate or daimyos often never returned 15 They often had to hide their wealth and some sought higher social status by using money to marry into the samurai class 15 There is some evidence that as merchants gained greater political influence in the late Edo period the rigid class division between samurai and merchants began to break down 15 A few domains notably Chōsu and Satsuma used innovative methods to restore their finances but most sunk further into debt The financial crisis provoked a reactionary solution near the end of the Tempo era 1830 1843 promulgated by the chief counselor Mizuno Tadakuni He raised taxes denounced luxuries and tried to impede the growth of business he failed and it appeared to many that the continued existence of the entire Tokugawa system was in jeopardy 24 Agriculture Edit Rice was the base of the economy About 80 of the people were rice farmers 25 Rice production increased steadily but population remained stable so prosperity increased Rice paddies grew from 1 6 million chō in 1600 to 3 million by 1720 19 Improved technology helped farmers control the all important flow of irrigation to their paddies The daimyo operated several hundred castle towns which became loci of domestic trade Large scale rice markets developed centered on Edo and Ōsaka 22 In the cities and towns guilds of merchants and artisans met the growing demand for goods and services The merchants while low in status prospered especially those with official patronage 21 Merchants invented credit instruments to transfer money currency came into common use and the strengthening credit market encouraged entrepreneurship 26 The daimyo collected the taxes from the peasants in the form of rice Taxes were high often at around 40 50 of the harvest 21 The rice was sold at the fudasashi market in Edo To raise money the daimyo used forward contracts to sell rice that was not even harvested yet These contracts were similar to modern futures trading It was during the Edo period that Japan developed an advanced forest management policy Increased demand for timber resources for construction shipbuilding and fuel had led to widespread deforestation which resulted in forest fires floods and soil erosion In response the shōgun beginning around 1666 instituted a policy to reduce logging and increase the planting of trees The policy mandated that only the shōgun and daimyo could authorize the use of wood By the 18th century Japan had developed detailed scientific knowledge about silviculture and plantation forestry 27 Artistic and intellectual development EditEducation Edit Terakoya private educational school The first shogun Ieyasu set up Confucian academies in his shinpan domains and other daimyos followed suit in their own domains establishing what s known as han schools 藩校 hankō 15 21 Within a generation almost all samurai were literate as their careers often required knowledge of literary arts 15 These academies were staffed mostly with other samurai along with some buddhist and shinto clergymen who were also learned in Neo Confucianism and the works of Zhu Xi 15 Beyond kanji Chinese characters the Confucian classics calligraphy basic arithmetics and etiquette 21 the samurai also learned various martial arts and military skills in schools 15 The chōnin urban merchants and artisans patronized neighborhood schools called terakoya 寺子屋 temple schools 15 Despite being located in temples the terakoya curriculum consisted of basic literacy and arithmetic instead of literary arts or philosophy 15 High rates of urban literacy in Edo contributed to the prevalence of novels and other literary forms 21 In urban areas children are often taught by masterless samurai while in rural areas priests from Buddhist temples or Shinto shrines often did the teaching 21 Unlike in the cities in rural Japan only children of prominent farmers would receive education 21 In Edo the shogunate set up several schools under its direct patronage the most important being the neo Confucian Shōheikō 昌平黌 acting as a de facto elite school for its bureaucracy but also creating a network of alumni from the whole country Besides Shoheikō other important directly run schools at the end of the shogunate included the Wagakukōdansho 和学講談所 Institute of Lectures of Japanese classics specialized in Japanese domestic history and literature influencing the rise of kokugaku and the Igakukan 医学間 Institute of medicine focusing on Chinese medicine 28 One estimate of literacy in Edo suggest that up to a third of males could read along with a sixth of women 15 Another estimate states that 40 of men and 10 of women by the end of the Edo period were literate 29 According to another estimate around 1800 almost 100 of the samurai class and about 50 to 60 of the chōnin craftsmen and merchants class and nōmin peasants class were literate 30 Some historians partially credited Japan s relatively high literacy rates for its fast development after the Meiji Restoration 21 As the literacy rate was so high that many ordinary people could read books books in various genres such as cooking gardening travel guides art books scripts of bunraku puppet theatre kibyōshi satirical novels sharebon books on urban culture kokkeibon comical books ninjōbon romance novel yomihon and kusazōshi were published There were 600 to 800 rental bookstores in Edo and people borrowed or bought these woodblock print books The best selling books in this period were Kōshoku Ichidai Otoko Life of an Amorous Man by Ihara Saikaku Nansō Satomi Hakkenden by Takizawa Bakin and Tōkaidōchu Hizakurige by Jippensha Ikku and these books were reprinted many times 31 30 32 33 Philosophy and religion Edit Wadokei Japanese made clockwatch 18th centuryThe flourishing of Neo Confucianism was the major intellectual development of the Tokugawa period 15 Confucian studies had long been kept active in Japan by Buddhist clerics but during the Tokugawa period Confucianism emerged from Buddhist religious control This system of thought increased attention to a secular view of man and society The ethical humanism rationalism and historical perspective of neo Confucian doctrine appealed to the official class By the mid 17th century neo Confucianism was Japan s dominant legal philosophy and contributed directly to the development of the kokugaku national learning school of thought Karakuri puppet Moji kaki doll made by Tanaka Hisashige Using mechanical power a puppet dips a brush into ink and writes a character on paper 19th centuryAdvanced studies and growing applications of neo Confucianism contributed to the transition of the social and political order from feudal norms to class and large group oriented practices The rule of the people or Confucian man was gradually replaced by the rule of law New laws were developed and new administrative devices were instituted A new theory of government and a new vision of society emerged as a means of justifying more comprehensive governance by the bakufu Each person had a distinct place in society and was expected to work to fulfill his or her mission in life The people were to be ruled with benevolence by those whose assigned duty it was to rule Government was all powerful but responsible and humane Although the class system was influenced by neo Confucianism it was not identical to it Whereas soldiers and clergy were at the bottom of the hierarchy in the Chinese model in Japan some members of these classes constituted the ruling elite Members of the samurai class adhered to bushi traditions with a renewed interest in Japanese history and cultivation of the ways of Confucian scholar administrators A distinct culture known as chōnindō the way of the townspeople emerged in cities such as Osaka Kyoto and Edo It encouraged aspiration to bushido qualities diligence honesty honor loyalty and frugality while blending Shinto neo Confucian and Buddhist beliefs Study of mathematics astronomy cartography engineering and medicine were also encouraged Emphasis was placed on quality of workmanship especially in the arts Kaitai Shinsho Japan s first treatise on Western anatomy published in 1774Buddhism and Shinto were both still important in Tokugawa Japan Buddhism together with neo Confucianism provided standards of social behavior Although Buddhism was not as politically powerful as it had been in the past Buddhism continued to be espoused by the upper classes Proscriptions against Christianity benefited Buddhism in 1640 when the bakufu ordered everyone to register at a temple The rigid separation of Tokugawa society into han villages wards and households helped reaffirm local Shinto attachments Shinto provided spiritual support to the political order and was an important tie between the individual and the community Shinto also helped preserve a sense of national identity Shinto eventually assumed an intellectual form as shaped by neo Confucian rationalism and materialism The kokugaku movement emerged from the interactions of these two belief systems Kokugaku contributed to the emperor centered nationalism of modern Japan and the revival of Shinto as a national creed in the 18th and 19th centuries The Kojiki Nihon Shoki and Man yōshu were all studied anew in the search for the Japanese spirit Some purists in the kokugaku movement such as Motoori Norinaga even criticized the Confucian and Buddhist influences in effect foreign influences for contaminating Japan s ancient ways Japan was the land of the kami and as such had a special destiny 34 During the period Japan studied Western sciences and techniques called rangaku Dutch studies through the information and books received through the Dutch traders in Dejima The main areas that were studied included geography medicine natural sciences astronomy art languages physical sciences such as the study of electrical phenomena and mechanical sciences as exemplified by the development of Japanese clockwatches or wadokei inspired by Western techniques Among those who studied mechanical science at that time Tanaka Hisashige the founder of Toshiba is worthy of special mention Because of the technical originality and sophistication of his Myriad year clock and karakuri puppet they are difficult to restore even today and are considered to be a highly mechanical heritage prior to Japan s modernization 35 36 37 Art culture and entertainment Edit Red and White Plum Blossoms by Ogata Kōrin 1712 1716 In the field of art the Rinpa school became popular The paintings and crafts of the Rinpa school are characterized by highly decorative and showy designs using gold and silver leaves bold compositions with simplified objects to be drawn repeated patterns and a playful spirit Important figures in the Rinpa school include Hon ami Kōetsu Tawaraya Sōtatsu Ogata Kōrin Sakai Hōitsu and Suzuki Kiitsu Other than the Rinpa school Maruyama Ōkyo and Itō Jakuchu are famous for their realistic painting techniques They produced their works under the patronage of wealthy merchants newly emerging from the economic development of this period Following the Azuchi Momoyama period the painters of the Kano school drew pictures on the walls and fusumas of castles and temples with the support of powerful people 38 Mounting for wakizashi decorated with lacquer of maki e technique 18th century Due to the end of the period of civil war and the development of the economy many crafts with high artistic value were produced Among the samurai class arms came to be treated like works of art and Japanese sword mountings and Japanese armour beautifully decorated with lacquer of maki e technique and metal carvings became popular Each han daimyo domain encouraged the production of crafts to improve their finances and crafts such as furnishings and inro beautifully decorated with lacquer metal or ivory became popular among rich people The Kaga Domain which was ruled by the Maeda clan was especially enthusiastic about promoting crafts and the area still boasts a reputation that surpasses Kyoto in crafts even today 39 40 For the first time urban populations had the means and leisure time to support a new mass culture Their search for enjoyment became known as ukiyo the floating world an ideal world of fashion popular entertainment and the discovery of aesthetic qualities in objects and actions of everyday life This increasing interest in pursuing recreational activities helped to develop an array of new industries many of which could be found in an area known as Yoshiwara The district was known for being the center of Edo s developing sense of elegance and refinement 41 Established in 1617 as the city s shogunate sanctioned prostitution district it kept this designation about 250 years Yoshiwara was home to mostly women who due to unfortunate circumstances found themselves working in this secluded environment Professional female entertainers geisha music popular stories Kabuki theater and bunraku puppet theater poetry a rich literature and art exemplified by beautiful woodblock prints known as ukiyo e were all part of this flowering of culture Literature also flourished with the talented examples of the playwright Chikamatsu Monzaemon 1653 1724 and the poet essayist and travel writer Matsuo Bashō 1644 1694 The Great Wave off Kanagawa full colour ukiyo e woodblock print Hokusai c 1829 1832Ukiyo e is a genre of painting and printmaking that developed in the late 17th century at first depicting the entertainments of the pleasure districts of Edo such as courtesans and kabuki actors Harunobu produced the first full colour nishiki e prints in 1765 a form that has become synonymous to most with ukiyo e The genre reached a peak in technique towards the end of the century with the works of such artists as Kiyonaga and Utamaro As the Edo period came to an end a great diversity of genres proliferated warriors nature folklore and the landscapes of Hokusai and Hiroshige The genre declined throughout the rest of the century in the face of modernization that saw ukiyo e as both old fashioned and laborious to produce compared to Western technologies Ukiyo e was a primary part of the wave of Japonisme that swept Western art in the late 19th century The Edo period was characterized by an unprecedented series of economic developments despite termination of contact with the outside world and cultural maturation especially in terms of theater music and other entertainment For example a poetic meter for music called kinsei kouta chō was invented during this time 42 and is still used today in folk songs Music and theater were influenced by the social gap between the noble and commoner classes and different arts became more defined as this gap widened Several different types of kabuki emerged Some such as shibaraku were only available at a certain time of year while some companies only performed for nobles Fashion trends satirization of local news stories and advertisements were often part of kabuki theater as well 43 Along with kabuki storytelling entertainments were popular among the common people and people enjoyed rakugo a comical story and kōdan a historical story in a dedicated theater called yose 44 The most popular sport was sumo Eating out became popular due to urbanization Particularly popular among ordinary people were stalls serving fast food such as soba sushi tempura and unagi tofu restaurants teahouses and izakaya Japanese style pubs A number of ryotei also opened to serve high class food People enjoyed eating at restaurants by buying books that listed restaurant ratings that imitated sumo rankings 45 46 Gardening were also popular pastimes for the people of the time Especially in Edo residences of daimyo feudal lords of each domain were gathered and many gardeners existed to manage these gardens which led to the development of horticultural techniques Among people cherry blossoms morning glories Japanese irises and chrysanthemums were especially popular and bonsai using deep pots became popular Not only did people buy plants and appreciate flowers but they were also enthusiastic about improving the varieties of flowers so specialized books were published one after another For example Matsudaira Sadatomo produced 300 varieties of iris and published a technical book 47 Traveling became popular among people because of the improvement of roads and post towns The main destinations were famous temples and Shinto shrines around the country and eating and drinking at the inns and prostitution were one of the main attractions And what people admired most was the visit to Ise Grand Shrine and the summit of Mount Fuji which are considered the most sacred places in Japan The Ise Grand Shrine in particular has been visited by an enormous number of visitors and historical documents record that 3 62 million people visited the shrine in 50 days in 1625 and 1 18 million people visited it in three days in 1829 when the grand festival held every 20 years Shikinen Sengu was held It was a once in a lifetime event for people living in remote areas so they set up a joint fund for each village saved their travel expenses and went on a group trip Local residents of Ise Grand Shrine and Mount Fuji used to send specialized advertising personnel to various parts of Japan to solicit trips to local areas to make money from tourism 48 49 Art culture Reading stand with Mt Yoshino decorated with lacquer of maki e technique 18th century Ukiyo e based on kabuki actors became popular Ichikawa Danjurō V in the popular kabuki play Shibaraku by Utagawa Kunimasa 1796 Ukiyo e depicting Sushi by Hiroshige A boarding place for a ferry on the Miya River which is crowded with people visiting Ise Grand Shrine by HiroshigeFashion Edit Outer kimono for a young woman uchikake 1840 1870 Khalili Collection of Kimono Clothing acquired a wide variety of designs and decorative techniques especially for kimono worn by women 50 The main consumers of kimono were the samurai who used lavish clothing and other material luxuries to signal their place at the top of the social order 51 Driven by this demand the textile industry grew and used increasingly sophisticated methods of weaving dyeing and embroidery 51 Over this period women adopted brighter colours and bolder designs whereas women s and men s kimono had been very similar 52 The rise of a merchant class fuelled more demand for elaborate costumes While ordinary kimono would usually be created by women at home luxurious silk kimono were designed and created by specialist artists who were usually men 53 Inro and Netsuke 18th century Ladies fashion in 1700s by Utagawa Toyokuni A kind of kimono specific to the military elite is the goshodoki or palace court style which would be worn in the residence of a military leader a shōgun or daimyo These would have landscape scenes among which there are other motifs usually referencing classic literature 54 Samurai men would dress with a more understated design with geometrical designs concentrated around the waist 55 The yogi or sleeping kimono is a thickly wadded form of wearable bedding usually with simple designs 56 A style called tsuma moyō had rich decoration from the waist down only and family emblems on the neck and shoulders These would be worn by women of the merchant class 57 The kimono of merchant class women were more subdued than those of the samurai but still with bold colours and designs representing nature 58 Red was a popular colour for wealthy women partly because of its cultural association with youth and passion and partly because the dye derived from safflower 59 was very expensive so a bright red garment was an ostentatious display of wealth 60 Indian fabrics brought to Japan by Dutch importers were received with enthusiasm and found many uses 61 Japanese designers started printing designs that were influenced by the Indian patterns 62 Some garments used fabric imported from Britain or France Ownership of these exotic textiles signified wealth and taste but they were worn as undergarments where the designs would not be seen 63 Inro and netsuke became popular as accessories among men Originally inro was a portable case to put a seal or medicine and netsuke was a fastener attached to the case and both were practical tools However from the middle of the Edo period products with high artistic value appeared and became popular as male accessories Especially samurai and wealthy merchants competed to buy inro of high artistic value At the end of the Edo period the artistic value of inro further increased and it came to be regarded as an art collection 64 65 End of the shogunate EditMain article Bakumatsu Decline of the Tokugawa Edit Dai Roku Daiba 第六台場 or No 6 Battery one of the original Edo era battery islands One of the cannons of Odaiba now at the Yasukuni Shrine 80 pound bronze bore 250mm length 3830mm The end of this period is specifically called the late Tokugawa shogunate The cause for the end of this period is controversial but is recounted as the forcing of Japan s opening to the world by Commodore Matthew Perry of the US Navy whose armada known by Japanese as the black ships fired weapons from Edo Bay Several artificial land masses were created to block the range of the armada and this land remains in what is presently called the Odaiba district The Tokugawa did not eventually collapse simply because of intrinsic failures Foreign intrusions helped to precipitate a complex political struggle between the bakufu and a coalition of its critics The continuity of the anti bakufu movement in the mid 19th century would finally bring down the Tokugawa Historians consider that a major contributing factor to the decline of the Tokugawa was poor management of the central government by the shōgun which caused the social classes in Japan to fall apart attribution needed 66 From the outset the Tokugawa attempted to restrict families accumulation of wealth and fostered a back to the soil policy in which the farmer the ultimate producer was the ideal person in society The standard of living for urban and rural dwellers alike grew significantly during the Tokugawa period Better means of crop production transport housing food and entertainment were all available as was more leisure time at least for urban dwellers The literacy rate was high for a preindustrial society by some estimates the literacy rate in the city of Edo was 80 percent and cultural values were redefined and widely imparted throughout the samurai and chōnin classes Despite the reappearance of guilds economic activities went well beyond the restrictive nature of the guilds and commerce spread and a money economy developed Although government heavily restricted the merchants and viewed them as unproductive and usurious members of society the samurai who gradually became separated from their rural ties depended greatly on the merchants and artisans for consumer goods artistic interests and loans In this way a subtle subversion of the warrior class by the chōnin took place A struggle arose in the face of political limitations that the shōgun imposed on the entrepreneurial class The government ideal of an agrarian society failed to square with the reality of commercial distribution A huge government bureaucracy had evolved which now stagnated because of its discrepancy with a new and evolving social order Compounding the situation the population increased significantly during the first half of the Tokugawa period Although the magnitude and growth rates are uncertain there were at least 26 million commoners and about four million members of samurai families and their attendants when the first nationwide census was taken in 1721 Drought followed by crop shortages and starvation resulted in twenty great famines between 1675 and 1837 During the Tokugawa period there were 154 famines of which 21 were widespread and serious 67 The Great Tenmei famine 1782 until 1788 was the worst famine in the Edo period 68 Many crops were damaged due to bad weather serious cold and the 1783 eruption of Mount Asama 69 68 A worsening factor of the Great Tenmei famine was a drop in global temperatures due to the eruption of the Icelandic volcano Laki in 1783 68 The spread of the famine was largely due to mismanagement of the Shogunate and the clan 68 Peasant unrest grew and by the late 18th century mass protests over taxes and food shortages had become commonplace Newly landless families became tenant farmers while the displaced rural poor moved into the cities As the fortunes of previously well to do families declined others moved in to accumulate land and a new wealthy farming class emerged Those people who benefited were able to diversify production and to hire laborers while others were left discontented Many samurai fell on hard times and were forced into handicraft production and wage jobs for merchants Although Japan was able to acquire and refine a wide variety of scientific knowledge the rapid industrialization of the West during the 18th century created a material gap in terms of technologies and armament between Japan and the West forcing it to abandon its policy of seclusion which contributed to the end of the Tokugawa regime Western intrusions were on the increase in the early 19th century Russian warships and traders encroached on Karafuto called Sakhalin under Russian and Soviet control and on the Kuril Islands the southernmost of which are considered by the Japanese as the northern islands of Hokkaidō A British warship entered Nagasaki harbour searching for enemy Dutch ships in 1808 and other warships and whalers were seen in Japanese waters with increasing frequency in the 1810s and 1820s Whalers and trading ships from the United States also arrived on Japan s shores Although the Japanese made some minor concessions and allowed some landings they largely attempted to keep all foreigners out sometimes using force Rangaku became crucial not only in understanding the foreign barbarians but also in using the knowledge gained from the West to fend them off By the 1830s there was a general sense of crisis Famines and natural disasters hit hard and unrest led to a peasant uprising against officials and merchants in Osaka in 1837 Although it lasted only a day the uprising made a dramatic impression Remedies came in the form of traditional solutions that sought to reform moral decay rather than address institutional problems The shōgun s advisers pushed for a return to the martial spirit more restrictions on foreign trade and contacts suppression of rangaku censorship of literature and elimination of luxury in the government and samurai class Others sought the overthrow of the Tokugawa and espoused the political doctrine of sonnō jōi revere the emperor expel the barbarians which called for unity under imperial rule and opposed foreign intrusions The bakufu persevered for the time being amidst growing concerns over Western successes in establishing colonial enclaves in China following the First Opium War of 1839 1842 More reforms were ordered especially in the economic sector to strengthen Japan against the Western threat Japan turned down a demand from the United States which was greatly expanding its own presence in the Asia Pacific region to establish diplomatic relations when Commodore James Biddle appeared in Edo Bay with two warships in July 1846 End of seclusion Edit Matthew Calbraith Perry Landing of Commodore Perry Officers and Men of the Squadron To meet the Imperial Commissioners at Kurihama Yokosuka March 8th 1854 When Commodore Matthew C Perry s four ship squadron appeared in Edo Bay in July 1853 the bakufu was thrown into turmoil The chairman of the senior councillors Abe Masahiro 1819 1857 was responsible for dealing with the Americans Having no precedent to manage this threat to national security Abe tried to balance the desires of the senior councillors to compromise with the foreigners of the emperor who wanted to keep the foreigners out and of the daimyo who wanted to go to war Lacking consensus Abe decided to compromise by accepting Perry s demands for opening Japan to foreign trade while also making military preparations In March 1854 the Treaty of Peace and Amity or Treaty of Kanagawa opened two ports to American ships seeking provisions guaranteed good treatment to shipwrecked American sailors and allowed a United States consul to take up residence in Shimoda a seaport on the Izu Peninsula southwest of Edo The Treaty of Amity and Commerce Between the U S and Japan Harris Treaty opening still more areas to American trade was forced on the bakufu five years later The resulting damage to the bakufu was significant The devalued price for gold in Japan was one immediate enormous effect 70 The European and American traders purchased gold for its original price on the world market and then sold it to the Japanese for triple the price 70 Along with this cheap goods from these developed nations like finished cotton flooded the market forcing many Japanese out of business 70 Debate over government policy was unusual and had engendered public criticism of the bakufu In the hope of enlisting the support of new allies Abe to the consternation of the fudai had consulted with the shinpan and tozama daimyo further undermining the already weakened bakufu In the Ansei Reform 1854 1856 Abe then tried to strengthen the regime by ordering Dutch warships and armaments from the Netherlands and building new port defenses In 1855 a naval training school with Dutch instructors was set up at Nagasaki and a Western style military school was established at Edo by the next year the government was translating Western books Opposition to Abe increased within fudai circles which opposed opening bakufu councils to tozama daimyo and he was replaced in 1855 as chairman of the senior councilors by Hotta Masayoshi 1810 1864 At the head of the dissident faction was Tokugawa Nariaki who had long embraced a militant loyalty to the emperor along with anti foreign sentiments and who had been put in charge of national defense in 1854 The Mito school based on neo Confucian and Shinto principles had as its goal the restoration of the imperial institution the turning back of the West and the founding of a world empire under the divine Yamato dynasty In the final years of the Tokugawas foreign contacts increased as more concessions were granted The new treaty with the United States in 1859 allowed more ports to be opened to diplomatic representatives unsupervised trade at four additional ports and foreign residences in Osaka and Edo It also embodied the concept of extraterritoriality foreigners were subject to the laws of their own countries but not to Japanese law Hotta lost the support of key daimyo and when Tokugawa Nariaki opposed the new treaty Hotta sought imperial sanction The court officials perceiving the weakness of the bakufu rejected Hotta s request and thus suddenly embroiled Kyoto and the emperor in Japan s internal politics for the first time in many centuries When the shōgun died without an heir Nariaki appealed to the court for support of his own son Tokugawa Yoshinobu or Keiki for shōgun a candidate favored by the shinpan and tozama daimyo The fudai won the power struggle however installing Tokugawa Yoshitomi arresting Nariaki and Keiki executing Yoshida Shōin 1830 1859 a leading sonnō jōi intellectual who had opposed the American treaty and plotted a revolution against the bakufu and signing treaties with the United States and five other nations thus ending more than 200 years of exclusion Recently when some scholars who have suggested that there were more events that spurred this opening of Japan Yoshimune eighth Tokugawa shōgun from 1716 to 1745 started the first Kyōhō reforms in an attempt to gain more revenue for the government 71 In 1767 to 1786 Tanuma Okitsugu also initiated some unorthodox economic reforms to expand government income 71 This led his conservative opponents to attack him and take his position as he was forced from government in disgrace 71 Similarly Matsudaira Sadanobu launched the Kansei Reforms in 1787 1793 to stabilize rice prices cut government costs and increase revenues 71 The final economic reform of the Tenpō era of 1841 1843 had similar objectives Most were ineffective and only worked in some areas These economic failings would also have been a force in the opening of Japan as Japanese businessmen desired larger markets Some scholars also point to internal activism for political change The Mito school had long been an active force in demanding political changes such as restoring the powers of the Emperor This anger can also be seen in the poetry of Matsuo Taseko a woman who farmed silkworms in the Ina Valley from Hirata Atsutane s School of National Learning It is disgusting the agitation over thread In today s world Ever since the ships from foreign countries came for the jeweled silkworm cocoons to the land of the gods and the Emperor Peoples hearts awesome though they are are being pulled apart and consumed by rage Matsuo Taseko Gordon 2008 p 52 This inspired many anti Tokugawa activists as they blamed the bakufu for impoverishing the people and dishonoring the emperor 72 Tokugawa Yoshinobu in later life Bakumatsu modernization and conflicts Edit Main article Bakumatsu During the last years of the bakufu or bakumatsu the bakufu took strong measures to try to reassert its dominance although its involvement with modernization and foreign powers was to make it a target of anti Western sentiment throughout the country The army and the navy were modernized A naval training school was established in Nagasaki in 1855 Naval students were sent to study in Western naval schools for several years starting a tradition of foreign educated future leaders such as Admiral Enomoto French naval engineers were hired to build naval arsenals such as Yokosuka and Nagasaki By the end of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1867 the Japanese navy of the shōgun already possessed eight Western style steam warships around the flagship Kaiyō Maru which were used against pro imperial forces during the Boshin War under the command of Admiral Enomoto A French military mission was established to help modernize the armies of the bakufu Kanrin Maru Japan s first screw driven steam warship 1855 Samurai in western clothing of the Tokugawa Shogunate Army 1866 Revering the emperor as a symbol of unity extremists wrought violence and death against the Bakufu and Han authorities and foreigners Foreign naval retaliation in the Anglo Satsuma War led to still another concessionary commercial treaty in 1865 but Yoshitomi was unable to enforce the Western treaties A bakufu army was defeated when it was sent to crush dissent in the Satsuma and Chōshu Domains in 1866 Finally in 1867 Emperor Kōmei died and was succeeded by his underaged son Emperor Meiji Tokugawa Yoshinobu reluctantly became head of the Tokugawa house and shōgun He tried to reorganize the government under the emperor while preserving the shōgun s leadership role Fearing the growing power of the Satsuma and Chōshu daimyo other daimyo called for returning the shōgun s political power to the emperor and a council of daimyo chaired by the former Tokugawa shōgun Yoshinobu accepted the plan in late 1867 and resigned announcing an imperial restoration The Satsuma Chōshu and other han leaders and radical courtiers however rebelled seized the imperial palace and announced their own restoration on January 3 1868 Following the Boshin War 1868 1869 the bakufu was abolished and Yoshinobu was reduced to the ranks of the common daimyo Resistance continued in the North throughout 1868 and the bakufu naval forces under Admiral Enomoto Takeaki continued to hold out for another six months in Hokkaidō where they founded the short lived Republic of Ezo Events Edit1600 Battle of Sekigahara Tokugawa Ieyasu defeats a coalition of daimyo and establishes hegemony over most of Japan 1603 The emperor appoints Tokugawa Ieyasu as shōgun who moves his government to Edo Tokyo and founds the Tokugawa dynasty of shōguns 1605 Tokugawa Ieyasu resigns as shōgun and is succeeded by his son Tokugawa Hidetada 1607 Korean Joseon dynasty sends an embassy to Tokugawa shogunate 1611 Ryukyu Islands become a vassal state of Satsuma Domain 1614 Tokugawa Ieyasu bans Christianity from Japan 1615 Battle of Osaka Tokugawa Ieyasu besieges Osaka Castle all opposition from forces loyal to the Toyotomi family Tokugawa authority becomes paramount throughout Japan 1616 Tokugawa Ieyasu dies 1620 After Ieyasu dies the peasants and chōnins increase in population 1623 Tokugawa Iemitsu becomes the third shōgun 1633 Iemitsu forbids travelling abroad and reading foreign books 1635 Iemitsu formalizes the system of mandatory alternative residence sankin kōtai in Edo 1637 Shimabara Rebellion 1637 38 mounted by overtaxed peasants 1638 Iemitsu forbids ship building 1639 Edicts establishing National Seclusion Sakoku Rei are completed All Westerners except the Dutch are prohibited from entering Japan 1641 Iemitsu bans all foreigners except Chinese Koreans and Dutch from Japan 1657 The Great Fire of Meireki destroys most of the city of Edo 1700 Kabuki and ukiyo e become popular clarification needed 1707 Mount Fuji erupts 1774 The anatomical text Kaitai Shinsho the first complete Japanese translation of a Western medical work is published by Sugita Genpaku and Maeno Ryotaku 1787 Matsudaira Sadanobu becomes senior shogunal councillor and institutes the Kansei Reforms 1792 Russian envoy Adam Laxman arrives at Nemuro in eastern Ezo now Hokkaidō 1804 Russian envoy Nikolai Rezanov reaches Nagasaki and unsuccessfully seeks the establishment of trade relations with Japan 1837 Rebellion of Ōshio Heihachirō 1841 Tenpō Reforms 1853 US Navy Commodore Matthew C Perry s four ship squadron appeared in Edo Bay Tokyo Bay 1854 The US forces Japan to sign a trade agreement Treaty of Kanagawa which reopens Japan to foreigners after two centuries 1855 Russia and Japan establish diplomatic relations 1860 Sakuradamon Incident 1864 British French Dutch and American warships bombard Shimonoseki and open more Japanese ports for foreigners 1868 Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigns the Tokugawa dynasty ends and the emperor or mikado Meiji is restored but with capital in Edo Tokyo and divine attributes Era names Edit The imperial eras proclaimed during the Edo period were 73 Eras during the Edo period Era name Japanese kanji Approximate yearsKeichō 慶長 1596 1615Genna 元和 1615 1624Kan ei 寛永 1624 1644Shōhō 正保 1644 1648Keian 慶安 1648 1652Jōō 承応 1652 1655Meireki 明暦 1655 1658Manji 万治 1658 1661Kanbun 寛文 1661 1673Enpō 延宝 1673 1681Tenna 天和 1681 1684Jōkyō 貞享 1684 1688Genroku 元禄 1688 1704Hōei 宝永 1704 1711Shōtoku 正徳 1711 1716Kyōhō 享保 1716 1736Genbun 元文 1736 1741Kanpō 寛保 1741 1744Enkyō 延享 1744 1748Kan en 寛延 1748 1751Hōreki 宝暦 1751 1764Meiwa 明和 1764 1772An ei 安永 1772 1781Tenmei 天明 1781 1789Kansei 寛政 1789 1801Kyōwa 享和 1801 1804Bunka 文化 1804 1818Bunsei 文政 1818 1830Tenpō 天保 1830 1844Kōka 弘化 1844 1848Kaei 嘉永 1848 1854Ansei 安政 1854 1860Man en 万延 1860 1861Bunkyu 文久 1861 1864Genji 元治 1864 1865Keiō 慶応 1865 1868In popular culture EditMain article Edo period in popular culture The Edo period is the setting of many works of popular culture These include novels comics stageplays films television shows animated works and manga There is a cultural theme park called Edo Wonderland Nikko Edomura in the Kinugawa Onsen area of Nikkō Tochigi north of Tokyo See also EditCriminal punishment in Edo period Japan Edomoji Japanese lettering styles invented in the Edo period Ee ja nai ka an outbreak of mass hysteria at the end of the Edo period Gonin Gumi groups of five households that were held collectively responsible during the Edo period Jidaigeki Japanese period dramas which are usually set in the Edo period Jitte weapon law enforcement weapon unique to the period Karakuri ningyō Japanese automatonsCitations Edit Tokugawa period Definition amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 10 03 daimyo Significance History amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 10 03 Hall amp McClain 1991 pp 128 182 a b Japan Christianity and the West during the Edo period Facts and Details August 26 2014 Archived from the original on March 15 2022 Hall amp McClain 1991 pp 369 370 Hall amp McClain 1991 p 370 Beasley 1972 p 22 Hall John W Autumn 1974 Rule by Status in Tokugawa Japan Journal of Japanese Studies 1 1 39 49 doi 10 2307 133436 JSTOR 133436 Totman 2000 pp 225 230 Michael Wert Samurai A Concise History 2019 Lewis 2003 pp 31 32 a b c d Frederic 2002 p 313 a b Frederic 2002 p 93 Kozo Yamamura Toward a reexamination of the economic history of Tokugawa Japan 1600 1867 Journal of Economic History 33 3 1973 509 546 online a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Perez Louis G 2009 The history of Japan 2nd ed Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 36442 6 OCLC 277040931 a b c Hanley S B 1968 Population trends and economic development in Tokugawa Japan the case of Bizen province in Okayama Daedalus 622 635 Flath 2000 a b c d Huang Ray 2015 Capitalism and the 21st Century Zi ben zhu yi yu er shi yi shi ji Di 1 ban ed Beijing ISBN 978 7 108 05368 8 OCLC 953227195 a b One chō or chobu equals 2 45 acres Constantine Nomikos Vaporis Tour of Duty Samurai Military Service in Edo and the Culture of Early Modern Japan Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 2008 26 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hane Mikiso Premodern Japan A historical survey Routledge 2018 a b Totman 2000 chapter 11 Sakata Yoshio Meiji Ishinshi A history of the Meiji Restoration Tokyo Miraisha 1960 19 McClain James L 2002 Japan a modern history 1st ed New York N Y W W Norton amp Co pp 5 108 ISBN 0 393 04156 5 OCLC 47013231 Susan B Hanley and Kozo Yamamura 1977 Economic and demographic change in preindustrial Japan 1600 1868 pp 69 90 Tetsuji Okazaki 2005 The role of the merchant coalition in pre modern Japanese economic development an historical institutional analysis PDF Explorations in Economic History 42 2 184 201 doi 10 1016 j eeh 2004 06 005 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 05 10 Diamond 2005 pp 297 304 Kobayashi Tetsuya 1976 Society Schools and Progress in Japan Pergamon pp 14 ISBN 9781483136226 See Martha Tocco Norms and texts for women s education in Tokugawa Japan In Ko Haboush and Piggott Women and Confucian Cultures 193 218 a b 第6回 和本の楽しみ方4 江戸の草紙 p 3 Konosuke Hashiguchi 2013 Seikei University Edo Picture Books and the Edo Period National Diet Library Nihonbashi Mitsui Fudosan Keizaburo Seimaru 2017 江戸のベストセラー Yosensha ISBN 978 4800312556 Lewis 2003 pp 45 47 Hisashige Tanaka 1799 1881 The Seiko Museum Ginza Mechanism of Man nen dokei a Historic Perpetual Chronometer Yuji Kubota 2005 Karakuri Nagoya Tradition to the modern robot Shobei Tamaya 琳派とは 知っておきたい琳派の巨匠と代表作 January 15 2019 Masayuki Murata 明治工芸入門 p 104 p 120 Me no Me 2017 ISBN 978 4907211110 Traditional Crafts of Kanazawa Archived 2022 01 17 at the Wayback Machine Kanazawa City Longstreet amp Longstreet 1989 p 2 Hoff Frank 1978 06 01 Song dance storytelling aspects of the performing arts in Japan China Japan Program Cornell University p 130 Nishiyama Matsunosuke 1997 Edo Culture daily life and diversions in urban Japan 1600 1868 Translated by Groemer Gerald Honolulu HI University of Hawaii Press pp 198 227 ISBN 0 585 30952 3 OCLC 45728301 寄席早わかり in Japanese Japan Arts Council Archived from the original on 19 October 2022 Retrieved 5 November 2022 江戸の食文化 外食産業の定着化 歴史系総合誌 歴博 第196号 National Museum of Japanese History 花開く江戸の園芸 Edo Tokyo Museum お伊勢さま 一度は行きたい庶民の夢 Cleanup Corporation 富士講と御師 Kitaguchihongu Sengenjinja Iwao 2015 p 8 a b Jackson 2015 p 20 Jackson 2015 p 22 Jackson 2015 p 24 Jackson 2015 pp 35 44 Jackson 2015 pp 76 78 Jackson 2015 pp 93 95 Jackson 2015 pp 46 51 Jackson 2015 p 54 Kimono Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 2020 02 20 Jackson 2015 p 63 Jackson 2015 p 80 Jackson 2015 pp 80 84 Jackson 2015 p 87 Masayuki Murata 明治工芸入門 pp 104 106 Me no Me 2017 ISBN 978 4907211110 Yuji Yamashita 明治の細密工芸 p 80 81 Heibonsha 2014 ISBN 978 4582922172 Jansen 2002 pp 289 292 Turkington David A Chronology of Japanese History Edo Period 1603 1868 archived from the original on June 25 2012 retrieved May 5 2012 a b c d 江戸の飢饉に巨大噴火の影 気温低下で凶作 人災も Nikkei April 30 2022 Archived from the original on May 5 2022 天明3年 1783年 浅間山噴火 利根川水系砂防事務所 国土交通省 関東地方整備局 www ktr mlit go jp Retrieved 2022 03 25 a b c Gordon 2008 p 51 a b c d Gordon 2008 p 42 Gordon 2008 p 52 江戸時代の年表 年号 in Japanese July 2019 Retrieved 2020 02 20 General and cited sources EditBirmingham Museum of Art 2010 Birmingham Museum of Art guide to the collection Birmingham Alabama Birmingham Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 904832 77 5 Beasley William G 1972 The Meiji Restoration Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0815 0 Diamond Jared 2005 Collapse How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed New York N Y Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 303655 6 Frederic Louis 2002 Japan Encyclopedia Harvard University Press Reference Library Belknap ISBN 9780674017535 Flath David 2000 The Japanese Economy New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 877504 0 Gordon Andrew 2008 A Modern History of Japan From Tokugawa Times to Present Second ed New York Oxford University press ISBN 978 0 19 533922 2 archived from the original on February 6 2010 Hall J W McClain J L 1991 The Cambridge History of Japan The Cambridge History of Japan Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521223553 Iwao Nagasaki 2015 Clad in the aesthetics of tradition from kosode to kimono In Jackson Anna ed Kimono the art and evolution of Japanese fashion London Thames amp Hudson pp 8 11 ISBN 9780500518021 OCLC 990574229 Jackson Anna 2015 Dress in the Edo period the evolution of fashion In Jackson Anna ed Kimono the art and evolution of Japanese fashion London Thames amp Hudson pp 20 103 ISBN 9780500518021 OCLC 990574229 Jansen Marius B 2002 The Making of Modern Japan Paperback ed Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 00991 6 Lewis James Bryant 2003 Frontier Contact Between Choson Korea and Tokugawa Japan London Routledge ISBN 0 7007 1301 8 Longstreet Stephen Longstreet Ethel 1989 Yoshiwara the pleasure quarters of old Tokyo Yenbooks Rutland Vermont Tuttle Publishing ISBN 0 8048 1599 2 Seigle Cecilia Segawa 1993 Yoshiwara The Glittering World of the Japanese Courtesan Honolulu Hawaii University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 1488 6 Totman Conrad 2000 A history of Japan 2nd ed Oxford Blackwell ISBN 9780631214472Attribution This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress Country Studies JapanFurther reading EditGuth Christine 1996 Art of Edo Japan the artist and the city 1615 1868 H N Abrams ISBN 9780300164138 Haga Tōru 2021 Pax Tokugawana The Cultural Flowering of Japan 1603 1853 First English ed Tokyo Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture ISBN 978 4 86658 148 4 Jansen Marius B 1986 Japan in transition from Tokugawa to Meiji Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 05459 2 Roberts Luke S 2012 Performing the Great Peace Political Space and Open Secrets in Tokugawa Japan Hawaii University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824835132External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edo period Japanese Maps of the Tokugawa Era A rich selection of rare Japanese maps from the UBC Library Digital Collections Timeline Japan Memoirs of a Secret EmpirePreceded byAzuchi Momoyama period1573 1603 History of JapanEdo period1603 1868 Succeeded byEmpire of Japan1868 1945 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edo period amp oldid 1128065918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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