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History of Japan

The first human inhabitants of the Japanese archipelago have been traced to the Paleolithic, around 38-39,000 years ago.[1] The Jōmon period, named after its cord-marked pottery, was followed by the Yayoi period in the first millennium BC when new inventions were introduced from Asia. During this period, the first known written reference to Japan was recorded in the Chinese Book of Han in the first century AD.

Around the 3rd century BC, the Yayoi people from the continent immigrated to the Japanese archipelago and introduced iron technology and agricultural civilization.[2] Because they had an agricultural civilization, the population of the Yayoi began to grow rapidly and ultimately overwhelmed the Jōmon people, natives of the Japanese archipelago who were hunter-gatherers.[3] Between the fourth and ninth centuries, Japan's many kingdoms and tribes gradually came to be unified under a centralized government, nominally controlled by the Emperor of Japan. The imperial dynasty established at this time continues to this day, albeit in an almost entirely ceremonial role. In 794, a new imperial capital was established at Heian-kyō (modern Kyoto), marking the beginning of the Heian period, which lasted until 1185. The Heian period is considered a golden age of classical Japanese culture. Japanese religious life from this time and onwards was a mix of native Shinto practices and Buddhism.

Over the following centuries, the power of the imperial house decreased, passing first to great clans of civilian aristocrats – most notably the Fujiwara – and then to the military clans and their armies of samurai. The Minamoto clan under Minamoto no Yoritomo emerged victorious from the Genpei War of 1180–85, defeating their rival military clan, the Taira. After seizing power, Yoritomo set up his capital in Kamakura and took the title of shōgun. In 1274 and 1281, the Kamakura shogunate withstood two Mongol invasions, but in 1333 it was toppled by a rival claimant to the shogunate, ushering in the Muromachi period. During this period, regional warlords called daimyō grew in power at the expense of the shōgun. Eventually, Japan descended into a period of civil war. Over the course of the late 16th century, Japan was reunified under the leadership of the prominent daimyō Oda Nobunaga and his successor, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. After Toyotomi's death in 1598, Tokugawa Ieyasu came to power and was appointed shōgun by the emperor. The Tokugawa shogunate, which governed from Edo (modern Tokyo), presided over a prosperous and peaceful era known as the Edo period (1600–1868). The Tokugawa shogunate imposed a strict class system on Japanese society and cut off almost all contact with the outside world.

Portugal and Japan came into contact in 1543, when the Portuguese became the first Europeans to reach Japan by landing in the southern archipelago. They had a significant impact on Japan, even in this initial limited interaction, introducing firearms to Japanese warfare. The American Perry Expedition in 1853–54 more completely ended Japan's seclusion; this contributed to the fall of the shogunate and the return of power to the emperor during the Boshin War in 1868. The new national leadership of the following Meiji period transformed the isolated feudal island country into an empire that closely followed Western models and became a great power. Although democracy developed and modern civilian culture prospered during the Taishō period (1912–26), Japan's powerful military had great autonomy and overruled Japan's civilian leaders in the 1920s and 1930s. The Japanese military invaded Manchuria in 1931, and from 1937 the conflict escalated into a prolonged war with China. Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 led to war with the United States and its allies. Japan's forces soon became overextended, but the military held out in spite of Allied air attacks that inflicted severe damage on population centers. Emperor Hirohito announced Japan's surrender on August 15, 1945, following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Soviet invasion of Manchuria.

The Allies occupied Japan until 1952, during which a new constitution was enacted in 1947 that transformed Japan into the constitutional monarchy. After 1955, Japan enjoyed very high economic growth under the governance of the Liberal Democratic Party, and became a world economic powerhouse. Since the Lost Decade of the 1990s, Japanese economic growth has slowed.

Prehistoric and ancient Japan Edit

Paleolithic period Edit

 
Japan at the Last Glacial Maximum in the Late Pleistocene about 20,000 years ago
  regions above sea level
  unvegetated
  sea
black outline indicates present-day Japan

Hunter-gatherers arrived in Japan in Paleolithic times, with the oldest evidence dating to around 38-40,000 years ago.[1] Little evidence of their presence remains, as Japan's acidic soils are inhospitable to the process of fossilization. However, the discovery of unique edge-ground axes in Japan dated to over 30,000 years ago may be evidence of the first Homo sapiens in Japan.[4] Early humans likely arrived in Japan by sea on watercraft.[5] Evidence of human habitation has been dated to 32,000 years ago in Okinawa's Yamashita Cave[6] and up to 20,000 years ago on Ishigaki Island's Shiraho Saonetabaru Cave.[7]

Jōmon period Edit

 
Reconstruction of a Jōmon family from the Sannai-Maruyama Site

The Jōmon period of prehistoric Japan spans from roughly 13,000 BC[8] to about 1,000 BC.[9] Japan was inhabited by a predominantly hunter-gatherer culture that reached a considerable degree of sedentism and cultural complexity.[10] The name Jōmon, meaning "cord-marked", was first applied by American scholar Edward S. Morse, who discovered shards of pottery in 1877.[11] The pottery style characteristic of the first phases of Jōmon culture was decorated by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay.[12] Jōmon pottery is generally accepted to be among the oldest in East Asia and the world.[13]

Yayoi period Edit

The advent of the Yayoi people from the Asian mainland brought fundamental transformations to the Japanese archipelago. The millennial achievements of the Neolithic Revolution took hold of the islands in a relatively short span of centuries, particularly with the development of rice cultivation[14] and metallurgy. Until recently, the onset of this wave of cultural and technological changes was thought to have begun around 400 BC.[15] Radio-carbon evidence now suggests that the new phase started some 500 years earlier, between 1,000 and 800 BC.[16][17] Endowed with bronze and iron weapons and tools initially imported from China and the Korean peninsula, the Yayoi radiated out from northern Kyūshū, gradually supplanting the Jōmon.[18] They also introduced weaving and silk production,[19] new woodworking methods,[16] glassmaking technology,[16] and new architectural styles.[20] The expansion of the Yayoi appears to have brought about a fusion with the indigenous Jōmon, resulting in a small genetic admixture.[21]

 
A Yayoi period bronze bell (dōtaku) of the 3rd century AD

These Yayoi technologies originated on the Asian mainland. There is debate among scholars as to what degree their spread can be attributed to migration or to cultural diffusion. The migration theory is supported by genetic and linguistic studies.[16] Historian Hanihara Kazurō has suggested that the annual immigrant influx from the continent range from 350 to 3,000.[22]

The population of Japan began to increase rapidly, perhaps with a 10-fold rise over the Jōmon. Calculations of the population size by the end of the Yayoi period have varied from 1 to 4 million.[23] Skeletal remains from the late Jōmon period reveal a deterioration in already poor standards of health and nutrition, whereas contemporaneous Yayoi archaeological sites possess large structures suggestive of grain storehouses. This shift was accompanied by an increase in both the stratification of society and tribal warfare, indicated by segregated gravesites and military fortifications.[16]

During the Yayoi period, the Yayoi tribes gradually coalesced into a number of kingdoms. In the earliest written work to unambiguously mention Japan, the Book of Han, published in 111 AD, states that one hundred kingdoms comprised Japan, which is referred to as Wa. A later Chinese work of history, the Book of Wei, states that by 240 AD, the powerful kingdom of Yamatai, ruled by the female monarch Himiko, had gained ascendancy over the others, though modern historians continue to debate its location and other aspects of its depiction in the Book of Wei.[24]

Kofun period (c. 250–538) Edit

 
Daisenryō Kofun, Osaka

During the subsequent Kofun period, Japan gradually unified under a single territory. The symbol of the growing power of Japan's new leaders was the kofun burial mounds they constructed from around 250 AD onwards.[25] Many were of massive scales, such as the Daisenryō Kofun, a 486 m-long keyhole-shaped burial mound that took huge teams of laborers fifteen years to complete. It is commonly accepted that the tomb was built for Emperor Nintoku.[26] The kofun were often surrounded by and filled with numerous haniwa clay sculptures, often in the shape of warriors and horses.[25]

The center of the unified state was Yamato in the Kinai region of central Japan.[25] The rulers of the Yamato state were a hereditary line of emperors who still reign as the world's longest dynasty. The rulers of the Yamato extended their power across Japan through military conquest, but their preferred method of expansion was to convince local leaders to accept their authority in exchange for positions of influence in the government.[27] Many of the powerful local clans who joined the Yamato state became known as the uji.[28]

 
Territorial extent of Yamato court during the Kofun period

These leaders sought and received formal diplomatic recognition from China, and Chinese accounts record five successive such leaders as the Five kings of Wa. Craftsmen and scholars from China and the Three Kingdoms of Korea played an important role in transmitting continental technologies and administrative skills to Japan during this period.[28]

Historians agree that there was a big struggle between the Yamato federation and the Izumo Federation centuries before written records.[29]

Classical Japan Edit

Asuka period (538–710) Edit

 
Buddhist temple of Hōryū-ji is the oldest wooden structure in the world. It was commissioned by Prince Shotoku and represents the beginning of Buddhism in Japan.

The Asuka period began as early as 538 AD with the introduction of the Buddhist religion from the Korean kingdom of Baekje.[30] Since then, Buddhism has coexisted with Japan's native Shinto religion, in what is today known as Shinbutsu-shūgō.[31] The period draws its name from the de facto imperial capital, Asuka, in the Kinai region.[32]

The Buddhist Soga clan took over the government in the 580s and controlled Japan from behind the scenes for nearly sixty years.[33] Prince Shōtoku, an advocate of Buddhism and of the Soga cause, who was of partial Soga descent, served as regent and de facto leader of Japan from 594 to 622. Shōtoku authored the Seventeen-article constitution, a Confucian-inspired code of conduct for officials and citizens, and attempted to introduce a merit-based civil service called the Cap and Rank System.[34] In 607, Shōtoku offered a subtle insult to China by opening his letter with the phrase, "The ruler of the land of the rising sun addresses the ruler of the land of the setting sun" as seen in the kanji characters for Japan (Nippon).[35] By 670, a variant of this expression, Nihon, established itself as the official name of the nation, which has persisted to this day.[36]

 
The word Nihon written in kanji (horizontal placement of characters). The text means "Japan" in Japanese.
 
Prince Shōtoku was a semi-legendary regent of the Asuka period, and considered to be the first major sponsor of Buddhism in Japan.

In 645, the Soga clan were overthrown in a coup launched by Prince Naka no Ōe and Fujiwara no Kamatari, the founder of the Fujiwara clan.[37] Their government devised and implemented the far-reaching Taika Reforms. The Reform began with land reform, based on Confucian ideas and philosophies from China. It nationalized all land in Japan, to be distributed equally among cultivators, and ordered the compilation of a household registry as the basis for a new system of taxation.[38] The true aim of the reforms was to bring about greater centralization and to enhance the power of the imperial court, which was also based on the governmental structure of China. Envoys and students were dispatched to China to learn about Chinese writing, politics, art, and religion. After the reforms, the Jinshin War of 672, a bloody conflict between Prince Ōama and his nephew Prince Ōtomo, two rivals to the throne, became a major catalyst for further administrative reforms.[37] These reforms culminated with the promulgation of the Taihō Code, which consolidated existing statutes and established the structure of the central government and its subordinate local governments.[39] These legal reforms created the ritsuryō state, a system of Chinese-style centralized government that remained in place for half a millennium.[37]

The art of the Asuka period embodies the themes of Buddhist art.[40] One of the most famous works is the Buddhist temple of Hōryū-ji, commissioned by Prince Shōtoku and completed in 607 AD. It is now the oldest wooden structure in the world.[41]

Nara period (710–794) Edit

 
The Daibutsu-den, within the complex of Tōdai-ji. This Buddhist temple was sponsored by the Imperial Court during the Nara period.

In 710, the government constructed a grandiose new capital at Heijō-kyō (modern Nara) modeled on Chang'an, the capital of the Chinese Tang dynasty. During this period, the first two books produced in Japan appeared: the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki,[42] which contain chronicles of legendary accounts of early Japan and its creation myth, which describes the imperial line as descendants of the gods.[43] The Man'yōshū was compiled in the latter half of the eighth century, which is widely considered the finest collection of Japanese poetry.[44]

During this period, Japan suffered a series of natural disasters, including wildfires, droughts, famines, and outbreaks of disease, such as a smallpox epidemic in 735–737 that killed over a quarter of the population.[45] Emperor Shōmu (r. 724–749) feared his lack of piousness had caused the trouble and so increased the government's promotion of Buddhism, including the construction of the temple Tōdai-ji in 752.[46] The funds to build this temple were raised in part by the influential Buddhist monk Gyōki, and once completed it was used by the Chinese monk Ganjin as an ordination site.[47] Japan nevertheless entered a phase of population decline that continued well into the following Heian period.[48] There was also a serious attempt to overthrow the Imperial house during the middle Nara period. During the 760s, monk Dōkyō tried to establish his own dynasty by the aid of Empress Shōtoku, but after her death in 770 he lost all his power and was exiled. The Fujiwara clan furthermore consolidated its power.

Heian period (794–1185) Edit

 
Miniature model of the ancient capital Heian-kyō
 
Later Three-Year War in the 11th century

In 784, the capital moved briefly to Nagaoka-kyō, then again in 794 to Heian-kyō (modern Kyoto), which remained the capital until 1868.[49] Political power within the court soon passed to the Fujiwara clan, a family of court nobles who grew increasingly close to the imperial family through intermarriage.[50] Between 812 and 814 CE, a smallpox epidemic killed almost half of the Japanese population.[51]

In 858, Fujiwara no Yoshifusa had himself declared sesshō ("regent") to the underage emperor. His son Fujiwara no Mototsune created the office of kampaku, which could rule in the place of an adult reigning emperor. Fujiwara no Michinaga, an exceptional statesman who became kampaku in 996, governed during the height of the Fujiwara clan's power[52] and married four of his daughters to emperors, current and future.[50] The Fujiwara clan held on to power until 1086, when Emperor Shirakawa ceded the throne to his son Emperor Horikawa but continued to exercise political power, establishing the practice of cloistered rule,[53] by which the reigning emperor would function as a figurehead while the real authority was held by a retired predecessor behind the scenes.[52]

Throughout the Heian period, the power of the imperial court declined. The court became so self-absorbed with power struggles and with the artistic pursuits of court nobles that it neglected the administration of government outside the capital.[50] The nationalization of land undertaken as part of the ritsuryō state decayed as various noble families and religious orders succeeded in securing tax-exempt status for their private shōen manors.[52] By the eleventh century, more land in Japan was controlled by shōen owners than by the central government. The imperial court was thus deprived of the tax revenue to pay for its national army. In response, the owners of the shōen set up their own armies of samurai warriors.[54] Two powerful noble families that had descended from branches of the imperial family,[55] the Taira and Minamoto clans, acquired large armies and many shōen outside the capital. The central government began to use these two warrior clans to suppress rebellions and piracy.[56] Japan's population stabilized during the late Heian period after hundreds of years of decline.[57]

During the early Heian period, the imperial court successfully consolidated its control over the Emishi people of northern Honshu.[58] Ōtomo no Otomaro was the first man the court granted the title of seii tai-shōgun ("Great Barbarian Subduing General").[59] In 802, seii tai-shōgun Sakanoue no Tamuramaro subjugated the Emishi people, who were led by Aterui.[58] By 1051, members of the Abe clan, who occupied key posts in the regional government, were openly defying the central authority. The court requested the Minamoto clan to engage the Abe clan, whom they defeated in the Former Nine Years' War.[60] The court thus temporarily reasserted its authority in northern Japan. Following another civil war – the Later Three-Year War – Fujiwara no Kiyohira took full power; his family, the Northern Fujiwara, controlled northern Honshu for the next century from their capital Hiraizumi.[61]

In 1156, a dispute over succession to the throne erupted and the two rival claimants (Emperor Go-Shirakawa and Emperor Sutoku) hired the Taira and Minamoto clans in the hopes of securing the throne by military force. During this war, the Taira clan led by Taira no Kiyomori defeated the Minamoto clan. Kiyomori used his victory to accumulate power for himself in Kyoto and even installed his own grandson Antoku as emperor. The outcome of this war led to the rivalry between the Minamoto and Taira clans. As a result, the dispute and power struggle between both clans led to the Heiji rebellion in 1160. In 1180, Taira no Kiyomori was challenged by an uprising led by Minamoto no Yoritomo, a member of the Minamoto clan whom Kiyomori had exiled to Kamakura.[62] Though Taira no Kiyomori died in 1181, the ensuing bloody Genpei War between the Taira and Minamoto families continued for another four years. The victory of the Minamoto clan was sealed in 1185, when a force commanded by Yoritomo's younger brother, Minamoto no Yoshitsune, scored a decisive victory at the naval Battle of Dan-no-ura. Yoritomo and his retainers thus became the de facto rulers of Japan.[63]

Heian culture Edit

 
A handscroll painting dated c. 1130, illustrating a scene from the "Bamboo River" chapter of The Tale of Genji

During the Heian period, the imperial court was a vibrant center of high art and culture.[64] Its literary accomplishments include the poetry collection Kokinshū and the Tosa Diary, both associated with the poet Ki no Tsurayuki, as well as Sei Shōnagon's collection of miscellany The Pillow Book,[65] and Murasaki Shikibu's Tale of Genji, often considered the masterpiece of Japanese literature.[66]

The development of the kana written syllabaries was part of a general trend of declining Chinese influence during the Heian period. The official Japanese missions to Tang dynasty of China, which began in the year 630,[67] ended during the ninth century, though informal missions of monks and scholars continued, and thereafter the development of native Japanese forms of art and poetry accelerated.[68] A major architectural achievement, apart from Heian-kyō itself, was the temple of Byōdō-in built in 1053 in Uji.[69]

Feudal Japan Edit

Kamakura period (1185–1333) Edit

 
Minamoto no Yoritomo was the founder of the Kamakura shogunate in 1192. This was the first military government in which the shogun with the samurai were the de facto rulers of Japan.

Upon the consolidation of power, Minamoto no Yoritomo chose to rule in concert with the Imperial Court in Kyoto. Though Yoritomo set up his own government in Kamakura in the Kantō region located in eastern Japan, its power was legally authorized by the Imperial court in Kyoto in several occasions. In 1192, the emperor declared Yoritomo seii tai-shōgun (征夷大将軍; Eastern Barbarian Subduing Great General), abbreviated as shōgun.[70] Yoritomo's government was called the bakufu (幕府 ("tent government")), referring to the tents where his soldiers encamped. The English term shogunate refers to the bakufu.[71] Japan remained largely under military rule until 1868.[72]

Legitimacy was conferred on the shogunate by the Imperial court, but the shogunate was the de facto rulers of the country. The court maintained bureaucratic and religious functions, and the shogunate welcomed participation by members of the aristocratic class. The older institutions remained intact in a weakened form, and Kyoto remained the official capital. This system has been contrasted with the "simple warrior rule" of the later Muromachi period.[70]

Yoritomo soon turned on Yoshitsune, who was initially harbored by Fujiwara no Hidehira, the grandson of Kiyohira and the de facto ruler of northern Honshu. In 1189, after Hidehira's death, his successor Yasuhira attempted to curry favor with Yoritomo by attacking Yoshitsune's home. Although Yoshitsune was killed, Yoritomo still invaded and conquered the Northern Fujiwara clan's territories.[73] In subsequent centuries, Yoshitsune would become a legendary figure, portrayed in countless works of literature as an idealized tragic hero.[74]

After Yoritomo's death in 1199, the office of shogun weakened. Behind the scenes, Yoritomo's wife Hōjō Masako became the true power behind the government. In 1203, her father, Hōjō Tokimasa, was appointed regent to the shogun, Yoritomo's son Minamoto no Sanetomo. Henceforth, the Minamoto shoguns became puppets of the Hōjō regents, who wielded actual power.[75]

The regime that Yoritomo had established, and which was kept in place by his successors, was decentralized and feudalistic in structure, in contrast with the earlier ritsuryō state. Yoritomo selected the provincial governors, known under the titles of shugo or jitō,[76] from among his close vassals, the gokenin. The Kamakura shogunate allowed its vassals to maintain their own armies and to administer law and order in their provinces on their own terms.[77]

In 1221, the retired Emperor Go-Toba instigated what became known as the Jōkyū War, a rebellion against the shogunate, in an attempt to restore political power to the court. The rebellion was a failure and led to Go-Toba being exiled to Oki Island, along with two other emperors, the retired Emperor Tsuchimikado and Emperor Juntoku, who were exiled to Tosa Province and Sado Island respectively.[78] The shogunate further consolidated its political power relative to the Kyoto aristocracy.[79]

The samurai armies of the whole nation were mobilized in 1274 and 1281 to confront two full-scale invasions launched by Kublai Khan of the Mongol Empire.[80] Though outnumbered by an enemy equipped with superior weaponry, the Japanese fought the Mongols to a standstill in Kyushu on both occasions until the Mongol fleet was destroyed by typhoons called kamikaze, meaning "divine wind". In spite of the Kamakura shogunate's victory, the defense so depleted its finances that it was unable to provide compensation to its vassals for their role in the victory. This had permanent negative consequences for the shogunate's relations with the samurai class.[81] Discontent among the samurai proved decisive in ending the Kamakura shogunate. In 1333, Emperor Go-Daigo launched a rebellion in the hope of restoring full power to the imperial court. The shogunate sent General Ashikaga Takauji to quell the revolt, but Takauji and his men instead joined forces with Emperor Go-Daigo and overthrew the Kamakura shogunate.[82]

Japan nevertheless entered a period of prosperity and population growth starting around 1250.[83] In rural areas, the greater use of iron tools and fertilizer, improved irrigation techniques, and double-cropping increased productivity and rural villages grew.[84] Fewer famines and epidemics allowed cities to grow and commerce to boom.[83] Buddhism, which had been largely a religion of the elites, was brought to the masses by prominent monks, such as Hōnen (1133–1212), who established Pure Land Buddhism in Japan, and Nichiren (1222–1282), who founded Nichiren Buddhism. Zen Buddhism spread widely among the samurai class.[85]

Muromachi period (1333–1568) Edit

 
Portrait of Ashikaga Takauji who was the founder and first shōgun of the Ashikaga shogunate

Takauji and many other samurai soon became dissatisfied with Emperor Go-Daigo's Kenmu Restoration, an ambitious attempt to monopolize power in the imperial court. Takauji rebeled after Go-Daigo refused to appoint him shōgun. In 1338, Takauji captured Kyoto and installed a rival member of the imperial family to the throne, Emperor Kōmyō, who did appoint him shogun.[86] Go-Daigo responded by fleeing to the southern city of Yoshino, where he set up a rival government. This ushered in a prolonged period of conflict between the Northern Court and the Southern Court.[87]

Takauji set up his shogunate in the Muromachi district of Kyoto. However, the shogunate was faced with the twin challenges of fighting the Southern Court and of maintaining its authority over its own subordinate governors.[87] Like the Kamakura shogunate, the Muromachi shogunate appointed its allies to rule in the provinces, but these men increasingly styled themselves as feudal lords—called daimyōs—of their domains and often refused to obey the shogun.[88] The Ashikaga shogun who was most successful at bringing the country together was Takauji's grandson Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, who came to power in 1368 and remained influential until his death in 1408. Yoshimitsu expanded the power of the shogunate and in 1392, brokered a deal to bring the Northern and Southern Courts together and end the civil war. Henceforth, the shogunate kept the emperor and his court under tight control.[87]

 
Kinkaku-ji was built in 1397 by Ashikaga Yoshimitsu.
 
Map showing the territories of major daimyō families around 1570 CE

During the final century of the Ashikaga shogunate the country descended into another, more violent period of civil war. This started in 1467 when the Ōnin War broke out over who would succeed the ruling shogun. The daimyōs each took sides and burned Kyoto to the ground while battling for their preferred candidate. By the time the succession was settled in 1477, the shogun had lost all power over the daimyō, who now ruled hundreds of independent states throughout Japan.[89] During this Warring States period, daimyōs fought among themselves for control of the country.[90] Some of the most powerful daimyōs of the era were Uesugi Kenshin and Takeda Shingen.[91] One enduring symbol of this era was the ninja, skilled spies and assassins hired by daimyōs. Few definite historical facts are known about the secretive lifestyles of the ninja, who became the subject of many legends.[92] In addition to the daimyōs, rebellious peasants and "warrior monks" affiliated with Buddhist temples also raised their own armies.[93]

Nanban trade Edit

Amid this on-going anarchy, a trading ship was blown off course and landed in 1543 on the Japanese island of Tanegashima, just south of Kyushu. The three Portuguese traders on board were the first Europeans to set foot in Japan.[94] Soon European traders would introduce many new items to Japan, most importantly the musket.[95] By 1556, the daimyōs were using about 300,000 muskets in their armies.[96] The Europeans also brought Christianity, which soon came to have a substantial following in Japan reaching 350,000 believers. In 1549 the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier disembarked in Kyushu.

 
Japan (Iapam) and Korea, in the 1568 Portuguese map of the cartographer João Vaz Dourado

Initiating direct commercial and cultural exchange between Japan and the West, the first map made of Japan in the west was represented in 1568 by the Portuguese cartographer Fernão Vaz Dourado.[97]

The Portuguese were allowed to trade and create colonies where they could convert new believers into the Christian religion. The civil war status in Japan greatly benefited the Portuguese, as well as several competing gentlemen who sought to attract Portuguese black boats and their trade to their domains. Initially, the Portuguese stayed on the lands belonging to Matsura Takanobu, Firando (Hirado),[98] and in the province of Bungo, lands of Ōtomo Sōrin, but in 1562 they moved to Yokoseura when the Daimyô there, Omura Sumitada, offered to be the first lord to convert to Christianity, adopting the name of Dom Bartolomeu. In 1564, he faced a rebellion instigated by the Buddhist clergy and Yokoseura was destroyed.

In 1561 forces under Ōtomo Sōrin attacked the castle in Moji with an alliance with the Portuguese, who provided three ships, with a crew of about 900 men and more than 50 cannons. This is thought to be the first bombardment by foreign ships on Japan.[99] The first recorded naval battle between Europeans and the Japanese occurred in 1565. In the Battle of Fukuda Bay, the daimyō Matsura Takanobu attacked two Portuguese trade vessels at Hirado port.[100] The engagement led the Portuguese traders to find a safe harbor for their ships that took them to Nagasaki.

 
The Black Ship Portuguese traders that came from Goa and Macau once a year

In 1571, Dom Bartolomeu, also known as Ōmura Sumitada, guaranteed a little land in the small fishing village of "Nagasáqui" to the Jesuits, who divided it into six areas. They could use the land to receive Christians exiled from other territories, as well as for Portuguese merchants. The Jesuits built a chapel and a school under the name of São Paulo, like those in Goa and Malacca. By 1579, Nagasáqui had four hundred houses, and some Portuguese had gotten married. Fearful that Nagasaki could fall into the hands of its rival Takanobu, Omura Sumitada (Dom Bartolomeu) decided to guarantee the city directly to the Jesuits in 1580.[101] After a few years, the Jesuits came to realize that if they understood the language they would achieve more conversions to the Catholic religion. Jesuits such as João Rodrigues wrote a Japanese dictionary. Thus Portuguese became the first Western language to have such a dictionary when it was published in Nagasaki in 1603.[102]

Oda Nobunaga used European technology and firearms to conquer many other daimyōs; his consolidation of power began what was known as the Azuchi–Momoyama period (1573–1603). After Nobunaga was assassinated in 1582 by Akechi Mitsuhide, his successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi unified the nation in 1590 and launched two unsuccessful invasions of Korea in 1592 and 1597. Before the invasion, Hideyoshi tried to hire two Portuguese galleons to join the invasion but the Portuguese refused the offer.[103]

Tokugawa Ieyasu served as regent for Hideyoshi's son Toyotomi Hideyori and used his position to gain political and military support. When open war broke out, Ieyasu defeated rival clans in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. In 1603 the Tokugawa shogunate at Edo enacted measures including buke shohatto, as a code of conduct to control the autonomous daimyōs, and in 1639 the isolationist sakoku ("closed country") policy that spanned the two and a half centuries of tenuous political unity known as the Edo period (1603–1868), this act ended with Portuguese influence after 100 years in Japanese territory, also aiming to limit the political presence of any foreign power.[94]

Muromachi culture Edit

In spite of the war, Japan's relative economic prosperity, which had begun in the Kamakura period, continued well into the Muromachi period. By 1450 Japan's population stood at ten million, compared to six million at the end of the thirteenth century.[83] Commerce flourished, including considerable trade with China and Korea.[104] Because the daimyōs and other groups within Japan were minting their own coins, Japan began to transition from a barter-based to a currency-based economy.[105] During the period, some of Japan's most representative art forms developed, including ink wash painting, ikebana flower arrangement, the tea ceremony, Japanese gardening, bonsai, and Noh theater.[106] Though the eighth Ashikaga shogun, Yoshimasa, was an ineffectual political and military leader, he played a critical role in promoting these cultural developments.[107] He had the famous Kinkaku-ji or "Temple of the Golden Pavilion" built in Kyoto in 1397.[108]

Azuchi–Momoyama period (1568-1600) Edit

 
Edo period screen depicting the Battle of Sekigahara. It began on 21 October, 1600, with a total of 160,000 men facing each other.

During the second half of the 16th century, Japan gradually reunified under two powerful warlords: Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The period takes its name from Nobunaga's headquarters, Azuchi Castle, and Hideyoshi's headquarters, Momoyama Castle.[71]

 
Japan in 1582, showing territory conquered by Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi in gray

Nobunaga was the daimyō of the small province of Owari. He burst onto the scene suddenly, in 1560, when, during the Battle of Okehazama, his army defeated a force several times its size led by the powerful daimyō Imagawa Yoshimoto.[109] Nobunaga was renowned for his strategic leadership and his ruthlessness. He encouraged Christianity to incite hatred toward his Buddhist enemies and to forge strong relationships with European arms merchants. He equipped his armies with muskets and trained them with innovative tactics.[110] He promoted talented men regardless of their social status, including his peasant servant Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who became one of his best generals.[111]

The Azuchi–Momoyama period began in 1568, when Nobunaga seized Kyoto and thus effectively brought an end to the Ashikaga shogunate.[109] He was well on his way towards his goal of reuniting all Japan when, in 1582, one of his own officers, Akechi Mitsuhide, killed him during an abrupt attack on his encampment. Hideyoshi avenged Nobunaga by crushing Akechi's uprising and emerged as Nobunaga's successor.[112] Hideyoshi completed the reunification of Japan by conquering Shikoku, Kyushu, and the lands of the Hōjō family in eastern Japan.[113] He launched sweeping changes to Japanese society, including the confiscation of swords from the peasantry, new restrictions on daimyōs, persecutions of Christians, a thorough land survey, and a new law effectively forbidding the peasants and samurai from changing their social class.[114] Hideyoshi's land survey designated all those who were cultivating the land as being "commoners", an act which effectively granted freedom to most of Japan's slaves.[115]

As Hideyoshi's power expanded, he dreamed of conquering China and launched two massive invasions of Korea starting in 1592. Hideyoshi failed to defeat the Chinese and Korean armies on the Korean Peninsula and the war ended after his death in 1598.[116] In the hope of founding a new dynasty, Hideyoshi had asked his most trusted subordinates to pledge loyalty to his infant son Toyotomi Hideyori. Despite this, almost immediately after Hideyoshi's death, war broke out between Hideyori's allies and those loyal to Tokugawa Ieyasu, a daimyō and a former ally of Hideyoshi.[117] Tokugawa Ieyasu won a decisive victory at the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, ushering in 268 uninterrupted years of rule by the Tokugawa clan.[118]

Early modern Japan Edit

Edo period (1600–1868) Edit

 
Tokugawa Ieyasu was the founder and first shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate.

The Edo period was characterized by relative peace and stability[119] under the tight control of the Tokugawa shogunate, which ruled from the eastern city of Edo (modern Tokyo).[120] In 1603, Emperor Go-Yōzei declared Tokugawa Ieyasu shōgun, and Ieyasu abdicated two years later to groom his son as the second shōgun of what became a long dynasty.[121] Nevertheless, it took time for the Tokugawas to consolidate their rule. In 1609, the shōgun gave the daimyō of the Satsuma Domain permission to invade the Ryukyu Kingdom for perceived insults towards the shogunate; the Satsuma victory began 266 years of Ryukyu's dual subordination to Satsuma and China.[99][122] Ieyasu led the Siege of Osaka that ended with the destruction of the Toyotomi clan in 1615.[123] Soon after the shogunate promulgated the Laws for the Military Houses, which imposed tighter controls on the daimyōs,[124] and the alternate attendance system, which required each daimyō to spend every other year in Edo.[125] Even so, the daimyōs continued to maintain a significant degree of autonomy in their domains.[126] The central government of the shogunate in Edo, which quickly became the most populous city in the world,[120] took counsel from a group of senior advisors known as rōjū and employed samurai as bureaucrats.[127] The emperor in Kyoto was funded lavishly by the government but was allowed no political power.[128]

The Tokugawa shogunate went to great lengths to suppress social unrest. Harsh penalties, including crucifixion, beheading, and death by boiling, were decreed for even the most minor offenses, though criminals of high social class were often given the option of seppuku ("self-disembowelment"), an ancient form of suicide that became ritualized.[125] Christianity, which was seen as a potential threat, was gradually clamped down on until finally, after the Christian-led Shimabara Rebellion of 1638, the religion was completely outlawed.[129] To prevent further foreign ideas from sowing dissent, the third Tokugawa shogun, Iemitsu, implemented the sakoku ("closed country") isolationist policy under which Japanese people were not allowed to travel abroad, return from overseas, or build ocean-going vessels.[130] The only Europeans allowed on Japanese soil were the Dutch, who were granted a single trading post on the island of Dejima at Nagasaki from 1634 to 1854.[131] China and Korea were the only other countries permitted to trade,[132] and many foreign books were banned from import.[126]

During the first century of Tokugawa rule, Japan's population doubled to thirty million, mostly because of agricultural growth; the population remained stable for the rest of the period.[133] The shogunate's construction of roads, elimination of road and bridge tolls, and standardization of coinage promoted commercial expansion that also benefited the merchants and artisans of the cities.[134] City populations grew,[135] but almost ninety percent of the population continued to live in rural areas.[136] Both the inhabitants of cities and of rural communities would benefit from one of the most notable social changes of the Edo period: increased literacy and numeracy. The number of private schools greatly expanded, particularly those attached to temples and shrines, and raised literacy to thirty percent. This may have been the world's highest rate at the time[137] and drove a flourishing commercial publishing industry, which grew to produce hundreds of titles per year.[138] In the area of numeracy – approximated by an index measuring people's ability to report an exact rather than a rounded age (age-heaping method), and which level shows a strong correlation to later economic development of a country – Japan's level was comparable to that of north-west European countries, and moreover, Japan's index came close to the 100 percent mark throughout the nineteenth century. These high levels of both literacy and numeracy were part of the socio-economical foundation for Japan's strong growth rates during the following century.[139]

Culture and philosophy Edit

 
Samurai could kill a commoner for the slightest insult and were widely feared by the Japanese population. Edo period, 1798.

The Edo period was a time of cultural flourishing, as the merchant classes grew in wealth and began spending their income on cultural and social pursuits.[140][141] Members of the merchant class who patronized culture and entertainment were said to live hedonistic lives, which came to be called the ukiyo ("floating world").[142] This lifestyle inspired ukiyo-zōshi popular novels and ukiyo-e art, the latter of which were often woodblock prints[143] that progressed to greater sophistication and use of multiple printed colors.[144]

Forms of theater such as kabuki and bunraku puppet theater became widely popular.[145] These new forms of entertainment were (at the time) accompanied by short songs (kouta) and music played on the shamisen, a new import to Japan in 1600.[146] Haiku, whose greatest master is generally agreed to be Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694), also rose as a major form of poetry.[147] Geisha, a new profession of entertainers, also became popular. They would provide conversation, sing, and dance for customers, though they would not sleep with them.[148]

The Tokugawas sponsored and were heavily influenced by Neo-Confucianism, which led the government to divide society into four classes based on the four occupations.[149] The samurai class claimed to follow the ideology of bushido, literally "the way of the warrior".[150]

Decline and fall of the shogunate Edit

By the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the shogunate showed signs of weakening.[151] The dramatic growth of agriculture that had characterized the early Edo period had ended,[133] and the government handled the devastating Tenpō famines poorly.[151] Peasant unrest grew and government revenues fell.[152] The shogunate cut the pay of the already financially distressed samurai, many of whom worked side jobs to make a living.[153] Discontented samurai were soon to play a major role in engineering the downfall of the Tokugawa shogunate.[154]

At the same time, the people drew inspiration from new ideas and fields of study. Dutch books brought into Japan stimulated interest in Western learning, called rangaku or "Dutch learning".[155] The physician Sugita Genpaku, for instance, used concepts from Western medicine to help spark a revolution in Japanese ideas of human anatomy.[156] The scholarly field of kokugaku or "national learning", developed by scholars such as Motoori Norinaga and Hirata Atsutane, promoted what it asserted were native Japanese values. For instance, it criticized the Chinese-style Neo-Confucianism advocated by the shogunate and emphasized the Emperor's divine authority, which the Shinto faith taught had its roots in Japan's mythic past, which was referred to as the "Age of the Gods".[157]

 
Samurai of the Satsuma Domain during the Boshin War

The arrival in 1853 of a fleet of American ships commanded by Commodore Matthew C. Perry threw Japan into turmoil. The US government aimed to end Japan's isolationist policies. The shogunate had no defense against Perry's gunboats and had to agree to his demands that American ships be permitted to acquire provisions and trade at Japanese ports.[151] The Western powers imposed what became known as "unequal treaties" on Japan which stipulated that Japan must allow citizens of these countries to visit or reside on Japanese territory and must not levy tariffs on their imports or try them in Japanese courts.[158]

The shogunate's failure to oppose the Western powers angered many Japanese, particularly those of the southern domains of Chōshū and Satsuma.[159] Many samurai there, inspired by the nationalist doctrines of the kokugaku school, adopted the slogan of sonnō jōi ("revere the emperor, expel the barbarians").[160] The two domains went on to form an alliance. In August 1866, soon after becoming shogun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, struggled to maintain power as civil unrest continued.[161] The Chōshū and Satsuma domains in 1868 convinced the young Emperor Meiji and his advisors to issue a rescript calling for an end to the Tokugawa shogunate. The armies of Chōshū and Satsuma soon marched on Edo and the ensuing Boshin War led to the fall of the shogunate.[162]

Modern Japan Edit

Meiji period (1868–1912) Edit

 
Emperor Meiji, the 122nd Emperor of Japan

The emperor was restored to nominal supreme power,[163] and in 1869, the imperial family moved to Edo, which was renamed Tokyo ("eastern capital").[164] However, the most powerful men in the government were former samurai from Chōshū and Satsuma rather than the emperor, who was fifteen in 1868.[163] These men, known as the Meiji oligarchs, oversaw the dramatic changes Japan would experience during this period.[165] The leaders of the Meiji government desired Japan to become a modern nation-state that could stand equal to the Western imperialist powers.[166] Among them were Ōkubo Toshimichi and Saigō Takamori from Satsuma, as well as Kido Takayoshi, Ito Hirobumi, and Yamagata Aritomo from Chōshū.[163]

Political and social changes Edit

The Meiji government abolished the Edo class structure[167] and replaced the feudal domains of the daimyōs with prefectures.[164] It instituted comprehensive tax reform and lifted the ban on Christianity.[167] Major government priorities also included the introduction of railways, telegraph lines, and a universal education system.[168] The Meiji government promoted widespread Westernization[169] and hired hundreds of advisers from Western nations with expertise in such fields as education, mining, banking, law, military affairs, and transportation to remodel Japan's institutions.[170] The Japanese adopted the Gregorian calendar, Western clothing, and Western hairstyles.[171] One leading advocate of Westernization was the popular writer Fukuzawa Yukichi.[172] As part of its Westernization drive, the Meiji government enthusiastically sponsored the importation of Western science, above all medical science. In 1893, Kitasato Shibasaburō established the Institute for Infectious Diseases, which would soon become world-famous,[173] and in 1913, Hideyo Noguchi proved the link between syphilis and paresis.[174] Furthermore, the introduction of European literary styles to Japan sparked a boom in new works of prose fiction. Characteristic authors of the period included Futabatei Shimei and Mori Ōgai,[175] although the most famous of the Meiji era writers was Natsume Sōseki,[176] who wrote satirical, autobiographical, and psychological novels[177] combining both the older and newer styles.[178] Ichiyō Higuchi, a leading female author, took inspiration from earlier literary models of the Edo period.[179]

Government institutions developed rapidly in response to the Freedom and People's Rights Movement, a grassroots campaign demanding greater popular participation in politics. The leaders of this movement included Itagaki Taisuke and Ōkuma Shigenobu.[180] Itō Hirobumi, the first Prime Minister of Japan, responded by writing the Meiji Constitution, which was promulgated in 1889. The new constitution established an elected lower house, the House of Representatives, but its powers were restricted. Only two percent of the population were eligible to vote, and legislation proposed in the House required the support of the unelected upper house, the House of Peers. Both the cabinet of Japan and the Japanese military were directly responsible not to the elected legislature but to the emperor.[181] Concurrently, the Japanese government also developed a form of Japanese nationalism under which Shinto became the state religion and the emperor was declared a living god.[182] Schools nationwide instilled patriotic values and loyalty to the emperor.[168]

Rise of imperialism and the military Edit

 
Chinese generals surrendering to the Japanese in the Sino-Japanese War of 1894–1895

In December 1871, a Ryukyuan ship was shipwrecked on Taiwan and the crew were massacred. In 1874, using the incident as a pretext, Japan launched a military expedition to Taiwan to assert their claims to the Ryukyu Islands. The expedition featured the first instance of the Japanese military ignoring the orders of the civilian government, as the expedition set sail after being ordered to postpone.[183] Yamagata Aritomo, who was born a samurai in the Chōshū Domain, was a key force behind the modernization and enlargement of the Imperial Japanese Army, especially the introduction of national conscription.[184] The new army was put to use in 1877 to crush the Satsuma Rebellion of discontented samurai in southern Japan led by the former Meiji leader Saigo Takamori.[185]

The Japanese military played a key role in Japan's expansion abroad. The government believed that Japan had to acquire its own colonies to compete with the Western colonial powers. After consolidating its control over Hokkaido (through the Hokkaidō Development Commission) and annexing the Ryukyu Kingdom (the "Ryūkyū Disposition"), it next turned its attention to China and Korea.[186] In 1894, Japanese and Chinese troops clashed in Korea, where they were both stationed to suppress the Donghak Rebellion. During the ensuing First Sino-Japanese War, Japan's highly motivated and well-led forces defeated the more numerous and better-equipped military of Qing China.[187] The island of Taiwan was thus ceded to Japan in 1895,[188] and Japan's government gained enough international prestige to allow Foreign Minister Mutsu Munemitsu to renegotiate the "unequal treaties".[189] In 1902 Japan signed an important military alliance with the British.[190]

 
The Japanese Empire in 1939

Japan next clashed with Russia, which was expanding its power in Asia. The Battle of Yalu River was the first time in decades that an Asian power defeated a western power.[191] The Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05 ended with the dramatic Battle of Tsushima, which was another victory for Japan's new navy. Japan thus laid claim to Korea as a protectorate in 1905, followed by full annexation in 1910.[192] The defeat of Russia in the war had set in motion a change in the global world order with the emergence of Japan as not only a regional power, but rather, the main Asian power.[193]

Economic modernization and labor unrest Edit

During the Meiji period, Japan underwent a rapid transition towards an industrial economy.[194] Both the Japanese government and private entrepreneurs adopted Western technology and knowledge to create factories capable of producing a wide range of goods.[195]

By the end of the period, the majority of Japan's exports were manufactured goods.[194] Some of Japan's most successful new businesses and industries constituted huge family-owned conglomerates called zaibatsu, such as Mitsubishi and Sumitomo.[196] The phenomenal industrial growth sparked rapid urbanization. The proportion of the population working in agriculture shrank from 75 percent in 1872 to 50 percent by 1920.[197] In 1927 the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line opened and it is the oldest subway line in Asia.[198]

Japan enjoyed solid economic growth at this time and most people lived longer and healthier lives. The population rose from 34 million in 1872 to 52 million in 1915.[199] Poor working conditions in factories led to growing labor unrest,[200] and many workers and intellectuals came to embrace socialist ideas.[201] The Meiji government responded with harsh suppression of dissent. Radical socialists plotted to assassinate the emperor in the High Treason Incident of 1910, after which the Tokkō secret police force was established to root out left-wing agitators.[202] The government also introduced social legislation in 1911 setting maximum work hours and a minimum age for employment.[203]

Taishō period (1912–1926) Edit

During the short reign of Emperor Taishō, Japan developed stronger democratic institutions and grew in international power. The Taishō political crisis opened the period with mass protests and riots organized by Japanese political parties, which succeeded in forcing Katsura Tarō to resign as prime minister.[204] This and the rice riots of 1918 increased the power of Japan's political parties over the ruling oligarchy.[205] The Seiyūkai and Minseitō parties came to dominate politics by the end of the so-called "Taishō democracy" era.[206] The franchise for the House of Representatives had been gradually expanded since 1890,[207] and in 1925 universal male suffrage was introduced. However, in the same year the far-reaching Peace Preservation Law also passed, prescribing harsh penalties for political dissidents.[208]

Japan's participation in World War I on the side of the Allies sparked unprecedented economic growth and earned Japan new colonies in the South Pacific seized from Germany.[209] After the war, Japan signed the Treaty of Versailles and enjoyed good international relations through its membership in the League of Nations and participation in international disarmament conferences.[210] The Great Kantō earthquake in September 1923 left over 100,000 dead, and combined with the resultant fires destroyed the homes of more than three million.[211] In the aftermath of the earthquake, the Kantō Massacre occurred, in which the Japanese military, police, and gangs of vigilantes murdered thousands of Korean people after rumors emerged that Koreans had been poisoning wells. The rumors were later described as false by numerous Japanese sources.[212]

The growth of popular prose fiction, which began during the Meiji period, continued into the Taishō period as literacy rates rose and book prices dropped.[213] Notable literary figures of the era included short story writer Ryūnosuke Akutagawa[214] and the novelist Haruo Satō. Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, described as "perhaps the most versatile literary figure of his day" by the historian Conrad Totman, produced many works during the Taishō period influenced by European literature, though his 1929 novel Some Prefer Nettles reflects deep appreciation for the virtues of traditional Japanese culture.[215] At the end of the Taishō period, Tarō Hirai, known by his penname Edogawa Ranpo, began writing popular mystery and crime stories.[214]

Shōwa period (1926–1989) Edit

Emperor Hirohito's sixty-three-year reign from 1926 to 1989 is the longest in recorded Japanese history.[216] The first twenty years were characterized by the rise of extreme nationalism and a series of expansionist wars. After suffering defeat in World War II, Japan was occupied by foreign powers for the first time in its history, and then re-emerged as a major world economic power.[217]

Manchurian Incident and the Second Sino-Japanese War Edit

The Empire of Japan in 1937

Left-wing groups had been subject to violent suppression by the end of the Taishō period,[218] and radical right-wing groups, inspired by fascism and Japanese nationalism, rapidly grew in popularity.[219] The extreme right became influential throughout the Japanese government and society, notably within the Kwantung Army, a Japanese army stationed in China along the Japanese-owned South Manchuria Railroad.[220] During the Manchurian Incident of 1931, radical army officers bombed a small portion of the South Manchuria Railroad and, falsely attributing the attack to the Chinese, invaded Manchuria. The Kwantung Army conquered Manchuria and set up the puppet government of Manchukuo there without permission from the Japanese government. International criticism of Japan following the invasion led to Japan withdrawing from the League of Nations.[221]

Prime Minister Tsuyoshi Inukai of the Seiyūkai Party attempted to restrain the Kwantung Army and was assassinated in 1932 by right-wing extremists. Because of growing opposition within the Japanese military and the extreme right to party politicians, who they saw as corrupt and self-serving, Inukai was the last party politician to govern Japan in the pre-World War II era.[221] In February 1936 young radical officers of the Imperial Japanese Army attempted a coup d'état. They assassinated many moderate politicians before the coup was suppressed.[222] In its wake the Japanese military consolidated its control over the political system and most political parties were abolished when the Imperial Rule Assistance Association was founded in 1940.[223]

 
Japanese experts inspect the scene of the alleged railway sabotage on South Manchurian Railway that led to the Mukden Incident and the Japanese occupation of Manchuria.

Japan's expansionist vision grew increasingly bold. Many of Japan's political elite aspired to have Japan acquire new territory for resource extraction and settlement of surplus population.[224] These ambitions led to the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937. After their victory in the Chinese capital, the Japanese military committed the infamous Nanjing massacre. The Japanese military failed to defeat the Chinese government led by Chiang Kai-shek and the war descended into a bloody stalemate that lasted until 1945.[225] Japan's stated war aim was to establish the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, a vast pan-Asian union under Japanese domination.[226] Hirohito's role in Japan's foreign wars remains a subject of controversy, with various historians portraying him as either a powerless figurehead or an enabler and supporter of Japanese militarism.[227]

The United States opposed Japan's invasion of China and responded with increasingly stringent economic sanctions intended to deprive Japan of the resources to continue its war in China.[228] Japan reacted by forging an alliance with Germany and Italy in 1940, known as the Tripartite Pact, which worsened its relations with the US. In July 1941, the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands froze all Japanese assets when Japan completed its invasion of French Indochina by occupying the southern half of the country, further increasing tension in the Pacific.[229]

World War II Edit

 
Planes from the Japanese aircraft carrier Shōkaku preparing the attack on Pearl Harbor
 
The Empire of Japan at its peak in 1942:
   Territory (1870–1895)
   Acquisitions (1895–1930)
   Acquisitions (1930–1942)

In late 1941, Japan's government, led by Prime Minister and General Hideki Tojo, decided to break the US-led embargo through force of arms.[230] On 7 December 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy launched a surprise attack on the American fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. This brought the US into World War II on the side of the Allies. Japan then successfully invaded the Asian colonies of the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands, including the Philippines, Malaya, Hong Kong, Singapore, Burma, and the Dutch East Indies.[231]

In the early stages of the war, Japan scored victory after victory. The tide began to turn against Japan following the Battle of Midway in June 1942 and the subsequent Battle of Guadalcanal, in which Allied troops wrested the Solomon Islands from Japanese control.[232] During this period the Japanese military was responsible for such war crimes as mistreatment of prisoners of war, massacres of civilians, and the use of chemical and biological weapons.[233] The Japanese military earned a reputation for fanaticism, often employing banzai charges and fighting almost to the last man against overwhelming odds.[234] In 1944 the Imperial Japanese Navy began deploying squadrons of kamikaze pilots who crashed their planes into enemy ships.[235]

 
Atomic cloud over Hiroshima, 1945

Life in Japan became increasingly difficult for civilians due to stringent rationing of food, electrical outages, and a brutal crackdown on dissent.[236] In 1944 the US Army captured the island of Saipan, which allowed the United States to begin widespread bombing raids on the Japanese mainland.[237] These destroyed over half of the total area of Japan's major cities.[238] The Battle of Okinawa, fought between April and June 1945, was the largest naval operation of the war and left 115,000 soldiers and 150,000 Okinawan civilians dead, suggesting that the planned invasion of mainland Japan would be even bloodier.[239] The Japanese superbattleship Yamato was sunk en route to aid in the Battle of Okinawa.[240]

However, on 6 August 1945, the US dropped an atomic bomb over Hiroshima, killing over 70,000 people. This was the first nuclear attack in history. On 9 August the Soviet Union declared war on Japan and invaded Manchukuo and other territories, and Nagasaki was struck by a second atomic bomb, killing around 40,000 people.[241] The surrender of Japan was communicated to the Allies on 14 August and broadcast by Emperor Hirohito on national radio the following day.[242]

Occupation of Japan Edit

 
General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor of Japan, Hirohito, at their first meeting, September 1945
 
US Secretary of State Dean Acheson signing the Treaty of Peace with Japan, 8 September 1951

Japan experienced dramatic political and social transformation under the Allied occupation in 1945–1952. US General Douglas MacArthur, the Supreme Commander of Allied Powers, served as Japan's de facto leader and played a central role in implementing reforms, many inspired by the New Deal of the 1930s.[243]

The occupation sought to decentralize power in Japan by breaking up the zaibatsu, transferring ownership of agricultural land from landlords to tenant farmers,[244] and promoting labor unionism.[245] Other major goals were the demilitarization and democratization of Japan's government and society. Japan's military was disarmed,[246] its colonies were granted independence,[247] the Peace Preservation Law and Special Higher Police were abolished,[248] and the International Military Tribunal of the Far East tried war criminals.[249] The cabinet became responsible not to the Emperor but to the elected National Diet.[250] The Emperor was permitted to remain on the throne, but was ordered to renounce his claims to divinity, which had been a pillar of the State Shinto system.[251] Japan's new constitution came into effect in 1947 and guaranteed civil liberties, labor rights, and women's suffrage,[252] and through Article 9, Japan renounced its right to go to war with another nation.[253]

The San Francisco Peace Treaty of 1951 officially normalized relations between Japan and the United States. The occupation ended in 1952, although the US continued to administer a number of the Ryukyu Islands.[254] In 1968, the Ogasawara Islands were returned from US occupation to Japanese sovereignty. Japanese citizens were allowed to return. Okinawa was the last to be returned in 1972.[255] The US continues to operate military bases throughout the Ryukyu Islands, mostly on Okinawa, as part of the US-Japan Security Treaty.[256]

Postwar growth and prosperity Edit

 
Shigeru Yoshida was one of the longest serving PMs in Japanese history (1946–1947 and 1948–1954).

Shigeru Yoshida served as prime minister in 1946–1947 and 1948–1954, and played a key role in guiding Japan through the occupation.[257] His policies, known as the Yoshida Doctrine, proposed that Japan should forge a tight relationship with the United States and focus on developing the economy rather than pursuing a proactive foreign policy.[258] Yoshida was one of the longest serving prime ministers in Japanese history.[259] Yoshida's Liberal Party merged in 1955 into the new Liberal Democratic Party (LDP),[260] which went on to dominate Japanese politics for the remainder of the Shōwa period.[261]

Although the Japanese economy was in bad shape in the immediate postwar years, an austerity program implemented in 1949 by finance expert Joseph Dodge ended inflation.[262] The Korean War (1950–1953) was a major boon to Japanese business.[263] In 1949 the Yoshida cabinet created the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) with a mission to promote economic growth through close cooperation between the government and big business. MITI sought successfully to promote manufacturing and heavy industry,[264] and encourage exports.[265] The factors behind Japan's postwar economic growth included technology and quality control techniques imported from the West, close economic and defense cooperation with the United States, non-tariff barriers to imports, restrictions on labor unionization, long work hours, and a generally favorable global economic environment.[266] Japanese corporations successfully retained a loyal and experienced workforce through the system of lifetime employment, which assured their employees a safe job.[267]

By 1955, the Japanese economy had grown beyond prewar levels,[268] and by 1968 it had become the second largest capitalist economy in the world.[269] The GNP expanded at an annual rate of nearly 10% from 1956 until the 1973 oil crisis slowed growth to a still-rapid average annual rate of just over 4% until 1991.[270] Life expectancy rose and Japan's population increased to 123 million by 1990.[271] Ordinary Japanese people became wealthy enough to purchase a wide array of consumer goods. During this period, Japan became the world's largest manufacturer of automobiles and a leading producer of electronics.[272] Japan signed the Plaza Accord in 1985 to depreciate the US dollar against the yen and other currencies. By the end of 1987, the Nikkei stock market index had doubled and the Tokyo Stock Exchange became the largest in the world. During the ensuing economic bubble, stock and real-estate loans grew rapidly.[273]

Japan became a member of the United Nations in 1956 and further cemented its international standing in 1964, when it hosted the Olympic Games in Tokyo.[274] Japan was a close ally of the United States during the Cold War, though this alliance did not have unanimous support from the Japanese people. As requested by the United States, Japan reconstituted its army in 1954 under the name Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF), though some Japanese insisted that the very existence of the JSDF was a violation of Article 9 of Japan's constitution.[275] In 1960, the massive Anpo protests saw hundreds of thousands of citizens take to the streets in opposition to the US-Japan Security Treaty.[276] Japan successfully normalized relations with the Soviet Union in 1956, despite an ongoing dispute over the ownership of the Kuril Islands,[277] and with South Korea in 1965, despite an ongoing dispute over the ownership of the islands of Liancourt Rocks.[278] In accordance with US policy, Japan recognized the Republic of China on Taiwan as the legitimate government of China after World War II, though Japan switched its recognition to the People's Republic of China in 1972.[279]

Among cultural developments, the immediate post-occupation period became a golden age for Japanese cinema.[280] The reasons for this include the abolition of government censorship, low film production costs, expanded access to new film techniques and technologies, and huge domestic audiences at a time when other forms of recreation were relatively scarce.[281] On 1 October 1964, Japan's first high-speed rail line was built called the Tokaido Shinkansen.[282] It is also the oldest high-speed rail system in the world.[282]

Heisei period (1989–2019) Edit

 
Tokyo in 2010

Emperor Akihito's reign began upon the death of his father, Emperor Hirohito. The economic bubble popped in 1989, and stock and land prices plunged as Japan entered a deflationary spiral. Banks found themselves saddled with insurmountable debts that hindered economic recovery.[283] Stagnation worsened as the birthrate declined far below replacement level.[284] The 1990s are often referred to as Japan's Lost Decade.[285] Economic performance was often poor in the following decades, and the stock market never returned to its pre-1989 highs.[286] Japan's system of lifetime employment largely collapsed and unemployment rates rose.[287] The faltering economy and several corruption scandals weakened the LDP's dominant political position. Japan was nevertheless governed by non-LDP prime ministers only in 1993–1996[288] and 2009–2012.[289]

Japan's dealing with its war legacy strained relations with China and Korea. Japanese officials and emperors have made over 50 formal war apologies since the 1950s. However, some politicians of China and Korea found the official apologies, such as those of the Emperor in 1990 and the Murayama Statement of 1995, inadequate or insincere.[290] Nationalist politics have exacerbated this, such as denial of the Nanjing Massacre and other war crimes,[291] revisionist history textbooks, which provoked protests in East Asia.[292] Japanese politicians make frequent visits to Yasukuni Shrine to commemorate the people who died in wars from 1868 to 1954, but convicted war criminals are among the enshrined.[293]

 
Wreckage at a railway station destroyed during the 2011 earthquake and tsunami

The population of Japan peaked at 128,083,960 in 2008, and as of December 2020 it had fallen below 126 million.[294] In 2011, China surpassed Japan as the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP.[295] Despite Japan's economic difficulties, this period also saw Japanese popular culture, including video games, anime, and manga, expanding worldwide, especially among young people.[296] In March 2011, the Tokyo Skytree became the tallest tower in the world at 634 metres (2,080 ft), displacing the Canton Tower.[297][298] It is currently the third tallest structure in the world.

On 11 March 2011, one of the largest earthquakes recorded in Japan occurred in the northeast. The resulting tsunami damaged the nuclear facilities in Fukushima, which suffered a nuclear meltdown and severe radiation leakage.[299]

Reiwa period (2019–present) Edit

Emperor Naruhito's reign began upon the abdication of his father, Emperor Akihito, on 1 May 2019.[300]

In 2020, Tokyo was due to host the Summer Olympics for the second time since 1964. Japan was the first Asian country to host the Olympics twice. However, due to the global outbreak and economic impact of COVID-19 pandemic, the Summer Olympics were postponed to 2021; they took place from 23 July to 8 August 2021.[301] Japan ranked third place, with 27 gold medals.[302]

When the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Japan condemned and levied sanctions on Russia for its actions.[303] Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy praised Japan as the "first Asian nation that has begun exerting pressure on Russia."[303] Japan froze the assets of Russia's central bank and other major Russian banks and assets owned by 500 Russian citizens and organizations.[303] Japan banned new investments and the export of high tech to the country. Russia's trade status as favored nation was revoked.[303] Japan's swift actions shows its becoming a leading power in the world.[303] The war in Ukraine and threats from China and North Korea caused a shift in Japan's security policy with higher defense spending which erodes its former pacifist stance.[303]

On 8 July 2022, former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, was assassinated in the city of Nara by former Japan Self-Defense Force Marine Tetsuya Yamagami while campaigning two days before the 2022 House of Councillors election.[304] This shocked the public, because firearm fatalities are very rare in Japan. There were only 10 shooting deaths from 2017 to 2020 and 1 gun death incident in 2021.[305]

After 2022 visit by Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan, China conducted "precision missile strikes" in the ocean around Taiwan's coastline on August 4, 2022.[306] These military exercises raised tensions in the region.[306] The Japanese Ministry of Defense reported that this was the first time ballistic missiles launched by China landed in Japan's exclusive economic zone and lodged a diplomatic protest with Beijing.[307] Five Chinese missiles landed in Japan's EEZ off Hateruma which is near Taiwan.[306] Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi said these missiles are "serious threats to Japan's national security and the safety of the Japanese people."[306]

On December 16, 2022, Japan announced a major shift in its military policy by acquiring counterstrike capabilities and a defense budget increase to 2% of GDP (¥43 trillion ($315 billion) by 2027.[308] [309] The impetus are regional security concerns over China, North-Korea and Russia.[308] This will leapfrog Japan from ninth to the world's third-largest defense spender, behind the United States and China.[310]

Social conditions Edit

Social stratification in Japan became pronounced during the Yayoi period. Expanding trade and agriculture increased the wealth of society, which was increasingly monopolized by social elites.[311] By 600 AD, a class structure had developed which included court aristocrats, the families of local magnates, commoners, and slaves.[312] Over 90% were commoners, who included farmers, merchants, and artisans.[313] During the late Heian period, the governing elite consisted of three classes. The traditional aristocracy shared power with Buddhist monks and samurai,[313] though the latter became increasingly dominant in the Kamakura and Muromachi periods.[314] These periods witnessed the rise of the merchant class, which diversified into a greater variety of specialized occupations.[315]

Women initially held social and political equality with men,[312] and archaeological evidence suggests a prehistorical preference for female rulers in western Japan. Female Emperors appear in recorded history until the Meiji Constitution declared strict male-only ascension in 1889.[316] Chinese Confucian-style patriarchy was first codified in the 7th–8th centuries with the ritsuryō system,[317] which introduced a patrilineal family register with a male head of household.[318] Women until then had held important roles in government which thereafter gradually diminished, though even in the late Heian period women wielded considerable court influence.[316] Marital customs and many laws governing private property remained gender neutral.[319]

For reasons that are unclear to historians the status of women rapidly deteriorated from the fourteenth century and onwards.[320] Women of all social classes lost the right to own and inherit property and were increasingly viewed as inferior to men.[321] Hideyoshi's land survey of the 1590s further entrenched the status of men as dominant landholders.[322] During the US occupation following World War II , women gained legal equality with men,[323] but faced widespread workplace discrimination. A movement for women's rights led to the passage of an equal employment law in 1986, but by the 1990s women held only 10% of management positions.[324]

Hideyoshi's land survey of the 1590s designated all who cultivated the land as commoners, an act which granted effective freedom to most of Japan's slaves.[325]

 
Social structure of the Edo period

The Tokugawa shogunate rigidified long-existent class divisions,[326] placing most of the population into a Neo-Confucian hierarchy of four occupations, with the ruling elite at the top, followed by the peasants who made up 80% of the population, then artisans, and merchants at the bottom.[327] Court nobles,[43] clerics, outcasts, entertainers, and workers of the licensed quarters fell outside this structure.[328] Different legal codes applied to different classes, marriage between classes was prohibited, and towns were subdivided into different class areas.[326] The social stratification had little bearing on economic conditions: many samurai lived in poverty[328] and the wealth of the merchant class grew throughout the period as the commercial economy developed and urbanization grew.[329] The Edo-era social power structure proved untenable and gave way following the Meiji Restoration to one in which commercial power played an increasingly significant political role.[330]

Although all social classes were legally abolished at the start of the Meiji period,[167] income inequality greatly increased.[331] New economic class divisions were formed between capitalist business owners who formed the new middle class, small shopkeepers of the old middle class, the working class in factories, rural landlords, and tenant farmers.[332] The great disparities of income between the classes dissipated during and after World War II, eventually declining to levels that were among the lowest in the industrialized world.[331] Some postwar surveys indicated that up to 90% of Japanese self-identified as being middle class.[333]

Populations of workers in professions considered unclean, such as leatherworkers and those who handled the dead, developed in the 15th and 16th centuries into hereditary outcast communities.[334] These people, later called burakumin, fell outside the Edo-period class structure and suffered discrimination that lasted after the class system was abolished.[334] Though activism has improved the social conditions of those from burakumin backgrounds, discrimination in employment and education has lingered into the 21st century.[334]

See also Edit

Citations Edit

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Cited sources Edit

  • Farris, William Wayne (1995). Population, Disease, and Land in Early Japan, 645–900. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 978-0-674-69005-9.
  • Farris, William Wayne (2009). Japan to 1600: A Social and Economic History. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3379-4.
  • Gao, Bai (2009). "The Postwar Japanese Economy". In Tsutsui, William M. (ed.). A Companion to Japanese History. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 299–314. ISBN 978-1-4051-9339-9.
  • Hane, Mikiso (1991). Premodern Japan: A Historical Survey. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-4970-1.
  • Henshall, Kenneth (2012). A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-34662-8. online
  • Connaughton, R. M. (1988). The War of the Rising Sun and the Tumbling Bear—A Military History of the Russo-Japanese War 1904–5. London. ISBN 0-415-00906-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Schimmelpenninck van der Oye, David (2005). "The Immediate Origins of the War". In Steinberg, John; Menning, Bruce; Schimmelpenninck van der Oye, David; Wolff, David; Yokote, Shinji (eds.). The Russo-Japanese War in Global Perspective: World War Zero. Vol. I. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-474-0704-1.
  • Holcombe, Charles (2017). A History Of East Asia: From the Origins of Civilization to the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge University Press.
  • Jansen, Marius (2000). The Making of Modern Japan. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press of Harvard U. ISBN 0674009916.
  • Keene, Donald (1999) [1993]. A History of Japanese Literature, Vol. 1: Seeds in the Heart – Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century (paperback ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11441-7.
  • Kerr, George (1958). Okinawa: History of an Island People. Rutland, Vermont: Tuttle Company.
  • Large, Stephen S. (2007). "Oligarchy, Democracy, and Fascism". A Companion to Japanese History. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Meyer, Milton W. (2009). Japan: A Concise History. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742557932.
  • McClain, James L. (2002). Japan: A Modern History. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-04156-9.
  • Morton, W Scott; Olenike, J Kenneth (2004). Japan: Its History and Culture. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780071460620.
  • Neary, Ian (2009). "Class and Social Stratification". In Tsutsui, William M. (ed.). A Companion to Japanese History. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 389–406. ISBN 978-1-4051-9339-9.
  • Perez, Louis G. (1998). The History of Japan. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-30296-1.
  • Sansom, George (1958). A History of Japan to 1334. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0523-3.
  • Sims, Richard (2001). Japanese Political History since the Meiji Restoration, 1868–2000. New York: Palgrave. ISBN 9780312239152.
  • Togo, Kazuhiko (2005). Japan's Foreign Policy 1945–2003: The Quest for a Proactive Policy. Boston: Brill. ISBN 9789004147966.
  • Tonomura, Hitomi (2009). "Women and Sexuality in Premodern Japan". In Tsutsui, William M. (ed.). A Companion to Japanese History. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 351–371. ISBN 978-1-4051-9339-9.
  • Totman, Conrad (2005). A History of Japan. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-119-02235-0.
  • Walker, Brett (2015). A Concise History of Japan. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107004184.
  • Weston, Mark (2002). Giants of Japan: The Lives of Japan's Greatest Men and Women. New York: Kodansha. ISBN 978-0-9882259-4-7.

Further reading Edit

  • Chang, Richard T. (1970). From Prejudice to Tolerance. A Study of the Japanese Image of the West, 1826-1864. Tokyo, Sophia University.
  • Garon, Sheldon (May 1994). "Rethinking Modernization and Modernity in Japanese History: A Focus on State-Society Relations". Journal of Asian Studies 53#2, pp. 346–366. JSTOR 2059838.
  • Hara, Katsuro (2010). Introduction to the History of Japan (registration required).
  • Hearn, Lafcadio (1894). Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan (first series). Leipzig, Bernhard Tauchnitz.
  • Hook, Glenn D. et al. (2011). Japan's International Relations: Politics, Economics and Security excerpt 1 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • Imamura, Keiji (1996). Prehistoric Japan: New Perspectives on Insular East Asia. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
  • Keene, Donald (1998) [1984]. A History of Japanese Literature, Vol. 3: Dawn to the West – Japanese Literature of the Modern Era (Fiction) (paperback ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11435-6.
  • Kingston, Jeffrey (2001). Japan in Transformation, 1952–2000. Pearson Education. 215pp; brief history textbook.
  • Kitaoka, Shin’ichi (2019). The Political History of Modern Japan: Foreign Relations and Domestic Politics. Routledge.
  • McOmie, William, ed. Foreign Images and Experiences of Japan: 1: First Century AD-1841. (Brill, 2021). online
  • Schirokauer, Conrad (2013). A Brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations. Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
  • Tames, Richard, et al. (2008). A Traveller's History of Japan. Popular history.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to History of Japan at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Pre-modern Japan travel guide from Wikivoyage

history, japan, first, human, inhabitants, japanese, archipelago, have, been, traced, paleolithic, around, years, jōmon, period, named, after, cord, marked, pottery, followed, yayoi, period, first, millennium, when, inventions, were, introduced, from, asia, du. The first human inhabitants of the Japanese archipelago have been traced to the Paleolithic around 38 39 000 years ago 1 The Jōmon period named after its cord marked pottery was followed by the Yayoi period in the first millennium BC when new inventions were introduced from Asia During this period the first known written reference to Japan was recorded in the Chinese Book of Han in the first century AD Around the 3rd century BC the Yayoi people from the continent immigrated to the Japanese archipelago and introduced iron technology and agricultural civilization 2 Because they had an agricultural civilization the population of the Yayoi began to grow rapidly and ultimately overwhelmed the Jōmon people natives of the Japanese archipelago who were hunter gatherers 3 Between the fourth and ninth centuries Japan s many kingdoms and tribes gradually came to be unified under a centralized government nominally controlled by the Emperor of Japan The imperial dynasty established at this time continues to this day albeit in an almost entirely ceremonial role In 794 a new imperial capital was established at Heian kyō modern Kyoto marking the beginning of the Heian period which lasted until 1185 The Heian period is considered a golden age of classical Japanese culture Japanese religious life from this time and onwards was a mix of native Shinto practices and Buddhism Over the following centuries the power of the imperial house decreased passing first to great clans of civilian aristocrats most notably the Fujiwara and then to the military clans and their armies of samurai The Minamoto clan under Minamoto no Yoritomo emerged victorious from the Genpei War of 1180 85 defeating their rival military clan the Taira After seizing power Yoritomo set up his capital in Kamakura and took the title of shōgun In 1274 and 1281 the Kamakura shogunate withstood two Mongol invasions but in 1333 it was toppled by a rival claimant to the shogunate ushering in the Muromachi period During this period regional warlords called daimyō grew in power at the expense of the shōgun Eventually Japan descended into a period of civil war Over the course of the late 16th century Japan was reunified under the leadership of the prominent daimyō Oda Nobunaga and his successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi After Toyotomi s death in 1598 Tokugawa Ieyasu came to power and was appointed shōgun by the emperor The Tokugawa shogunate which governed from Edo modern Tokyo presided over a prosperous and peaceful era known as the Edo period 1600 1868 The Tokugawa shogunate imposed a strict class system on Japanese society and cut off almost all contact with the outside world Portugal and Japan came into contact in 1543 when the Portuguese became the first Europeans to reach Japan by landing in the southern archipelago They had a significant impact on Japan even in this initial limited interaction introducing firearms to Japanese warfare The American Perry Expedition in 1853 54 more completely ended Japan s seclusion this contributed to the fall of the shogunate and the return of power to the emperor during the Boshin War in 1868 The new national leadership of the following Meiji period transformed the isolated feudal island country into an empire that closely followed Western models and became a great power Although democracy developed and modern civilian culture prospered during the Taishō period 1912 26 Japan s powerful military had great autonomy and overruled Japan s civilian leaders in the 1920s and 1930s The Japanese military invaded Manchuria in 1931 and from 1937 the conflict escalated into a prolonged war with China Japan s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 led to war with the United States and its allies Japan s forces soon became overextended but the military held out in spite of Allied air attacks that inflicted severe damage on population centers Emperor Hirohito announced Japan s surrender on August 15 1945 following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Soviet invasion of Manchuria The Allies occupied Japan until 1952 during which a new constitution was enacted in 1947 that transformed Japan into the constitutional monarchy After 1955 Japan enjoyed very high economic growth under the governance of the Liberal Democratic Party and became a world economic powerhouse Since the Lost Decade of the 1990s Japanese economic growth has slowed Contents 1 Prehistoric and ancient Japan 1 1 Paleolithic period 1 2 Jōmon period 1 3 Yayoi period 1 4 Kofun period c 250 538 2 Classical Japan 2 1 Asuka period 538 710 2 2 Nara period 710 794 2 3 Heian period 794 1185 2 3 1 Heian culture 3 Feudal Japan 3 1 Kamakura period 1185 1333 3 2 Muromachi period 1333 1568 3 2 1 Nanban trade 3 2 2 Muromachi culture 3 3 Azuchi Momoyama period 1568 1600 4 Early modern Japan 4 1 Edo period 1600 1868 4 1 1 Culture and philosophy 4 1 2 Decline and fall of the shogunate 5 Modern Japan 5 1 Meiji period 1868 1912 5 1 1 Political and social changes 5 1 2 Rise of imperialism and the military 5 1 3 Economic modernization and labor unrest 5 2 Taishō period 1912 1926 5 3 Shōwa period 1926 1989 5 3 1 Manchurian Incident and the Second Sino Japanese War 5 3 2 World War II 5 3 3 Occupation of Japan 5 3 4 Postwar growth and prosperity 5 4 Heisei period 1989 2019 5 5 Reiwa period 2019 present 6 Social conditions 7 See also 8 Citations 9 Cited sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksPrehistoric and ancient Japan EditPaleolithic period Edit Main article Japanese Paleolithic nbsp Japan at the Last Glacial Maximum in the Late Pleistocene about 20 000 years ago regions above sea level unvegetated sea black outline indicates present day JapanHunter gatherers arrived in Japan in Paleolithic times with the oldest evidence dating to around 38 40 000 years ago 1 Little evidence of their presence remains as Japan s acidic soils are inhospitable to the process of fossilization However the discovery of unique edge ground axes in Japan dated to over 30 000 years ago may be evidence of the first Homo sapiens in Japan 4 Early humans likely arrived in Japan by sea on watercraft 5 Evidence of human habitation has been dated to 32 000 years ago in Okinawa s Yamashita Cave 6 and up to 20 000 years ago on Ishigaki Island s Shiraho Saonetabaru Cave 7 Jōmon period Edit Main article Jōmon period nbsp Reconstruction of a Jōmon family from the Sannai Maruyama SiteThe Jōmon period of prehistoric Japan spans from roughly 13 000 BC 8 to about 1 000 BC 9 Japan was inhabited by a predominantly hunter gatherer culture that reached a considerable degree of sedentism and cultural complexity 10 The name Jōmon meaning cord marked was first applied by American scholar Edward S Morse who discovered shards of pottery in 1877 11 The pottery style characteristic of the first phases of Jōmon culture was decorated by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay 12 Jōmon pottery is generally accepted to be among the oldest in East Asia and the world 13 nbsp A vase from the early Jōmon period 11000 7000 BC nbsp Middle Jōmon vase 2000 BC nbsp Dogu figurine of the late Jōmon period 1000 400 BC Yayoi period Edit Main article Yayoi period The advent of the Yayoi people from the Asian mainland brought fundamental transformations to the Japanese archipelago The millennial achievements of the Neolithic Revolution took hold of the islands in a relatively short span of centuries particularly with the development of rice cultivation 14 and metallurgy Until recently the onset of this wave of cultural and technological changes was thought to have begun around 400 BC 15 Radio carbon evidence now suggests that the new phase started some 500 years earlier between 1 000 and 800 BC 16 17 Endowed with bronze and iron weapons and tools initially imported from China and the Korean peninsula the Yayoi radiated out from northern Kyushu gradually supplanting the Jōmon 18 They also introduced weaving and silk production 19 new woodworking methods 16 glassmaking technology 16 and new architectural styles 20 The expansion of the Yayoi appears to have brought about a fusion with the indigenous Jōmon resulting in a small genetic admixture 21 nbsp A Yayoi period bronze bell dōtaku of the 3rd century ADThese Yayoi technologies originated on the Asian mainland There is debate among scholars as to what degree their spread can be attributed to migration or to cultural diffusion The migration theory is supported by genetic and linguistic studies 16 Historian Hanihara Kazurō has suggested that the annual immigrant influx from the continent range from 350 to 3 000 22 The population of Japan began to increase rapidly perhaps with a 10 fold rise over the Jōmon Calculations of the population size by the end of the Yayoi period have varied from 1 to 4 million 23 Skeletal remains from the late Jōmon period reveal a deterioration in already poor standards of health and nutrition whereas contemporaneous Yayoi archaeological sites possess large structures suggestive of grain storehouses This shift was accompanied by an increase in both the stratification of society and tribal warfare indicated by segregated gravesites and military fortifications 16 During the Yayoi period the Yayoi tribes gradually coalesced into a number of kingdoms In the earliest written work to unambiguously mention Japan the Book of Han published in 111 AD states that one hundred kingdoms comprised Japan which is referred to as Wa A later Chinese work of history the Book of Wei states that by 240 AD the powerful kingdom of Yamatai ruled by the female monarch Himiko had gained ascendancy over the others though modern historians continue to debate its location and other aspects of its depiction in the Book of Wei 24 Kofun period c 250 538 Edit nbsp Daisenryō Kofun OsakaDuring the subsequent Kofun period Japan gradually unified under a single territory The symbol of the growing power of Japan s new leaders was the kofun burial mounds they constructed from around 250 AD onwards 25 Many were of massive scales such as the Daisenryō Kofun a 486 m long keyhole shaped burial mound that took huge teams of laborers fifteen years to complete It is commonly accepted that the tomb was built for Emperor Nintoku 26 The kofun were often surrounded by and filled with numerous haniwa clay sculptures often in the shape of warriors and horses 25 The center of the unified state was Yamato in the Kinai region of central Japan 25 The rulers of the Yamato state were a hereditary line of emperors who still reign as the world s longest dynasty The rulers of the Yamato extended their power across Japan through military conquest but their preferred method of expansion was to convince local leaders to accept their authority in exchange for positions of influence in the government 27 Many of the powerful local clans who joined the Yamato state became known as the uji 28 nbsp Territorial extent of Yamato court during the Kofun periodThese leaders sought and received formal diplomatic recognition from China and Chinese accounts record five successive such leaders as the Five kings of Wa Craftsmen and scholars from China and the Three Kingdoms of Korea played an important role in transmitting continental technologies and administrative skills to Japan during this period 28 Historians agree that there was a big struggle between the Yamato federation and the Izumo Federation centuries before written records 29 Classical Japan EditAsuka period 538 710 Edit nbsp Buddhist temple of Hōryu ji is the oldest wooden structure in the world It was commissioned by Prince Shotoku and represents the beginning of Buddhism in Japan The Asuka period began as early as 538 AD with the introduction of the Buddhist religion from the Korean kingdom of Baekje 30 Since then Buddhism has coexisted with Japan s native Shinto religion in what is today known as Shinbutsu shugō 31 The period draws its name from the de facto imperial capital Asuka in the Kinai region 32 The Buddhist Soga clan took over the government in the 580s and controlled Japan from behind the scenes for nearly sixty years 33 Prince Shōtoku an advocate of Buddhism and of the Soga cause who was of partial Soga descent served as regent and de facto leader of Japan from 594 to 622 Shōtoku authored the Seventeen article constitution a Confucian inspired code of conduct for officials and citizens and attempted to introduce a merit based civil service called the Cap and Rank System 34 In 607 Shōtoku offered a subtle insult to China by opening his letter with the phrase The ruler of the land of the rising sun addresses the ruler of the land of the setting sun as seen in the kanji characters for Japan Nippon 35 By 670 a variant of this expression Nihon established itself as the official name of the nation which has persisted to this day 36 nbsp The word Nihon written in kanji horizontal placement of characters The text means Japan in Japanese nbsp Prince Shōtoku was a semi legendary regent of the Asuka period and considered to be the first major sponsor of Buddhism in Japan In 645 the Soga clan were overthrown in a coup launched by Prince Naka no Ōe and Fujiwara no Kamatari the founder of the Fujiwara clan 37 Their government devised and implemented the far reaching Taika Reforms The Reform began with land reform based on Confucian ideas and philosophies from China It nationalized all land in Japan to be distributed equally among cultivators and ordered the compilation of a household registry as the basis for a new system of taxation 38 The true aim of the reforms was to bring about greater centralization and to enhance the power of the imperial court which was also based on the governmental structure of China Envoys and students were dispatched to China to learn about Chinese writing politics art and religion After the reforms the Jinshin War of 672 a bloody conflict between Prince Ōama and his nephew Prince Ōtomo two rivals to the throne became a major catalyst for further administrative reforms 37 These reforms culminated with the promulgation of the Taihō Code which consolidated existing statutes and established the structure of the central government and its subordinate local governments 39 These legal reforms created the ritsuryō state a system of Chinese style centralized government that remained in place for half a millennium 37 The art of the Asuka period embodies the themes of Buddhist art 40 One of the most famous works is the Buddhist temple of Hōryu ji commissioned by Prince Shōtoku and completed in 607 AD It is now the oldest wooden structure in the world 41 Nara period 710 794 Edit Main article Nara period nbsp The Daibutsu den within the complex of Tōdai ji This Buddhist temple was sponsored by the Imperial Court during the Nara period In 710 the government constructed a grandiose new capital at Heijō kyō modern Nara modeled on Chang an the capital of the Chinese Tang dynasty During this period the first two books produced in Japan appeared the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki 42 which contain chronicles of legendary accounts of early Japan and its creation myth which describes the imperial line as descendants of the gods 43 The Man yōshu was compiled in the latter half of the eighth century which is widely considered the finest collection of Japanese poetry 44 During this period Japan suffered a series of natural disasters including wildfires droughts famines and outbreaks of disease such as a smallpox epidemic in 735 737 that killed over a quarter of the population 45 Emperor Shōmu r 724 749 feared his lack of piousness had caused the trouble and so increased the government s promotion of Buddhism including the construction of the temple Tōdai ji in 752 46 The funds to build this temple were raised in part by the influential Buddhist monk Gyōki and once completed it was used by the Chinese monk Ganjin as an ordination site 47 Japan nevertheless entered a phase of population decline that continued well into the following Heian period 48 There was also a serious attempt to overthrow the Imperial house during the middle Nara period During the 760s monk Dōkyō tried to establish his own dynasty by the aid of Empress Shōtoku but after her death in 770 he lost all his power and was exiled The Fujiwara clan furthermore consolidated its power Heian period 794 1185 Edit Main article Heian period nbsp Miniature model of the ancient capital Heian kyō nbsp Later Three Year War in the 11th centuryIn 784 the capital moved briefly to Nagaoka kyō then again in 794 to Heian kyō modern Kyoto which remained the capital until 1868 49 Political power within the court soon passed to the Fujiwara clan a family of court nobles who grew increasingly close to the imperial family through intermarriage 50 Between 812 and 814 CE a smallpox epidemic killed almost half of the Japanese population 51 In 858 Fujiwara no Yoshifusa had himself declared sesshō regent to the underage emperor His son Fujiwara no Mototsune created the office of kampaku which could rule in the place of an adult reigning emperor Fujiwara no Michinaga an exceptional statesman who became kampaku in 996 governed during the height of the Fujiwara clan s power 52 and married four of his daughters to emperors current and future 50 The Fujiwara clan held on to power until 1086 when Emperor Shirakawa ceded the throne to his son Emperor Horikawa but continued to exercise political power establishing the practice of cloistered rule 53 by which the reigning emperor would function as a figurehead while the real authority was held by a retired predecessor behind the scenes 52 Throughout the Heian period the power of the imperial court declined The court became so self absorbed with power struggles and with the artistic pursuits of court nobles that it neglected the administration of government outside the capital 50 The nationalization of land undertaken as part of the ritsuryō state decayed as various noble families and religious orders succeeded in securing tax exempt status for their private shōen manors 52 By the eleventh century more land in Japan was controlled by shōen owners than by the central government The imperial court was thus deprived of the tax revenue to pay for its national army In response the owners of the shōen set up their own armies of samurai warriors 54 Two powerful noble families that had descended from branches of the imperial family 55 the Taira and Minamoto clans acquired large armies and many shōen outside the capital The central government began to use these two warrior clans to suppress rebellions and piracy 56 Japan s population stabilized during the late Heian period after hundreds of years of decline 57 During the early Heian period the imperial court successfully consolidated its control over the Emishi people of northern Honshu 58 Ōtomo no Otomaro was the first man the court granted the title of seii tai shōgun Great Barbarian Subduing General 59 In 802 seii tai shōgun Sakanoue no Tamuramaro subjugated the Emishi people who were led by Aterui 58 By 1051 members of the Abe clan who occupied key posts in the regional government were openly defying the central authority The court requested the Minamoto clan to engage the Abe clan whom they defeated in the Former Nine Years War 60 The court thus temporarily reasserted its authority in northern Japan Following another civil war the Later Three Year War Fujiwara no Kiyohira took full power his family the Northern Fujiwara controlled northern Honshu for the next century from their capital Hiraizumi 61 In 1156 a dispute over succession to the throne erupted and the two rival claimants Emperor Go Shirakawa and Emperor Sutoku hired the Taira and Minamoto clans in the hopes of securing the throne by military force During this war the Taira clan led by Taira no Kiyomori defeated the Minamoto clan Kiyomori used his victory to accumulate power for himself in Kyoto and even installed his own grandson Antoku as emperor The outcome of this war led to the rivalry between the Minamoto and Taira clans As a result the dispute and power struggle between both clans led to the Heiji rebellion in 1160 In 1180 Taira no Kiyomori was challenged by an uprising led by Minamoto no Yoritomo a member of the Minamoto clan whom Kiyomori had exiled to Kamakura 62 Though Taira no Kiyomori died in 1181 the ensuing bloody Genpei War between the Taira and Minamoto families continued for another four years The victory of the Minamoto clan was sealed in 1185 when a force commanded by Yoritomo s younger brother Minamoto no Yoshitsune scored a decisive victory at the naval Battle of Dan no ura Yoritomo and his retainers thus became the de facto rulers of Japan 63 Heian culture Edit nbsp A handscroll painting dated c 1130 illustrating a scene from the Bamboo River chapter of The Tale of GenjiDuring the Heian period the imperial court was a vibrant center of high art and culture 64 Its literary accomplishments include the poetry collection Kokinshu and the Tosa Diary both associated with the poet Ki no Tsurayuki as well as Sei Shōnagon s collection of miscellany The Pillow Book 65 and Murasaki Shikibu s Tale of Genji often considered the masterpiece of Japanese literature 66 The development of the kana written syllabaries was part of a general trend of declining Chinese influence during the Heian period The official Japanese missions to Tang dynasty of China which began in the year 630 67 ended during the ninth century though informal missions of monks and scholars continued and thereafter the development of native Japanese forms of art and poetry accelerated 68 A major architectural achievement apart from Heian kyō itself was the temple of Byōdō in built in 1053 in Uji 69 Feudal Japan EditKamakura period 1185 1333 Edit Main article Kamakura period nbsp Minamoto no Yoritomo was the founder of the Kamakura shogunate in 1192 This was the first military government in which the shogun with the samurai were the de facto rulers of Japan Upon the consolidation of power Minamoto no Yoritomo chose to rule in concert with the Imperial Court in Kyoto Though Yoritomo set up his own government in Kamakura in the Kantō region located in eastern Japan its power was legally authorized by the Imperial court in Kyoto in several occasions In 1192 the emperor declared Yoritomo seii tai shōgun 征夷大将軍 Eastern Barbarian Subduing Great General abbreviated as shōgun 70 Yoritomo s government was called the bakufu 幕府 tent government referring to the tents where his soldiers encamped The English term shogunate refers to the bakufu 71 Japan remained largely under military rule until 1868 72 Legitimacy was conferred on the shogunate by the Imperial court but the shogunate was the de facto rulers of the country The court maintained bureaucratic and religious functions and the shogunate welcomed participation by members of the aristocratic class The older institutions remained intact in a weakened form and Kyoto remained the official capital This system has been contrasted with the simple warrior rule of the later Muromachi period 70 Yoritomo soon turned on Yoshitsune who was initially harbored by Fujiwara no Hidehira the grandson of Kiyohira and the de facto ruler of northern Honshu In 1189 after Hidehira s death his successor Yasuhira attempted to curry favor with Yoritomo by attacking Yoshitsune s home Although Yoshitsune was killed Yoritomo still invaded and conquered the Northern Fujiwara clan s territories 73 In subsequent centuries Yoshitsune would become a legendary figure portrayed in countless works of literature as an idealized tragic hero 74 After Yoritomo s death in 1199 the office of shogun weakened Behind the scenes Yoritomo s wife Hōjō Masako became the true power behind the government In 1203 her father Hōjō Tokimasa was appointed regent to the shogun Yoritomo s son Minamoto no Sanetomo Henceforth the Minamoto shoguns became puppets of the Hōjō regents who wielded actual power 75 The regime that Yoritomo had established and which was kept in place by his successors was decentralized and feudalistic in structure in contrast with the earlier ritsuryō state Yoritomo selected the provincial governors known under the titles of shugo or jitō 76 from among his close vassals the gokenin The Kamakura shogunate allowed its vassals to maintain their own armies and to administer law and order in their provinces on their own terms 77 In 1221 the retired Emperor Go Toba instigated what became known as the Jōkyu War a rebellion against the shogunate in an attempt to restore political power to the court The rebellion was a failure and led to Go Toba being exiled to Oki Island along with two other emperors the retired Emperor Tsuchimikado and Emperor Juntoku who were exiled to Tosa Province and Sado Island respectively 78 The shogunate further consolidated its political power relative to the Kyoto aristocracy 79 The samurai armies of the whole nation were mobilized in 1274 and 1281 to confront two full scale invasions launched by Kublai Khan of the Mongol Empire 80 Though outnumbered by an enemy equipped with superior weaponry the Japanese fought the Mongols to a standstill in Kyushu on both occasions until the Mongol fleet was destroyed by typhoons called kamikaze meaning divine wind In spite of the Kamakura shogunate s victory the defense so depleted its finances that it was unable to provide compensation to its vassals for their role in the victory This had permanent negative consequences for the shogunate s relations with the samurai class 81 Discontent among the samurai proved decisive in ending the Kamakura shogunate In 1333 Emperor Go Daigo launched a rebellion in the hope of restoring full power to the imperial court The shogunate sent General Ashikaga Takauji to quell the revolt but Takauji and his men instead joined forces with Emperor Go Daigo and overthrew the Kamakura shogunate 82 Japan nevertheless entered a period of prosperity and population growth starting around 1250 83 In rural areas the greater use of iron tools and fertilizer improved irrigation techniques and double cropping increased productivity and rural villages grew 84 Fewer famines and epidemics allowed cities to grow and commerce to boom 83 Buddhism which had been largely a religion of the elites was brought to the masses by prominent monks such as Hōnen 1133 1212 who established Pure Land Buddhism in Japan and Nichiren 1222 1282 who founded Nichiren Buddhism Zen Buddhism spread widely among the samurai class 85 The Illustrated Account of the Mongol Invasion Mōko Shurai Ekotoba nbsp Ancient drawing depicting a samurai battling forces of the Mongol Empire nbsp Samurai Mitsui Sukenaga right defeating the Mongolian invasion army left nbsp Shiraishi clanMuromachi period 1333 1568 Edit Main articles Muromachi period Sengoku period and Higashiyama period nbsp Portrait of Ashikaga Takauji who was the founder and first shōgun of the Ashikaga shogunateTakauji and many other samurai soon became dissatisfied with Emperor Go Daigo s Kenmu Restoration an ambitious attempt to monopolize power in the imperial court Takauji rebeled after Go Daigo refused to appoint him shōgun In 1338 Takauji captured Kyoto and installed a rival member of the imperial family to the throne Emperor Kōmyō who did appoint him shogun 86 Go Daigo responded by fleeing to the southern city of Yoshino where he set up a rival government This ushered in a prolonged period of conflict between the Northern Court and the Southern Court 87 Takauji set up his shogunate in the Muromachi district of Kyoto However the shogunate was faced with the twin challenges of fighting the Southern Court and of maintaining its authority over its own subordinate governors 87 Like the Kamakura shogunate the Muromachi shogunate appointed its allies to rule in the provinces but these men increasingly styled themselves as feudal lords called daimyōs of their domains and often refused to obey the shogun 88 The Ashikaga shogun who was most successful at bringing the country together was Takauji s grandson Ashikaga Yoshimitsu who came to power in 1368 and remained influential until his death in 1408 Yoshimitsu expanded the power of the shogunate and in 1392 brokered a deal to bring the Northern and Southern Courts together and end the civil war Henceforth the shogunate kept the emperor and his court under tight control 87 nbsp Kinkaku ji was built in 1397 by Ashikaga Yoshimitsu nbsp Map showing the territories of major daimyō families around 1570 CEDuring the final century of the Ashikaga shogunate the country descended into another more violent period of civil war This started in 1467 when the Ōnin War broke out over who would succeed the ruling shogun The daimyōs each took sides and burned Kyoto to the ground while battling for their preferred candidate By the time the succession was settled in 1477 the shogun had lost all power over the daimyō who now ruled hundreds of independent states throughout Japan 89 During this Warring States period daimyōs fought among themselves for control of the country 90 Some of the most powerful daimyōs of the era were Uesugi Kenshin and Takeda Shingen 91 One enduring symbol of this era was the ninja skilled spies and assassins hired by daimyōs Few definite historical facts are known about the secretive lifestyles of the ninja who became the subject of many legends 92 In addition to the daimyōs rebellious peasants and warrior monks affiliated with Buddhist temples also raised their own armies 93 Nanban trade Edit Main article Nanban trade Amid this on going anarchy a trading ship was blown off course and landed in 1543 on the Japanese island of Tanegashima just south of Kyushu The three Portuguese traders on board were the first Europeans to set foot in Japan 94 Soon European traders would introduce many new items to Japan most importantly the musket 95 By 1556 the daimyōs were using about 300 000 muskets in their armies 96 The Europeans also brought Christianity which soon came to have a substantial following in Japan reaching 350 000 believers In 1549 the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier disembarked in Kyushu nbsp Japan Iapam and Korea in the 1568 Portuguese map of the cartographer Joao Vaz DouradoInitiating direct commercial and cultural exchange between Japan and the West the first map made of Japan in the west was represented in 1568 by the Portuguese cartographer Fernao Vaz Dourado 97 The Portuguese were allowed to trade and create colonies where they could convert new believers into the Christian religion The civil war status in Japan greatly benefited the Portuguese as well as several competing gentlemen who sought to attract Portuguese black boats and their trade to their domains Initially the Portuguese stayed on the lands belonging to Matsura Takanobu Firando Hirado 98 and in the province of Bungo lands of Ōtomo Sōrin but in 1562 they moved to Yokoseura when the Daimyo there Omura Sumitada offered to be the first lord to convert to Christianity adopting the name of Dom Bartolomeu In 1564 he faced a rebellion instigated by the Buddhist clergy and Yokoseura was destroyed In 1561 forces under Ōtomo Sōrin attacked the castle in Moji with an alliance with the Portuguese who provided three ships with a crew of about 900 men and more than 50 cannons This is thought to be the first bombardment by foreign ships on Japan 99 The first recorded naval battle between Europeans and the Japanese occurred in 1565 In the Battle of Fukuda Bay the daimyō Matsura Takanobu attacked two Portuguese trade vessels at Hirado port 100 The engagement led the Portuguese traders to find a safe harbor for their ships that took them to Nagasaki nbsp The Black Ship Portuguese traders that came from Goa and Macau once a yearIn 1571 Dom Bartolomeu also known as Ōmura Sumitada guaranteed a little land in the small fishing village of Nagasaqui to the Jesuits who divided it into six areas They could use the land to receive Christians exiled from other territories as well as for Portuguese merchants The Jesuits built a chapel and a school under the name of Sao Paulo like those in Goa and Malacca By 1579 Nagasaqui had four hundred houses and some Portuguese had gotten married Fearful that Nagasaki could fall into the hands of its rival Takanobu Omura Sumitada Dom Bartolomeu decided to guarantee the city directly to the Jesuits in 1580 101 After a few years the Jesuits came to realize that if they understood the language they would achieve more conversions to the Catholic religion Jesuits such as Joao Rodrigues wrote a Japanese dictionary Thus Portuguese became the first Western language to have such a dictionary when it was published in Nagasaki in 1603 102 Oda Nobunaga used European technology and firearms to conquer many other daimyōs his consolidation of power began what was known as the Azuchi Momoyama period 1573 1603 After Nobunaga was assassinated in 1582 by Akechi Mitsuhide his successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi unified the nation in 1590 and launched two unsuccessful invasions of Korea in 1592 and 1597 Before the invasion Hideyoshi tried to hire two Portuguese galleons to join the invasion but the Portuguese refused the offer 103 Tokugawa Ieyasu served as regent for Hideyoshi s son Toyotomi Hideyori and used his position to gain political and military support When open war broke out Ieyasu defeated rival clans in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 In 1603 the Tokugawa shogunate at Edo enacted measures including buke shohatto as a code of conduct to control the autonomous daimyōs and in 1639 the isolationist sakoku closed country policy that spanned the two and a half centuries of tenuous political unity known as the Edo period 1603 1868 this act ended with Portuguese influence after 100 years in Japanese territory also aiming to limit the political presence of any foreign power 94 Muromachi culture Edit In spite of the war Japan s relative economic prosperity which had begun in the Kamakura period continued well into the Muromachi period By 1450 Japan s population stood at ten million compared to six million at the end of the thirteenth century 83 Commerce flourished including considerable trade with China and Korea 104 Because the daimyōs and other groups within Japan were minting their own coins Japan began to transition from a barter based to a currency based economy 105 During the period some of Japan s most representative art forms developed including ink wash painting ikebana flower arrangement the tea ceremony Japanese gardening bonsai and Noh theater 106 Though the eighth Ashikaga shogun Yoshimasa was an ineffectual political and military leader he played a critical role in promoting these cultural developments 107 He had the famous Kinkaku ji or Temple of the Golden Pavilion built in Kyoto in 1397 108 Azuchi Momoyama period 1568 1600 Edit Main article Azuchi Momoyama period nbsp Edo period screen depicting the Battle of Sekigahara It began on 21 October 1600 with a total of 160 000 men facing each other During the second half of the 16th century Japan gradually reunified under two powerful warlords Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi The period takes its name from Nobunaga s headquarters Azuchi Castle and Hideyoshi s headquarters Momoyama Castle 71 nbsp Japan in 1582 showing territory conquered by Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi in grayNobunaga was the daimyō of the small province of Owari He burst onto the scene suddenly in 1560 when during the Battle of Okehazama his army defeated a force several times its size led by the powerful daimyō Imagawa Yoshimoto 109 Nobunaga was renowned for his strategic leadership and his ruthlessness He encouraged Christianity to incite hatred toward his Buddhist enemies and to forge strong relationships with European arms merchants He equipped his armies with muskets and trained them with innovative tactics 110 He promoted talented men regardless of their social status including his peasant servant Toyotomi Hideyoshi who became one of his best generals 111 The Azuchi Momoyama period began in 1568 when Nobunaga seized Kyoto and thus effectively brought an end to the Ashikaga shogunate 109 He was well on his way towards his goal of reuniting all Japan when in 1582 one of his own officers Akechi Mitsuhide killed him during an abrupt attack on his encampment Hideyoshi avenged Nobunaga by crushing Akechi s uprising and emerged as Nobunaga s successor 112 Hideyoshi completed the reunification of Japan by conquering Shikoku Kyushu and the lands of the Hōjō family in eastern Japan 113 He launched sweeping changes to Japanese society including the confiscation of swords from the peasantry new restrictions on daimyōs persecutions of Christians a thorough land survey and a new law effectively forbidding the peasants and samurai from changing their social class 114 Hideyoshi s land survey designated all those who were cultivating the land as being commoners an act which effectively granted freedom to most of Japan s slaves 115 As Hideyoshi s power expanded he dreamed of conquering China and launched two massive invasions of Korea starting in 1592 Hideyoshi failed to defeat the Chinese and Korean armies on the Korean Peninsula and the war ended after his death in 1598 116 In the hope of founding a new dynasty Hideyoshi had asked his most trusted subordinates to pledge loyalty to his infant son Toyotomi Hideyori Despite this almost immediately after Hideyoshi s death war broke out between Hideyori s allies and those loyal to Tokugawa Ieyasu a daimyō and a former ally of Hideyoshi 117 Tokugawa Ieyasu won a decisive victory at the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 ushering in 268 uninterrupted years of rule by the Tokugawa clan 118 Early modern Japan EditEdo period 1600 1868 Edit nbsp Tokugawa Ieyasu was the founder and first shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate The Edo period was characterized by relative peace and stability 119 under the tight control of the Tokugawa shogunate which ruled from the eastern city of Edo modern Tokyo 120 In 1603 Emperor Go Yōzei declared Tokugawa Ieyasu shōgun and Ieyasu abdicated two years later to groom his son as the second shōgun of what became a long dynasty 121 Nevertheless it took time for the Tokugawas to consolidate their rule In 1609 the shōgun gave the daimyō of the Satsuma Domain permission to invade the Ryukyu Kingdom for perceived insults towards the shogunate the Satsuma victory began 266 years of Ryukyu s dual subordination to Satsuma and China 99 122 Ieyasu led the Siege of Osaka that ended with the destruction of the Toyotomi clan in 1615 123 Soon after the shogunate promulgated the Laws for the Military Houses which imposed tighter controls on the daimyōs 124 and the alternate attendance system which required each daimyō to spend every other year in Edo 125 Even so the daimyōs continued to maintain a significant degree of autonomy in their domains 126 The central government of the shogunate in Edo which quickly became the most populous city in the world 120 took counsel from a group of senior advisors known as rōju and employed samurai as bureaucrats 127 The emperor in Kyoto was funded lavishly by the government but was allowed no political power 128 The Tokugawa shogunate went to great lengths to suppress social unrest Harsh penalties including crucifixion beheading and death by boiling were decreed for even the most minor offenses though criminals of high social class were often given the option of seppuku self disembowelment an ancient form of suicide that became ritualized 125 Christianity which was seen as a potential threat was gradually clamped down on until finally after the Christian led Shimabara Rebellion of 1638 the religion was completely outlawed 129 To prevent further foreign ideas from sowing dissent the third Tokugawa shogun Iemitsu implemented the sakoku closed country isolationist policy under which Japanese people were not allowed to travel abroad return from overseas or build ocean going vessels 130 The only Europeans allowed on Japanese soil were the Dutch who were granted a single trading post on the island of Dejima at Nagasaki from 1634 to 1854 131 China and Korea were the only other countries permitted to trade 132 and many foreign books were banned from import 126 During the first century of Tokugawa rule Japan s population doubled to thirty million mostly because of agricultural growth the population remained stable for the rest of the period 133 The shogunate s construction of roads elimination of road and bridge tolls and standardization of coinage promoted commercial expansion that also benefited the merchants and artisans of the cities 134 City populations grew 135 but almost ninety percent of the population continued to live in rural areas 136 Both the inhabitants of cities and of rural communities would benefit from one of the most notable social changes of the Edo period increased literacy and numeracy The number of private schools greatly expanded particularly those attached to temples and shrines and raised literacy to thirty percent This may have been the world s highest rate at the time 137 and drove a flourishing commercial publishing industry which grew to produce hundreds of titles per year 138 In the area of numeracy approximated by an index measuring people s ability to report an exact rather than a rounded age age heaping method and which level shows a strong correlation to later economic development of a country Japan s level was comparable to that of north west European countries and moreover Japan s index came close to the 100 percent mark throughout the nineteenth century These high levels of both literacy and numeracy were part of the socio economical foundation for Japan s strong growth rates during the following century 139 Culture and philosophy Edit nbsp Samurai could kill a commoner for the slightest insult and were widely feared by the Japanese population Edo period 1798 The Edo period was a time of cultural flourishing as the merchant classes grew in wealth and began spending their income on cultural and social pursuits 140 141 Members of the merchant class who patronized culture and entertainment were said to live hedonistic lives which came to be called the ukiyo floating world 142 This lifestyle inspired ukiyo zōshi popular novels and ukiyo e art the latter of which were often woodblock prints 143 that progressed to greater sophistication and use of multiple printed colors 144 Forms of theater such as kabuki and bunraku puppet theater became widely popular 145 These new forms of entertainment were at the time accompanied by short songs kouta and music played on the shamisen a new import to Japan in 1600 146 Haiku whose greatest master is generally agreed to be Matsuo Bashō 1644 1694 also rose as a major form of poetry 147 Geisha a new profession of entertainers also became popular They would provide conversation sing and dance for customers though they would not sleep with them 148 The Tokugawas sponsored and were heavily influenced by Neo Confucianism which led the government to divide society into four classes based on the four occupations 149 The samurai class claimed to follow the ideology of bushido literally the way of the warrior 150 Decline and fall of the shogunate Edit Main articles Bakumatsu and Meiji Restoration By the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the shogunate showed signs of weakening 151 The dramatic growth of agriculture that had characterized the early Edo period had ended 133 and the government handled the devastating Tenpō famines poorly 151 Peasant unrest grew and government revenues fell 152 The shogunate cut the pay of the already financially distressed samurai many of whom worked side jobs to make a living 153 Discontented samurai were soon to play a major role in engineering the downfall of the Tokugawa shogunate 154 At the same time the people drew inspiration from new ideas and fields of study Dutch books brought into Japan stimulated interest in Western learning called rangaku or Dutch learning 155 The physician Sugita Genpaku for instance used concepts from Western medicine to help spark a revolution in Japanese ideas of human anatomy 156 The scholarly field of kokugaku or national learning developed by scholars such as Motoori Norinaga and Hirata Atsutane promoted what it asserted were native Japanese values For instance it criticized the Chinese style Neo Confucianism advocated by the shogunate and emphasized the Emperor s divine authority which the Shinto faith taught had its roots in Japan s mythic past which was referred to as the Age of the Gods 157 nbsp Samurai of the Satsuma Domain during the Boshin WarThe arrival in 1853 of a fleet of American ships commanded by Commodore Matthew C Perry threw Japan into turmoil The US government aimed to end Japan s isolationist policies The shogunate had no defense against Perry s gunboats and had to agree to his demands that American ships be permitted to acquire provisions and trade at Japanese ports 151 The Western powers imposed what became known as unequal treaties on Japan which stipulated that Japan must allow citizens of these countries to visit or reside on Japanese territory and must not levy tariffs on their imports or try them in Japanese courts 158 The shogunate s failure to oppose the Western powers angered many Japanese particularly those of the southern domains of Chōshu and Satsuma 159 Many samurai there inspired by the nationalist doctrines of the kokugaku school adopted the slogan of sonnō jōi revere the emperor expel the barbarians 160 The two domains went on to form an alliance In August 1866 soon after becoming shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu struggled to maintain power as civil unrest continued 161 The Chōshu and Satsuma domains in 1868 convinced the young Emperor Meiji and his advisors to issue a rescript calling for an end to the Tokugawa shogunate The armies of Chōshu and Satsuma soon marched on Edo and the ensuing Boshin War led to the fall of the shogunate 162 Modern Japan EditMeiji period 1868 1912 Edit Main articles Meiji era and Foreign relations of Meiji Japan nbsp Emperor Meiji the 122nd Emperor of JapanThe emperor was restored to nominal supreme power 163 and in 1869 the imperial family moved to Edo which was renamed Tokyo eastern capital 164 However the most powerful men in the government were former samurai from Chōshu and Satsuma rather than the emperor who was fifteen in 1868 163 These men known as the Meiji oligarchs oversaw the dramatic changes Japan would experience during this period 165 The leaders of the Meiji government desired Japan to become a modern nation state that could stand equal to the Western imperialist powers 166 Among them were Ōkubo Toshimichi and Saigō Takamori from Satsuma as well as Kido Takayoshi Ito Hirobumi and Yamagata Aritomo from Chōshu 163 Political and social changes Edit The Meiji government abolished the Edo class structure 167 and replaced the feudal domains of the daimyōs with prefectures 164 It instituted comprehensive tax reform and lifted the ban on Christianity 167 Major government priorities also included the introduction of railways telegraph lines and a universal education system 168 The Meiji government promoted widespread Westernization 169 and hired hundreds of advisers from Western nations with expertise in such fields as education mining banking law military affairs and transportation to remodel Japan s institutions 170 The Japanese adopted the Gregorian calendar Western clothing and Western hairstyles 171 One leading advocate of Westernization was the popular writer Fukuzawa Yukichi 172 As part of its Westernization drive the Meiji government enthusiastically sponsored the importation of Western science above all medical science In 1893 Kitasato Shibasaburō established the Institute for Infectious Diseases which would soon become world famous 173 and in 1913 Hideyo Noguchi proved the link between syphilis and paresis 174 Furthermore the introduction of European literary styles to Japan sparked a boom in new works of prose fiction Characteristic authors of the period included Futabatei Shimei and Mori Ōgai 175 although the most famous of the Meiji era writers was Natsume Sōseki 176 who wrote satirical autobiographical and psychological novels 177 combining both the older and newer styles 178 Ichiyō Higuchi a leading female author took inspiration from earlier literary models of the Edo period 179 Government institutions developed rapidly in response to the Freedom and People s Rights Movement a grassroots campaign demanding greater popular participation in politics The leaders of this movement included Itagaki Taisuke and Ōkuma Shigenobu 180 Itō Hirobumi the first Prime Minister of Japan responded by writing the Meiji Constitution which was promulgated in 1889 The new constitution established an elected lower house the House of Representatives but its powers were restricted Only two percent of the population were eligible to vote and legislation proposed in the House required the support of the unelected upper house the House of Peers Both the cabinet of Japan and the Japanese military were directly responsible not to the elected legislature but to the emperor 181 Concurrently the Japanese government also developed a form of Japanese nationalism under which Shinto became the state religion and the emperor was declared a living god 182 Schools nationwide instilled patriotic values and loyalty to the emperor 168 Rise of imperialism and the military Edit Further information History of Japanese foreign relations and Military history of Japan nbsp Chinese generals surrendering to the Japanese in the Sino Japanese War of 1894 1895In December 1871 a Ryukyuan ship was shipwrecked on Taiwan and the crew were massacred In 1874 using the incident as a pretext Japan launched a military expedition to Taiwan to assert their claims to the Ryukyu Islands The expedition featured the first instance of the Japanese military ignoring the orders of the civilian government as the expedition set sail after being ordered to postpone 183 Yamagata Aritomo who was born a samurai in the Chōshu Domain was a key force behind the modernization and enlargement of the Imperial Japanese Army especially the introduction of national conscription 184 The new army was put to use in 1877 to crush the Satsuma Rebellion of discontented samurai in southern Japan led by the former Meiji leader Saigo Takamori 185 The Japanese military played a key role in Japan s expansion abroad The government believed that Japan had to acquire its own colonies to compete with the Western colonial powers After consolidating its control over Hokkaido through the Hokkaidō Development Commission and annexing the Ryukyu Kingdom the Ryukyu Disposition it next turned its attention to China and Korea 186 In 1894 Japanese and Chinese troops clashed in Korea where they were both stationed to suppress the Donghak Rebellion During the ensuing First Sino Japanese War Japan s highly motivated and well led forces defeated the more numerous and better equipped military of Qing China 187 The island of Taiwan was thus ceded to Japan in 1895 188 and Japan s government gained enough international prestige to allow Foreign Minister Mutsu Munemitsu to renegotiate the unequal treaties 189 In 1902 Japan signed an important military alliance with the British 190 nbsp The Japanese Empire in 1939Japan next clashed with Russia which was expanding its power in Asia The Battle of Yalu River was the first time in decades that an Asian power defeated a western power 191 The Russo Japanese War of 1904 05 ended with the dramatic Battle of Tsushima which was another victory for Japan s new navy Japan thus laid claim to Korea as a protectorate in 1905 followed by full annexation in 1910 192 The defeat of Russia in the war had set in motion a change in the global world order with the emergence of Japan as not only a regional power but rather the main Asian power 193 Economic modernization and labor unrest Edit During the Meiji period Japan underwent a rapid transition towards an industrial economy 194 Both the Japanese government and private entrepreneurs adopted Western technology and knowledge to create factories capable of producing a wide range of goods 195 By the end of the period the majority of Japan s exports were manufactured goods 194 Some of Japan s most successful new businesses and industries constituted huge family owned conglomerates called zaibatsu such as Mitsubishi and Sumitomo 196 The phenomenal industrial growth sparked rapid urbanization The proportion of the population working in agriculture shrank from 75 percent in 1872 to 50 percent by 1920 197 In 1927 the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line opened and it is the oldest subway line in Asia 198 Japan enjoyed solid economic growth at this time and most people lived longer and healthier lives The population rose from 34 million in 1872 to 52 million in 1915 199 Poor working conditions in factories led to growing labor unrest 200 and many workers and intellectuals came to embrace socialist ideas 201 The Meiji government responded with harsh suppression of dissent Radical socialists plotted to assassinate the emperor in the High Treason Incident of 1910 after which the Tokkō secret police force was established to root out left wing agitators 202 The government also introduced social legislation in 1911 setting maximum work hours and a minimum age for employment 203 Taishō period 1912 1926 Edit Main article Taishō During the short reign of Emperor Taishō Japan developed stronger democratic institutions and grew in international power The Taishō political crisis opened the period with mass protests and riots organized by Japanese political parties which succeeded in forcing Katsura Tarō to resign as prime minister 204 This and the rice riots of 1918 increased the power of Japan s political parties over the ruling oligarchy 205 The Seiyukai and Minseitō parties came to dominate politics by the end of the so called Taishō democracy era 206 The franchise for the House of Representatives had been gradually expanded since 1890 207 and in 1925 universal male suffrage was introduced However in the same year the far reaching Peace Preservation Law also passed prescribing harsh penalties for political dissidents 208 Japan s participation in World War I on the side of the Allies sparked unprecedented economic growth and earned Japan new colonies in the South Pacific seized from Germany 209 After the war Japan signed the Treaty of Versailles and enjoyed good international relations through its membership in the League of Nations and participation in international disarmament conferences 210 The Great Kantō earthquake in September 1923 left over 100 000 dead and combined with the resultant fires destroyed the homes of more than three million 211 In the aftermath of the earthquake the Kantō Massacre occurred in which the Japanese military police and gangs of vigilantes murdered thousands of Korean people after rumors emerged that Koreans had been poisoning wells The rumors were later described as false by numerous Japanese sources 212 The growth of popular prose fiction which began during the Meiji period continued into the Taishō period as literacy rates rose and book prices dropped 213 Notable literary figures of the era included short story writer Ryunosuke Akutagawa 214 and the novelist Haruo Satō Jun ichirō Tanizaki described as perhaps the most versatile literary figure of his day by the historian Conrad Totman produced many works during the Taishō period influenced by European literature though his 1929 novel Some Prefer Nettles reflects deep appreciation for the virtues of traditional Japanese culture 215 At the end of the Taishō period Tarō Hirai known by his penname Edogawa Ranpo began writing popular mystery and crime stories 214 Shōwa period 1926 1989 Edit Main articles Shōwa 1926 1989 and History of Japanese foreign relations Emperor Hirohito s sixty three year reign from 1926 to 1989 is the longest in recorded Japanese history 216 The first twenty years were characterized by the rise of extreme nationalism and a series of expansionist wars After suffering defeat in World War II Japan was occupied by foreign powers for the first time in its history and then re emerged as a major world economic power 217 Manchurian Incident and the Second Sino Japanese War Edit source source source source source The Empire of Japan in 1937Left wing groups had been subject to violent suppression by the end of the Taishō period 218 and radical right wing groups inspired by fascism and Japanese nationalism rapidly grew in popularity 219 The extreme right became influential throughout the Japanese government and society notably within the Kwantung Army a Japanese army stationed in China along the Japanese owned South Manchuria Railroad 220 During the Manchurian Incident of 1931 radical army officers bombed a small portion of the South Manchuria Railroad and falsely attributing the attack to the Chinese invaded Manchuria The Kwantung Army conquered Manchuria and set up the puppet government of Manchukuo there without permission from the Japanese government International criticism of Japan following the invasion led to Japan withdrawing from the League of Nations 221 Prime Minister Tsuyoshi Inukai of the Seiyukai Party attempted to restrain the Kwantung Army and was assassinated in 1932 by right wing extremists Because of growing opposition within the Japanese military and the extreme right to party politicians who they saw as corrupt and self serving Inukai was the last party politician to govern Japan in the pre World War II era 221 In February 1936 young radical officers of the Imperial Japanese Army attempted a coup d etat They assassinated many moderate politicians before the coup was suppressed 222 In its wake the Japanese military consolidated its control over the political system and most political parties were abolished when the Imperial Rule Assistance Association was founded in 1940 223 nbsp Japanese experts inspect the scene of the alleged railway sabotage on South Manchurian Railway that led to the Mukden Incident and the Japanese occupation of Manchuria Japan s expansionist vision grew increasingly bold Many of Japan s political elite aspired to have Japan acquire new territory for resource extraction and settlement of surplus population 224 These ambitions led to the outbreak of the Second Sino Japanese War in 1937 After their victory in the Chinese capital the Japanese military committed the infamous Nanjing massacre The Japanese military failed to defeat the Chinese government led by Chiang Kai shek and the war descended into a bloody stalemate that lasted until 1945 225 Japan s stated war aim was to establish the Greater East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere a vast pan Asian union under Japanese domination 226 Hirohito s role in Japan s foreign wars remains a subject of controversy with various historians portraying him as either a powerless figurehead or an enabler and supporter of Japanese militarism 227 The United States opposed Japan s invasion of China and responded with increasingly stringent economic sanctions intended to deprive Japan of the resources to continue its war in China 228 Japan reacted by forging an alliance with Germany and Italy in 1940 known as the Tripartite Pact which worsened its relations with the US In July 1941 the United States the United Kingdom and the Netherlands froze all Japanese assets when Japan completed its invasion of French Indochina by occupying the southern half of the country further increasing tension in the Pacific 229 World War II Edit Main article Pacific War nbsp Planes from the Japanese aircraft carrier Shōkaku preparing the attack on Pearl Harbor nbsp The Empire of Japan at its peak in 1942 Territory 1870 1895 Acquisitions 1895 1930 Acquisitions 1930 1942 In late 1941 Japan s government led by Prime Minister and General Hideki Tojo decided to break the US led embargo through force of arms 230 On 7 December 1941 the Imperial Japanese Navy launched a surprise attack on the American fleet at Pearl Harbor Hawaii This brought the US into World War II on the side of the Allies Japan then successfully invaded the Asian colonies of the United States the United Kingdom and the Netherlands including the Philippines Malaya Hong Kong Singapore Burma and the Dutch East Indies 231 In the early stages of the war Japan scored victory after victory The tide began to turn against Japan following the Battle of Midway in June 1942 and the subsequent Battle of Guadalcanal in which Allied troops wrested the Solomon Islands from Japanese control 232 During this period the Japanese military was responsible for such war crimes as mistreatment of prisoners of war massacres of civilians and the use of chemical and biological weapons 233 The Japanese military earned a reputation for fanaticism often employing banzai charges and fighting almost to the last man against overwhelming odds 234 In 1944 the Imperial Japanese Navy began deploying squadrons of kamikaze pilots who crashed their planes into enemy ships 235 nbsp Atomic cloud over Hiroshima 1945Life in Japan became increasingly difficult for civilians due to stringent rationing of food electrical outages and a brutal crackdown on dissent 236 In 1944 the US Army captured the island of Saipan which allowed the United States to begin widespread bombing raids on the Japanese mainland 237 These destroyed over half of the total area of Japan s major cities 238 The Battle of Okinawa fought between April and June 1945 was the largest naval operation of the war and left 115 000 soldiers and 150 000 Okinawan civilians dead suggesting that the planned invasion of mainland Japan would be even bloodier 239 The Japanese superbattleship Yamato was sunk en route to aid in the Battle of Okinawa 240 However on 6 August 1945 the US dropped an atomic bomb over Hiroshima killing over 70 000 people This was the first nuclear attack in history On 9 August the Soviet Union declared war on Japan and invaded Manchukuo and other territories and Nagasaki was struck by a second atomic bomb killing around 40 000 people 241 The surrender of Japan was communicated to the Allies on 14 August and broadcast by Emperor Hirohito on national radio the following day 242 Occupation of Japan Edit Main article Occupation of Japan nbsp General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor of Japan Hirohito at their first meeting September 1945 nbsp US Secretary of State Dean Acheson signing the Treaty of Peace with Japan 8 September 1951Japan experienced dramatic political and social transformation under the Allied occupation in 1945 1952 US General Douglas MacArthur the Supreme Commander of Allied Powers served as Japan s de facto leader and played a central role in implementing reforms many inspired by the New Deal of the 1930s 243 The occupation sought to decentralize power in Japan by breaking up the zaibatsu transferring ownership of agricultural land from landlords to tenant farmers 244 and promoting labor unionism 245 Other major goals were the demilitarization and democratization of Japan s government and society Japan s military was disarmed 246 its colonies were granted independence 247 the Peace Preservation Law and Special Higher Police were abolished 248 and the International Military Tribunal of the Far East tried war criminals 249 The cabinet became responsible not to the Emperor but to the elected National Diet 250 The Emperor was permitted to remain on the throne but was ordered to renounce his claims to divinity which had been a pillar of the State Shinto system 251 Japan s new constitution came into effect in 1947 and guaranteed civil liberties labor rights and women s suffrage 252 and through Article 9 Japan renounced its right to go to war with another nation 253 The San Francisco Peace Treaty of 1951 officially normalized relations between Japan and the United States The occupation ended in 1952 although the US continued to administer a number of the Ryukyu Islands 254 In 1968 the Ogasawara Islands were returned from US occupation to Japanese sovereignty Japanese citizens were allowed to return Okinawa was the last to be returned in 1972 255 The US continues to operate military bases throughout the Ryukyu Islands mostly on Okinawa as part of the US Japan Security Treaty 256 Postwar growth and prosperity Edit Main articles Postwar Japan and Japanese economic miracle nbsp Shigeru Yoshida was one of the longest serving PMs in Japanese history 1946 1947 and 1948 1954 Shigeru Yoshida served as prime minister in 1946 1947 and 1948 1954 and played a key role in guiding Japan through the occupation 257 His policies known as the Yoshida Doctrine proposed that Japan should forge a tight relationship with the United States and focus on developing the economy rather than pursuing a proactive foreign policy 258 Yoshida was one of the longest serving prime ministers in Japanese history 259 Yoshida s Liberal Party merged in 1955 into the new Liberal Democratic Party LDP 260 which went on to dominate Japanese politics for the remainder of the Shōwa period 261 Although the Japanese economy was in bad shape in the immediate postwar years an austerity program implemented in 1949 by finance expert Joseph Dodge ended inflation 262 The Korean War 1950 1953 was a major boon to Japanese business 263 In 1949 the Yoshida cabinet created the Ministry of International Trade and Industry MITI with a mission to promote economic growth through close cooperation between the government and big business MITI sought successfully to promote manufacturing and heavy industry 264 and encourage exports 265 The factors behind Japan s postwar economic growth included technology and quality control techniques imported from the West close economic and defense cooperation with the United States non tariff barriers to imports restrictions on labor unionization long work hours and a generally favorable global economic environment 266 Japanese corporations successfully retained a loyal and experienced workforce through the system of lifetime employment which assured their employees a safe job 267 By 1955 the Japanese economy had grown beyond prewar levels 268 and by 1968 it had become the second largest capitalist economy in the world 269 The GNP expanded at an annual rate of nearly 10 from 1956 until the 1973 oil crisis slowed growth to a still rapid average annual rate of just over 4 until 1991 270 Life expectancy rose and Japan s population increased to 123 million by 1990 271 Ordinary Japanese people became wealthy enough to purchase a wide array of consumer goods During this period Japan became the world s largest manufacturer of automobiles and a leading producer of electronics 272 Japan signed the Plaza Accord in 1985 to depreciate the US dollar against the yen and other currencies By the end of 1987 the Nikkei stock market index had doubled and the Tokyo Stock Exchange became the largest in the world During the ensuing economic bubble stock and real estate loans grew rapidly 273 Japan became a member of the United Nations in 1956 and further cemented its international standing in 1964 when it hosted the Olympic Games in Tokyo 274 Japan was a close ally of the United States during the Cold War though this alliance did not have unanimous support from the Japanese people As requested by the United States Japan reconstituted its army in 1954 under the name Japan Self Defense Forces JSDF though some Japanese insisted that the very existence of the JSDF was a violation of Article 9 of Japan s constitution 275 In 1960 the massive Anpo protests saw hundreds of thousands of citizens take to the streets in opposition to the US Japan Security Treaty 276 Japan successfully normalized relations with the Soviet Union in 1956 despite an ongoing dispute over the ownership of the Kuril Islands 277 and with South Korea in 1965 despite an ongoing dispute over the ownership of the islands of Liancourt Rocks 278 In accordance with US policy Japan recognized the Republic of China on Taiwan as the legitimate government of China after World War II though Japan switched its recognition to the People s Republic of China in 1972 279 Among cultural developments the immediate post occupation period became a golden age for Japanese cinema 280 The reasons for this include the abolition of government censorship low film production costs expanded access to new film techniques and technologies and huge domestic audiences at a time when other forms of recreation were relatively scarce 281 On 1 October 1964 Japan s first high speed rail line was built called the Tokaido Shinkansen 282 It is also the oldest high speed rail system in the world 282 Heisei period 1989 2019 Edit Main article Heisei nbsp Tokyo in 2010Emperor Akihito s reign began upon the death of his father Emperor Hirohito The economic bubble popped in 1989 and stock and land prices plunged as Japan entered a deflationary spiral Banks found themselves saddled with insurmountable debts that hindered economic recovery 283 Stagnation worsened as the birthrate declined far below replacement level 284 The 1990s are often referred to as Japan s Lost Decade 285 Economic performance was often poor in the following decades and the stock market never returned to its pre 1989 highs 286 Japan s system of lifetime employment largely collapsed and unemployment rates rose 287 The faltering economy and several corruption scandals weakened the LDP s dominant political position Japan was nevertheless governed by non LDP prime ministers only in 1993 1996 288 and 2009 2012 289 Japan s dealing with its war legacy strained relations with China and Korea Japanese officials and emperors have made over 50 formal war apologies since the 1950s However some politicians of China and Korea found the official apologies such as those of the Emperor in 1990 and the Murayama Statement of 1995 inadequate or insincere 290 Nationalist politics have exacerbated this such as denial of the Nanjing Massacre and other war crimes 291 revisionist history textbooks which provoked protests in East Asia 292 Japanese politicians make frequent visits to Yasukuni Shrine to commemorate the people who died in wars from 1868 to 1954 but convicted war criminals are among the enshrined 293 nbsp Wreckage at a railway station destroyed during the 2011 earthquake and tsunamiThe population of Japan peaked at 128 083 960 in 2008 and as of December 2020 it had fallen below 126 million 294 In 2011 China surpassed Japan as the world s second largest economy by nominal GDP 295 Despite Japan s economic difficulties this period also saw Japanese popular culture including video games anime and manga expanding worldwide especially among young people 296 In March 2011 the Tokyo Skytree became the tallest tower in the world at 634 metres 2 080 ft displacing the Canton Tower 297 298 It is currently the third tallest structure in the world On 11 March 2011 one of the largest earthquakes recorded in Japan occurred in the northeast The resulting tsunami damaged the nuclear facilities in Fukushima which suffered a nuclear meltdown and severe radiation leakage 299 Reiwa period 2019 present Edit Main article Reiwa Emperor Naruhito s reign began upon the abdication of his father Emperor Akihito on 1 May 2019 300 In 2020 Tokyo was due to host the Summer Olympics for the second time since 1964 Japan was the first Asian country to host the Olympics twice However due to the global outbreak and economic impact of COVID 19 pandemic the Summer Olympics were postponed to 2021 they took place from 23 July to 8 August 2021 301 Japan ranked third place with 27 gold medals 302 When the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine began Japan condemned and levied sanctions on Russia for its actions 303 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy praised Japan as the first Asian nation that has begun exerting pressure on Russia 303 Japan froze the assets of Russia s central bank and other major Russian banks and assets owned by 500 Russian citizens and organizations 303 Japan banned new investments and the export of high tech to the country Russia s trade status as favored nation was revoked 303 Japan s swift actions shows its becoming a leading power in the world 303 The war in Ukraine and threats from China and North Korea caused a shift in Japan s security policy with higher defense spending which erodes its former pacifist stance 303 On 8 July 2022 former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was assassinated in the city of Nara by former Japan Self Defense Force Marine Tetsuya Yamagami while campaigning two days before the 2022 House of Councillors election 304 This shocked the public because firearm fatalities are very rare in Japan There were only 10 shooting deaths from 2017 to 2020 and 1 gun death incident in 2021 305 After 2022 visit by Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan China conducted precision missile strikes in the ocean around Taiwan s coastline on August 4 2022 306 These military exercises raised tensions in the region 306 The Japanese Ministry of Defense reported that this was the first time ballistic missiles launched by China landed in Japan s exclusive economic zone and lodged a diplomatic protest with Beijing 307 Five Chinese missiles landed in Japan s EEZ off Hateruma which is near Taiwan 306 Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi said these missiles are serious threats to Japan s national security and the safety of the Japanese people 306 On December 16 2022 Japan announced a major shift in its military policy by acquiring counterstrike capabilities and a defense budget increase to 2 of GDP 43 trillion 315 billion by 2027 308 309 The impetus are regional security concerns over China North Korea and Russia 308 This will leapfrog Japan from ninth to the world s third largest defense spender behind the United States and China 310 Social conditions EditSocial stratification in Japan became pronounced during the Yayoi period Expanding trade and agriculture increased the wealth of society which was increasingly monopolized by social elites 311 By 600 AD a class structure had developed which included court aristocrats the families of local magnates commoners and slaves 312 Over 90 were commoners who included farmers merchants and artisans 313 During the late Heian period the governing elite consisted of three classes The traditional aristocracy shared power with Buddhist monks and samurai 313 though the latter became increasingly dominant in the Kamakura and Muromachi periods 314 These periods witnessed the rise of the merchant class which diversified into a greater variety of specialized occupations 315 Women initially held social and political equality with men 312 and archaeological evidence suggests a prehistorical preference for female rulers in western Japan Female Emperors appear in recorded history until the Meiji Constitution declared strict male only ascension in 1889 316 Chinese Confucian style patriarchy was first codified in the 7th 8th centuries with the ritsuryō system 317 which introduced a patrilineal family register with a male head of household 318 Women until then had held important roles in government which thereafter gradually diminished though even in the late Heian period women wielded considerable court influence 316 Marital customs and many laws governing private property remained gender neutral 319 For reasons that are unclear to historians the status of women rapidly deteriorated from the fourteenth century and onwards 320 Women of all social classes lost the right to own and inherit property and were increasingly viewed as inferior to men 321 Hideyoshi s land survey of the 1590s further entrenched the status of men as dominant landholders 322 During the US occupation following World War II women gained legal equality with men 323 but faced widespread workplace discrimination A movement for women s rights led to the passage of an equal employment law in 1986 but by the 1990s women held only 10 of management positions 324 Hideyoshi s land survey of the 1590s designated all who cultivated the land as commoners an act which granted effective freedom to most of Japan s slaves 325 nbsp Social structure of the Edo periodThe Tokugawa shogunate rigidified long existent class divisions 326 placing most of the population into a Neo Confucian hierarchy of four occupations with the ruling elite at the top followed by the peasants who made up 80 of the population then artisans and merchants at the bottom 327 Court nobles 43 clerics outcasts entertainers and workers of the licensed quarters fell outside this structure 328 Different legal codes applied to different classes marriage between classes was prohibited and towns were subdivided into different class areas 326 The social stratification had little bearing on economic conditions many samurai lived in poverty 328 and the wealth of the merchant class grew throughout the period as the commercial economy developed and urbanization grew 329 The Edo era social power structure proved untenable and gave way following the Meiji Restoration to one in which commercial power played an increasingly significant political role 330 Although all social classes were legally abolished at the start of the Meiji period 167 income inequality greatly increased 331 New economic class divisions were formed between capitalist business owners who formed the new middle class small shopkeepers of the old middle class the working class in factories rural landlords and tenant farmers 332 The great disparities of income between the classes dissipated during and after World War II eventually declining to levels that were among the lowest in the industrialized world 331 Some postwar surveys indicated that up to 90 of Japanese self identified as being middle class 333 Populations of workers in professions considered unclean such as leatherworkers and those who handled the dead developed in the 15th and 16th centuries into hereditary outcast communities 334 These people later called burakumin fell outside the Edo period class structure and suffered discrimination that lasted after the class system was abolished 334 Though activism has improved the social conditions of those from burakumin backgrounds discrimination in employment and education has lingered into the 21st century 334 See also Edit nbsp History portal nbsp Japan portal nbsp Ancient Japan portalEconomic history of Japan Higashiyama period Historiography of Japan Bibliography of Japanese history Bulletin of the National Museum of Japanese History in Japanese Japanese Journal of Religious Studies Journal of Japanese Studies Monumenta Nipponica Japanese studies in English Social Science Japan Journal History of East Asia History of Japanese art History of Japanese foreign relations Foreign relations of Meiji Japan Greater East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere 1930 1945 History of Japan Korea relations History of Sino Japanese relations China Japan Japanese foreign policy on Southeast Asia Japan Soviet Union relations History of Tokyo List of Emperors of Japan List of prime ministers of Japan Timeline of Japanese historyCitations Edit a b Nakazawa Yuichi 1 December 2017 On the Pleistocene Population History in the Japanese Archipelago Current Anthropology 58 S17 S539 S552 doi 10 1086 694447 hdl 2115 72078 ISSN 0011 3204 S2CID 149000410 Shinya Shōda 2007 A Comment on the Yayoi Period Dating Controversy Bulletin of the Society for East Asian Archaeology 1 Archived from the original on 1 August 2019 Retrieved 16 February 2020 Jomon woman helps solve Japan s genetic mystery NHK World Archived from the original on 26 April 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Ono Akira 2014 Modern hominids in the Japanese Islands and the early use of obsidian pp 157 159 in Sanz Nuria ed Human Origin Sites and the World Heritage Convention in Asia Archived 17 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine Paris UNESCO Takashi Tsutsumi 2012 MIS3 edge ground axes and the arrival of the first Homo sapiens in the Japanese archipelago Quaternary International 248 70 78 Bibcode 2012QuInt 248 70T doi 10 1016 j quaint 2011 01 030 Hudson Mark 2009 Japanese Beginnings p 15 In Tsutsui William M ed A Companion to Japanese History Malden MA Blackwell ISBN 9781405193399 Nakagawa Ryohei Doi Naomi Nishioka Yuichiro Nunami Shin Yamauchi Heizaburo Fujita Masaki Yamazaki Shinji Yamamoto Masaaki Katagiri Chiaki Mukai Hitoshi Matsuzaki Hiroyuki Gakuhari Takashi Takigami Mai Yoneda Minoru 2010 Pleistocene human remains from Shiraho Saonetabaru Cave on Ishigaki Island Okinawa Japan and their radiocarbon dating Anthropological Science 118 3 173 183 doi 10 1537 ase 091214 Totman 2005 p 64 Habu Junko 2004 Ancient Jomon of Japan Cambridge MA Cambridge Press pp 3 258 ISBN 978 0 521 77670 7 Walker 2015 pp 12 15 Kidder J Edward 1993 The Earliest Societies in Japan in The Cambridge History of Japan Volume 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 59 Holcombe 2017 p 88 Kuzmin Yaroslav V 2015 Chronology of the earliest pottery in East Asia progress and pitfalls Antiquity 80 308 362 371 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00093686 S2CID 17316841 Kumar Ann 2009 Globalizing the Prehistory of Japan Language Genes and Civilisation Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Routledge ISBN 978 0 710 31313 3 p 1 Bruce Loyd Batten To the Ends of Japan Premodern Frontiers Boundaries and Interactions Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine University of Hawaii Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 824 82447 1 p 60 a b c d e Schirokauer Conrad Miranda Brown David Lurie Suzanne Gay 2012 A Brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations Cengage Learning pp 138 143 ISBN 978 0 495 91322 1 Crawford Gary W Japan and Korea Japan in Neil Asher Silberman Alexander A Bauer eds The Oxford Companion to Archaeology Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Oxford University Press USA Vol 1 2012 ISBN 978 0 199 73578 5 pp 153 157 p 155 Imamura Keiji 1996 Prehistoric Japan New Perspectives on Insular East Asia Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 824 81852 4 pp 165 178 Kaner Simon 2011 The Archeology of Religion and Ritual in the Prehistoric Japanese Archipelago in Timothy Insoll ed The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 23244 4 pp 457 468 p 462 Mizoguchi Koji 2013 The Archaeology of Japan From the Earliest Rice Farming Villages to the Rise of the State Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88490 7 pp 81 82 referring to the two sub styles of houses introduced from the Korean peninsular Songguk ni 松菊里 and Teppyong ni 大坪里 Hudson Mark 1999 Ruins of Identity Ethnogenesis in the Japanese Islands Archived 5 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 824 82156 2 pp 79 81 The Jōmon component is estimated at somewhere under 25 Maher Kohn C 1996 North Kyushu Creole A Language Contact Model for the Origins of Japanese in Multicultural Japan Palaeolithic to Postmodern New York Cambridge University Press p 40 Farris 1995 p 25 Henshall 2012 pp 14 15 a b c Henshall 2012 pp 15 16 Totman 2005 p 51 Henshall 2012 pp 16 22 a b Totman 2005 pp 52 53 Brown Delmer M Hall John Whitney Press Cambridge University McCullough William H Jansen Marius B Shively Donald H Yamamura Kozo Duus Peter 1988 The Cambridge History of Japan Cambridge University Press p 529 ISBN 978 0 521 22352 2 Carter William R 1983 Asuka period In Reischauer Edwin et al eds Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan Volume 1 Tokyo Kodansha p 107 ISBN 9780870116216 Perez 1998 pp 16 18 Frederic Louis 2002 Japan Encyclopedia Cambridge Massachusetts Belknap p 59 ISBN 9780674017535 Totman 2005 pp 54 55 Henshall 2012 pp 18 19 Weston 2002 p 127 Rhee Song Nai 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2004 Japan Its History and Culture New York McGraw Hill ISBN 9780071460620 Neary Ian 2009 Class and Social Stratification In Tsutsui William M ed A Companion to Japanese History John Wiley amp Sons pp 389 406 ISBN 978 1 4051 9339 9 Perez Louis G 1998 The History of Japan Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30296 1 Sansom George 1958 A History of Japan to 1334 Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0523 3 Sims Richard 2001 Japanese Political History since the Meiji Restoration 1868 2000 New York Palgrave ISBN 9780312239152 Togo Kazuhiko 2005 Japan s Foreign Policy 1945 2003 The Quest for a Proactive Policy Boston Brill ISBN 9789004147966 Tonomura Hitomi 2009 Women and Sexuality in Premodern Japan In Tsutsui William M ed A Companion to Japanese History John Wiley amp Sons pp 351 371 ISBN 978 1 4051 9339 9 Totman Conrad 2005 A History of Japan Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 119 02235 0 Walker Brett 2015 A Concise History of Japan Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107004184 Weston Mark 2002 Giants of Japan The Lives of Japan s Greatest Men and Women New York Kodansha ISBN 978 0 9882259 4 7 Further reading EditChang Richard T 1970 From Prejudice to Tolerance A Study of the Japanese Image of the West 1826 1864 Tokyo Sophia University Garon Sheldon May 1994 Rethinking Modernization and Modernity in Japanese History A Focus on State Society Relations Journal of Asian Studies 53 2 pp 346 366 JSTOR 2059838 Hara Katsuro 2010 Introduction to the History of Japan registration required Hearn Lafcadio 1894 Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan first series Leipzig Bernhard Tauchnitz Hook Glenn D et al 2011 Japan s International Relations Politics Economics and Security excerpt Archived 1 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine Imamura Keiji 1996 Prehistoric Japan New Perspectives on Insular East Asia Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Keene Donald 1998 1984 A History of Japanese Literature Vol 3 Dawn to the West Japanese Literature of the Modern Era Fiction paperback ed New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 11435 6 Kingston Jeffrey 2001 Japan in Transformation 1952 2000 Pearson Education 215pp brief history textbook Kitaoka Shin ichi 2019 The Political History of Modern Japan Foreign Relations and Domestic Politics Routledge McOmie William ed Foreign Images and Experiences of Japan 1 First Century AD 1841 Brill 2021 onlineSchirokauer Conrad 2013 A Brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations Boston Wadsworth Cengage Learning Tames Richard et al 2008 A Traveller s History of Japan Popular history External links Edit nbsp Media related to History of Japan at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Pre modern Japan travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Japan amp oldid 1181680806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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