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Yamato people

The Yamato people (大和民族, Yamato minzoku, literally "Yamato ethnicity") (or the Wajin (和人, Wajin, 倭, literally "Wa people"))[1] (was applied to the Imperial House of Japan or "Yamato Court" that existed in Japan in the 4th century; further, it was originally) are an ethnic group of the people that first settled in Yamato Province (modern-day Nara Prefecture). Generations of Japanese historians, linguists, and archeologists have debated whether the word is related to the earlier Yamatai (邪馬臺). The Yamato clan set up Japan's first and only dynasty. The clan became the ruling faction in the area, and incorporated native Japanese, Chinese and Korean migrants.[2] The clan leaders also elevated their own belief system that featured ancestor worship into a national religion known as Shinto.[2]

Yamato
大和民族
Yamato-no-Takeru, prince of the Yamato dynasty.
Regions with significant populations
 Japan
Languages
Japanese
Religion
Majority
Irreligious
Traditionally
Shintoism and Japanese Buddhism
Minority
Christianity, Japanese new religions and other religions
Related ethnic groups

The term came to be used around the late 19th century to distinguish the settlers of mainland Japan from minority ethnic groups inhabiting the peripheral areas of the then Japanese Empire, including the Ainu, Emishi, Ryukyuans, Nivkh, Oroks, as well as Chinese, Koreans, Austronesians, and Micronesian peoples who were incorporated into the Empire of Japan in the early 20th century. After Japan's surrender in World War II, the term became antiquated for suggesting pseudoscientific racial notions that have been discarded in many circles.[3] Japanese statistics only count their population in terms of nationality, rather than ethnicity.

Etymology

The Wajin (also known as Wa or ) or Yamato were the names early China used to refer to an ethnic group living in Japan around the time of the Three Kingdoms period. Chinese, Japanese, and Korean scribes regularly wrote Wa or Yamato with one and the same Chinese character 倭 until the 8th century, when the Japanese found fault with it, replacing it with 和 "harmony, peace, balance". Retroactively, this character was adopted in Japan to refer to the country itself, often combined with the character 大, literally meaning "Great", similar to Great Qing or Great Britain, so as to write the preexisting name Yamato (大和) (e.g., such as 大淸帝國 "Great Qing Empire" or 大英帝國 "Great British Empire"). The pronunciation Yamato cannot be formed from the sounds of its constituent Chinese characters; it is speculated to originally refer to a place in Japan meaning "Mountain Gate" (山戸).[4]

The historical province of Yamato within Japan (now Nara Prefecture in central Honshu) borders Yamashiro Province (now the southern part of Kyoto Prefecture); however, the names of both provinces appear to contain the Japonic etymon yama, usually meaning "mountain(s)" (but sometimes having a meaning closer to "forest", especially in some Ryukyuan languages). Some other pairs of historical provinces of Japan exhibit similar sharing of one etymological element, such as Kazusa (<*Kami-tu-Fusa, "Upper Fusa") and Shimōsa (<*Simo-tu-Fusa, "Lower Fusa") or Kōzuke (<*Kami-tu-Ke, "Upper Ke") and Shimotsuke (<*Simo-tu-Ke, "Lower Ke"). In these latter cases, the pairs of provinces with similar names are thought to have been created through the subdivision of an earlier single province in prehistoric or protohistoric times.

Although the etymological origins of Wa remain uncertain, Chinese historical texts recorded an ancient people residing in the Japanese archipelago, named something like *ʼWâ or *ʼWər 倭. Carr[5]: 9–10  surveys prevalent proposals for the etymology of Wa ranging from feasible (transcribing Japanese first-person pronouns waga 我が "my; our" and ware 我 "I; we; oneself") to shameful (writing Japanese Wa as 倭 implying "dwarf"), and summarizes interpretations for *ʼWâ "Japanese" into variations on two etymologies: "behaviorally 'submissive' or physically 'short'". The first "submissive; obedient" explanation began with the (121 CE) Shuowen Jiezi dictionary. It defines 倭 as shùnmào 順皃 "obedient/submissive/docile appearance", graphically explains the "person; human' radical with a wěi 委 "bent" phonetic, and quotes the above Shi Jing poem. "Conceivably, when Chinese first met Japanese," Carr[5]: 9  suggests, "they transcribed Wa as *ʼWâ 'bent back' signifying 'compliant' bowing/obeisance. Bowing is noted in early historical references to Japan." Examples include "Respect is shown by squatting",[6] and "they either squat or kneel, with both hands on the ground. This is the way they show respect."[7]

Koji Nakayama interprets wēi 逶 "winding" as "very far away" and euphemistically translates 倭 as "separated from the continent". The second etymology of 倭 meaning "dwarf (variety of an animal or plant species), midget, little people" has possible cognates in ǎi 矮 "low, short (of stature)", 踒 "strain; sprain; bent legs", and 臥 "lie down; crouch; sit (animals and birds)". Early Chinese dynastic histories refer to a Zhūrúguó 侏儒國 "pygmy/dwarf country" located south of Japan, associated with possibly Okinawa Island or the Ryukyu Islands. Carr cites the historical precedence of construing Wa as "submissive people" and the "Country of Dwarfs" legend as evidence that the "little people" etymology was a secondary development.

History of usage

In the 6th century, the Yamato dynasty—one of many tribes, of various origins, who had settled Japan in prehistory—founded a state modeled on the Chinese states of Sui and Tang, the center of East Asian political influence at the time. As the Yamato influence expanded, their Old Japanese language became the common spoken language.

After Meiji restoration

Racism existed historically in Japan prior to Western contact. The idea of scientific racism was adapted in Japan from the late nineteenth century onward. The false notion of racial homogeneity was used as propaganda because of the political circumstances of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Japan, which coincided with Japanese imperialism and World War II.[3] Pseudoscientific racial theories, which included the false belief of the superiority of the Yamato character, were used to justify military expansionism, discriminatory practices, and ethnocentrism.[3] The concept of "pure blood" as a criterion for the uniqueness of the Yamato minzoku began circulating around 1880 in Japan, around the time some Japanese scientists began investigations into eugenics.[8]

Initially, in order to justify Japan's conquest of Asia, Japanese propaganda espoused the ideas of Japanese supremacy by claiming that the Japanese represented a combination of all Asian peoples and cultures, emphasizing heterogeneous traits.[9] Japanese propaganda started to place an emphasis on the ideas of racial purity and the supremacy of the Yamato race when the Second Sino-Japanese War intensified.[9] Driven by the ideology of racial supremacy, racial purity and national unity, between 1868 and the 1940s, the Japanese government carefully identified and forcefully assimilated marginalized populations, which included Okinawans, the Ainu, and other underrepresented groups, imposing assimilation programs in language, culture and religion.[10]

According to Aya Fujiwara, a postdoctoral Fellow at McMaster University, in an attempt to have some influence over the Japanese diaspora in Canada, Japanese authorities used the term Yamato as race propaganda during World War 2, saying that:

"For Japanese-Canadians in particular, the Emperor was the most natural symbol to promote primordial national sentiment and superiority of the Yamato race — the term that the Japanese used to distinguish themselves from others. This term meant a noble race, the members of which saw themselves as “chosen people.” The modernization of Japan, which began with the Meiji Restoration in 1868, produced a number of historical writings that tried to define the Japanese under the official scheme to create a strong nation. Imported to Canada by Japanese intellectuals, a “common myth of descent” that Japanese people belonged to the noble Yamato race headed by the Emperor since the ancient period was one of the core elements that defined Japanese-Canadian ethno-racial identity in the 1920s and the 1930s. The evolution and survival of an ethnic community, Anthony D. Smith argues, relies on the complicated “belief-system” that creates “a sacred communion of the people” with cultural and historical distinctiveness. During this period, Japanese intellectuals, scholars, and official representatives sought to keep Japanese Canadians within their sphere of influence, thereby reinforcing a transnational myth that would promote Japanese Canadians’ sense of racial pride as God’s chosen people in the world."[11]

Contemporary usage

At the end of the World War II, the Japanese government continued to adhere to the notions of racial homogeneity and racial supremacy, with the Yamato race at the top of the racial hierarchy.[12] Japanese propaganda of racial purity returned to post-World War II Japan because of the support of the Allied forces. U.S. policy in Japan terminated the purge of high-ranking fascist war criminals and reinstalled the leaders who were responsible for the creation and manifestation of prewar race propaganda.[13]

In present-day Japan, the term Yamato minzoku may be seen as antiquated for connoting racial notions that have been discarded in many circles since Japan's surrender in World War II.[14] "Japanese people" or even "Japanese-Japanese" are often used instead, although these terms also have complications owing to their ambiguous blending of notions of ethnicity and nationality.[15]

In present-day Japan statistics only counts their population in terms of nationality, rather than ethnicity, thus the number of ethnic Yamato and their actual population numbers are ambiguous.[16]

Origin

 
Proposed population migration routes into Japan, based on haplogroups.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24]
 
Migration routes into Japan during the Jōmon period.

The most well-regarded theory is that present-day Yamato Japanese are descendants from both the Yayoi people and the various local Jōmon people. Japanese people belong to the East Asian lineages D-M55 and O-M175, with a minority belonging to C-M217 and N-M231.[25] The reference population for the Japanese (Yamato) used in Geno 2.0 Next Generation is 89% East Asia, 2% Finland and Northern Siberia, 2% Central Asia, and 7% Southeast Asia & Oceania, making Japanese approximately ~100% East-Eurasian.[26] Genealogical research has indicated extremely similar genetic profiles between these groups, making them nearly indistinguishable from each other and ancient samples. Japanese people were found to share high genetic affinity with the ancient (~8,000 BC) "Devils_Gate_N" sample in the Amur region of Northeast Asia.[27]

The earliest written records about people in Japan are from Chinese sources. These sources spoke about the Wa people, the direct ancestors of the Yamato and other Japonic agriculturalists. The Wa of Na received a golden seal from the Emperor Guangwu of the Later Han dynasty. This event was recorded in the Book of the Later Han compiled by Fan Ye in the 5th century. The seal itself was discovered in northern Kyūshū in the 18th century.[28] Early Chinese historians described Wa as a land of hundreds of scattered tribal communities.[29] Third-century Chinese sources reported that the Wa/early Yamato lived on raw fish, vegetables, and rice served on bamboo and wooden trays, clapped their hands in worship (something still done in Shinto shrines today), and built earthen-grave mounds. They also maintained vassal-master relations, collected taxes, had provincial granaries and markets, and observed mourning. The Wei Zhi (Chinese: 魏志), which is part of the Records of the three Kingdoms, first mentions Yamataikoku and Queen Himiko in the 3rd century. According to the record, Himiko assumed the throne of Wa, as a spiritual leader, after a major civil war. Her younger brother was in charge of the affairs of state, including diplomatic relations with the Chinese court of the Kingdom of Wei.[30] When asked about their origins by the Wei embassy, the people of Wa claimed to be descendants of the people of Wu, a historic figure of the Wu Kingdom around the Yangtze Delta of China, however this is disputed.[31][32]

Japonic speakers were also present on the southern and central "Korean Peninsula". These "Peninsular Japonic agriculturalists" were later replaced/assimilated by Koreanic-speakers (from southern Manchuria) likely causing the Yayoi migration and expansion within the Japanese archipelago.[33][34] Whitman (2012) suggests that the Yayoi agriculturalists are not related to the proto-Koreans but that they were present on the Korean peninsula during the Mumun pottery period. According to him, Japonic arrived in the Korean peninsula around 1500 BC and was brought to the Japanese archipelago by the Yayoi agriculturalists at around 950 BC, during the late Jōmon period. The language family associated with both Mumun and Yayoi culture is Japonic. Koreanic arrived later from Manchuria to the Korean peninsula at around 300 BC and coexist with the descendants of the Japonic Mumun cultivators (or assimilated them). Both had influence on each other and a later founder effect diminished the internal variety of both language families.[35]

A genetic study (2019) estimated that modern Japanese (Yamato) share more than 90% of their genome with the Yayoi rice agriculturalists and less than 10% with the heterogeneous Jōmon period groups.[36] A more recent study by Gakuhari et al. 2019 estimates that modern Japanese people have between 92% to 96,7% Yayoi rice-agriculturalist ancestry (with the 3.3% to 8% from the heterogeneous Jōmon period tribes) and cluster closely with other Koreans and Han-Chinese, but are slightly with shifted towards eastern Siberians.[37]

Based on archaeological evidence and the genetic similarity between modern Japanese and Koreans, Jared Diamond said that the Yayoi people, the ancestors of the Yamato people, migrated from the Korean peninsula.[38] Watanabe et al. 2021 found that the Jōmon people were a heterogeneous population and that Japanese from different regions had different amounts of Jōmon-derived SNP alleles, ranging from 17.3% to 24% samplified by southern Jōmon, and 3.8% to 14.9% samplified by northern Jōmon. Southern Jōmon were genetically similar to contemporary East Asians (especially Tujia people, Tibetan people and Miao people), while northern Jōmon had a partial distinct ancestry component, possibly deriving from Paleolithic Siberians, next to an East Asian ancestry component. The Jōmon period population, although heterogeneous, were closest to contemporary East Asians and Native Americans.[39]

In 2021, new research from a study published in the journal Science Advances found that the people of Japan bore genetic signatures from three ancient populations rather than just two as previously thought.[40][41]

The first was Japan's indigenous culture of hunter-gatherers called the Jomon, dating to roughly 15,000 years ago. The second was a population of Northeast Asian origins called the Yayoi, who arrived at about 900 BC, bringing wet-rice farming to Japan. According to the researchers, Japanese people has approximately 13% and 16% genetic ancestry from these two groups respectively.[40]

The remaining 71% of genetic ancestry was found to come from migrants that arrived around 300 AD during the Kofun period, and had genetic makeup mainly resembling the Han Chinese population of China. This migrant group was said to have brought cultural advances and centralised leadership to Japan. According to Shigeki Nakagome, co-leader of the study, "Chinese characters started to be used in this period, such as Chinese characters inscribed on metal implements, for example swords."[40]

A new study in 2022 conducted by the University of Xiamen shed light on the lack of Jōmon genomes found in present-day Koreans and Japanese.[42] Researchers discovered that despite finding evidence of the Jōmon people on the Korean peninsula and the Japanese archipelago, there were little to no traces left of their genetic impact in their respective people's gene pools.[42] According to the study, Ancient Koreans were composed of "northern East Asian-related ancestry and indigenous Jōmon-related ancestry" where the "northern East Asian ancestry was suggested to be related to the Neolithic West Liao River farmers in northeast China".[42] The finding indicated that the "West Liao River-related farmers might have spread the proto-Korean language as their ancestry was found to be predominant in extant Koreans" and these "Proto-Korean groups, in turn, introduced West Liao River-like ancestry into the gene pool of present-day Japan".[42] These people are thought to have caused the displacement of the indigenous Jōmon people causing a significant diminishment of Jōmon genomes in the regions. It was deduced that this event (and the populations remaining genetically homogeneous since then) was what caused modern Koreans and Japanese to share the majority of their genetic makeup[42] as the latter group "can be represented as a mixture of Koreans (91%) with a limited genetic heritage from a basal East Asian lineage related to Jōmon (9%)".[43][42]

Controversies regarding the Ryukyuan people

Major disagreements exists as to whether the Ryukyuans are considered the same as the Yamato, or identified as an independent but related ethnic group, or as a sub-group that constitutes Japanese ethnicity together with the Yamato. Ryukyuans have a distinct culture from the Yamato, with its own native cuisine, history, language, religion and traditions.[44][45]

From the Meiji period onward, by which the Ryukyuan's kingdom was annexed by Japan, Japanese scholars such as Shinobu Orikuchi and Kunio Yanagita supported the later discredited ideological viewpoint that they were a sub-group of the Yamato people. The Ryukyuans were forcibly assimilated into Japanese (Yamato) people with their ethnic identity suppressed by the Meiji government, and suppressed Ryukyuan ethnic identity, tradition, culture and language.[46][47][48] Many modern day Japanese people today that colonized the Ryukyu Islands are a mixture of both Yamato and Ryukyuan.

See also

References

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yamato, people, confused, with, wajin, ancient, people, 大和民族, yamato, minzoku, literally, yamato, ethnicity, wajin, 和人, wajin, literally, people, applied, imperial, house, japan, yamato, court, that, existed, japan, century, further, originally, ethnic, group,. Not to be confused with Wajin ancient people The Yamato people 大和民族 Yamato minzoku literally Yamato ethnicity or the Wajin 和人 Wajin 倭 literally Wa people 1 was applied to the Imperial House of Japan or Yamato Court that existed in Japan in the 4th century further it was originally are an ethnic group of the people that first settled in Yamato Province modern day Nara Prefecture Generations of Japanese historians linguists and archeologists have debated whether the word is related to the earlier Yamatai 邪馬臺 The Yamato clan set up Japan s first and only dynasty The clan became the ruling faction in the area and incorporated native Japanese Chinese and Korean migrants 2 The clan leaders also elevated their own belief system that featured ancestor worship into a national religion known as Shinto 2 Yamato大和民族Yamato no Takeru prince of the Yamato dynasty Regions with significant populations JapanLanguagesJapaneseReligionMajorityIrreligiousTraditionallyShintoism and Japanese BuddhismMinorityChristianity Japanese new religions and other religionsRelated ethnic groupsRyukyuan peopleYayoi peopleAinu peopleJōmon peopleThe term came to be used around the late 19th century to distinguish the settlers of mainland Japan from minority ethnic groups inhabiting the peripheral areas of the then Japanese Empire including the Ainu Emishi Ryukyuans Nivkh Oroks as well as Chinese Koreans Austronesians and Micronesian peoples who were incorporated into the Empire of Japan in the early 20th century After Japan s surrender in World War II the term became antiquated for suggesting pseudoscientific racial notions that have been discarded in many circles 3 Japanese statistics only count their population in terms of nationality rather than ethnicity Contents 1 Etymology 2 History of usage 2 1 After Meiji restoration 2 2 Contemporary usage 3 Origin 4 Controversies regarding the Ryukyuan people 5 See also 6 ReferencesEtymology EditFurther information Wa Japan and Yamatai The Wajin also known as Wa or Wō or Yamato were the names early China used to refer to an ethnic group living in Japan around the time of the Three Kingdoms period Chinese Japanese and Korean scribes regularly wrote Wa or Yamato with one and the same Chinese character 倭 until the 8th century when the Japanese found fault with it replacing it with 和 harmony peace balance Retroactively this character was adopted in Japan to refer to the country itself often combined with the character 大 literally meaning Great similar to Great Qing or Great Britain so as to write the preexisting name Yamato 大和 e g such as 大淸帝國 Great Qing Empire or 大英帝國 Great British Empire The pronunciation Yamato cannot be formed from the sounds of its constituent Chinese characters it is speculated to originally refer to a place in Japan meaning Mountain Gate 山戸 4 The historical province of Yamato within Japan now Nara Prefecture in central Honshu borders Yamashiro Province now the southern part of Kyoto Prefecture however the names of both provinces appear to contain the Japonic etymon yama usually meaning mountain s but sometimes having a meaning closer to forest especially in some Ryukyuan languages Some other pairs of historical provinces of Japan exhibit similar sharing of one etymological element such as Kazusa lt Kami tu Fusa Upper Fusa and Shimōsa lt Simo tu Fusa Lower Fusa or Kōzuke lt Kami tu Ke Upper Ke and Shimotsuke lt Simo tu Ke Lower Ke In these latter cases the pairs of provinces with similar names are thought to have been created through the subdivision of an earlier single province in prehistoric or protohistoric times Although the etymological origins of Wa remain uncertain Chinese historical texts recorded an ancient people residing in the Japanese archipelago named something like ʼWa or ʼWer 倭 Carr 5 9 10 surveys prevalent proposals for the etymology of Wa ranging from feasible transcribing Japanese first person pronouns waga 我が my our and ware 我 I we oneself to shameful writing Japanese Wa as 倭 implying dwarf and summarizes interpretations for ʼWa Japanese into variations on two etymologies behaviorally submissive or physically short The first submissive obedient explanation began with the 121 CE Shuowen Jiezi dictionary It defines 倭 as shunmao 順皃 obedient submissive docile appearance graphically explains the person human radical with a wei 委 bent phonetic and quotes the above Shi Jing poem Conceivably when Chinese first met Japanese Carr 5 9 suggests they transcribed Wa as ʼWa bent back signifying compliant bowing obeisance Bowing is noted in early historical references to Japan Examples include Respect is shown by squatting 6 and they either squat or kneel with both hands on the ground This is the way they show respect 7 Koji Nakayama interprets wei 逶 winding as very far away and euphemistically translates Wō 倭 as separated from the continent The second etymology of wō 倭 meaning dwarf variety of an animal or plant species midget little people has possible cognates in ǎi 矮 low short of stature wō 踒 strain sprain bent legs and wo 臥 lie down crouch sit animals and birds Early Chinese dynastic histories refer to a Zhuruguo 侏儒國 pygmy dwarf country located south of Japan associated with possibly Okinawa Island or the Ryukyu Islands Carr cites the historical precedence of construing Wa as submissive people and the Country of Dwarfs legend as evidence that the little people etymology was a secondary development History of usage EditSee also Yamato damashii In the 6th century the Yamato dynasty one of many tribes of various origins who had settled Japan in prehistory founded a state modeled on the Chinese states of Sui and Tang the center of East Asian political influence at the time As the Yamato influence expanded their Old Japanese language became the common spoken language After Meiji restoration Edit Racism existed historically in Japan prior to Western contact The idea of scientific racism was adapted in Japan from the late nineteenth century onward The false notion of racial homogeneity was used as propaganda because of the political circumstances of late nineteenth and early twentieth century Japan which coincided with Japanese imperialism and World War II 3 Pseudoscientific racial theories which included the false belief of the superiority of the Yamato character were used to justify military expansionism discriminatory practices and ethnocentrism 3 The concept of pure blood as a criterion for the uniqueness of the Yamato minzoku began circulating around 1880 in Japan around the time some Japanese scientists began investigations into eugenics 8 Initially in order to justify Japan s conquest of Asia Japanese propaganda espoused the ideas of Japanese supremacy by claiming that the Japanese represented a combination of all Asian peoples and cultures emphasizing heterogeneous traits 9 Japanese propaganda started to place an emphasis on the ideas of racial purity and the supremacy of the Yamato race when the Second Sino Japanese War intensified 9 Driven by the ideology of racial supremacy racial purity and national unity between 1868 and the 1940s the Japanese government carefully identified and forcefully assimilated marginalized populations which included Okinawans the Ainu and other underrepresented groups imposing assimilation programs in language culture and religion 10 According to Aya Fujiwara a postdoctoral Fellow at McMaster University in an attempt to have some influence over the Japanese diaspora in Canada Japanese authorities used the term Yamato as race propaganda during World War 2 saying that For Japanese Canadians in particular the Emperor was the most natural symbol to promote primordial national sentiment and superiority of the Yamato race the term that the Japanese used to distinguish themselves from others This term meant a noble race the members of which saw themselves as chosen people The modernization of Japan which began with the Meiji Restoration in 1868 produced a number of historical writings that tried to define the Japanese under the official scheme to create a strong nation Imported to Canada by Japanese intellectuals a common myth of descent that Japanese people belonged to the noble Yamato race headed by the Emperor since the ancient period was one of the core elements that defined Japanese Canadian ethno racial identity in the 1920s and the 1930s The evolution and survival of an ethnic community Anthony D Smith argues relies on the complicated belief system that creates a sacred communion of the people with cultural and historical distinctiveness During this period Japanese intellectuals scholars and official representatives sought to keep Japanese Canadians within their sphere of influence thereby reinforcing a transnational myth that would promote Japanese Canadians sense of racial pride as God s chosen people in the world 11 Contemporary usage Edit At the end of the World War II the Japanese government continued to adhere to the notions of racial homogeneity and racial supremacy with the Yamato race at the top of the racial hierarchy 12 Japanese propaganda of racial purity returned to post World War II Japan because of the support of the Allied forces U S policy in Japan terminated the purge of high ranking fascist war criminals and reinstalled the leaders who were responsible for the creation and manifestation of prewar race propaganda 13 In present day Japan the term Yamato minzoku may be seen as antiquated for connoting racial notions that have been discarded in many circles since Japan s surrender in World War II 14 Japanese people or even Japanese Japanese are often used instead although these terms also have complications owing to their ambiguous blending of notions of ethnicity and nationality 15 In present day Japan statistics only counts their population in terms of nationality rather than ethnicity thus the number of ethnic Yamato and their actual population numbers are ambiguous 16 Origin EditMain articles Genetic history of East Asians and Genetic and anthropometric studies on Japanese people Proposed population migration routes into Japan based on haplogroups 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Migration routes into Japan during the Jōmon period The most well regarded theory is that present day Yamato Japanese are descendants from both the Yayoi people and the various local Jōmon people Japanese people belong to the East Asian lineages D M55 and O M175 with a minority belonging to C M217 and N M231 25 The reference population for the Japanese Yamato used in Geno 2 0 Next Generation is 89 East Asia 2 Finland and Northern Siberia 2 Central Asia and 7 Southeast Asia amp Oceania making Japanese approximately 100 East Eurasian 26 Genealogical research has indicated extremely similar genetic profiles between these groups making them nearly indistinguishable from each other and ancient samples Japanese people were found to share high genetic affinity with the ancient 8 000 BC Devils Gate N sample in the Amur region of Northeast Asia 27 The earliest written records about people in Japan are from Chinese sources These sources spoke about the Wa people the direct ancestors of the Yamato and other Japonic agriculturalists The Wa of Na received a golden seal from the Emperor Guangwu of the Later Han dynasty This event was recorded in the Book of the Later Han compiled by Fan Ye in the 5th century The seal itself was discovered in northern Kyushu in the 18th century 28 Early Chinese historians described Wa as a land of hundreds of scattered tribal communities 29 Third century Chinese sources reported that the Wa early Yamato lived on raw fish vegetables and rice served on bamboo and wooden trays clapped their hands in worship something still done in Shinto shrines today and built earthen grave mounds They also maintained vassal master relations collected taxes had provincial granaries and markets and observed mourning The Wei Zhi Chinese 魏志 which is part of the Records of the three Kingdoms first mentions Yamataikoku and Queen Himiko in the 3rd century According to the record Himiko assumed the throne of Wa as a spiritual leader after a major civil war Her younger brother was in charge of the affairs of state including diplomatic relations with the Chinese court of the Kingdom of Wei 30 When asked about their origins by the Wei embassy the people of Wa claimed to be descendants of the people of Wu a historic figure of the Wu Kingdom around the Yangtze Delta of China however this is disputed 31 32 Japonic speakers were also present on the southern and central Korean Peninsula These Peninsular Japonic agriculturalists were later replaced assimilated by Koreanic speakers from southern Manchuria likely causing the Yayoi migration and expansion within the Japanese archipelago 33 34 Whitman 2012 suggests that the Yayoi agriculturalists are not related to the proto Koreans but that they were present on the Korean peninsula during the Mumun pottery period According to him Japonic arrived in the Korean peninsula around 1500 BC and was brought to the Japanese archipelago by the Yayoi agriculturalists at around 950 BC during the late Jōmon period The language family associated with both Mumun and Yayoi culture is Japonic Koreanic arrived later from Manchuria to the Korean peninsula at around 300 BC and coexist with the descendants of the Japonic Mumun cultivators or assimilated them Both had influence on each other and a later founder effect diminished the internal variety of both language families 35 A genetic study 2019 estimated that modern Japanese Yamato share more than 90 of their genome with the Yayoi rice agriculturalists and less than 10 with the heterogeneous Jōmon period groups 36 A more recent study by Gakuhari et al 2019 estimates that modern Japanese people have between 92 to 96 7 Yayoi rice agriculturalist ancestry with the 3 3 to 8 from the heterogeneous Jōmon period tribes and cluster closely with other Koreans and Han Chinese but are slightly with shifted towards eastern Siberians 37 Based on archaeological evidence and the genetic similarity between modern Japanese and Koreans Jared Diamond said that the Yayoi people the ancestors of the Yamato people migrated from the Korean peninsula 38 Watanabe et al 2021 found that the Jōmon people were a heterogeneous population and that Japanese from different regions had different amounts of Jōmon derived SNP alleles ranging from 17 3 to 24 samplified by southern Jōmon and 3 8 to 14 9 samplified by northern Jōmon Southern Jōmon were genetically similar to contemporary East Asians especially Tujia people Tibetan people and Miao people while northern Jōmon had a partial distinct ancestry component possibly deriving from Paleolithic Siberians next to an East Asian ancestry component The Jōmon period population although heterogeneous were closest to contemporary East Asians and Native Americans 39 In 2021 new research from a study published in the journal Science Advances found that the people of Japan bore genetic signatures from three ancient populations rather than just two as previously thought 40 41 The first was Japan s indigenous culture of hunter gatherers called the Jomon dating to roughly 15 000 years ago The second was a population of Northeast Asian origins called the Yayoi who arrived at about 900 BC bringing wet rice farming to Japan According to the researchers Japanese people has approximately 13 and 16 genetic ancestry from these two groups respectively 40 The remaining 71 of genetic ancestry was found to come from migrants that arrived around 300 AD during the Kofun period and had genetic makeup mainly resembling the Han Chinese population of China This migrant group was said to have brought cultural advances and centralised leadership to Japan According to Shigeki Nakagome co leader of the study Chinese characters started to be used in this period such as Chinese characters inscribed on metal implements for example swords 40 A new study in 2022 conducted by the University of Xiamen shed light on the lack of Jōmon genomes found in present day Koreans and Japanese 42 Researchers discovered that despite finding evidence of the Jōmon people on the Korean peninsula and the Japanese archipelago there were little to no traces left of their genetic impact in their respective people s gene pools 42 According to the study Ancient Koreans were composed of northern East Asian related ancestry and indigenous Jōmon related ancestry where the northern East Asian ancestry was suggested to be related to the Neolithic West Liao River farmers in northeast China 42 The finding indicated that the West Liao River related farmers might have spread the proto Korean language as their ancestry was found to be predominant in extant Koreans and these Proto Korean groups in turn introduced West Liao River like ancestry into the gene pool of present day Japan 42 These people are thought to have caused the displacement of the indigenous Jōmon people causing a significant diminishment of Jōmon genomes in the regions It was deduced that this event and the populations remaining genetically homogeneous since then was what caused modern Koreans and Japanese to share the majority of their genetic makeup 42 as the latter group can be represented as a mixture of Koreans 91 with a limited genetic heritage from a basal East Asian lineage related to Jōmon 9 43 42 Controversies regarding the Ryukyuan people EditSee also Ryukyu Kingdom Ryukyu Disposition and Ryukyu independence movement Major disagreements exists as to whether the Ryukyuans are considered the same as the Yamato or identified as an independent but related ethnic group or as a sub group that constitutes Japanese ethnicity together with the Yamato Ryukyuans have a distinct culture from the Yamato with its own native cuisine history language religion and traditions 44 45 From the Meiji period onward by which the Ryukyuan s kingdom was annexed by Japan Japanese scholars such as Shinobu Orikuchi and Kunio Yanagita supported the later discredited ideological viewpoint that they were a sub group of the Yamato people The Ryukyuans were forcibly assimilated into Japanese Yamato people with their ethnic identity suppressed by the Meiji government and suppressed Ryukyuan ethnic identity tradition culture and language 46 47 48 Many modern day Japanese people today that colonized the Ryukyu Islands are a mixture of both Yamato and Ryukyuan See also Edit Japan portalEmperor of Japan Ethnic groups of Japan Japanese battleship Yamato Japanese nationalism Nihonjinron Race and ethnicity in Japan Yama bito Yamato disambiguation Yamato period Yamato nadeshiko Yamato damashii the Japanese spirit References Edit David Blake Willis and Stephen Murphy Shigematsu Transcultural Japan At the Borderlands of Race Gender and Identity p 272 Wajin which is written with Chinese characters that can also be read Yamato no hito Yamato person a b Tignor Robert 2013 Worlds Together Worlds Apart Volume 1 Beginnings through the Fifteenth Century New York W W Norton amp Company p 346 ISBN 978 0 393 12376 0 a b c Tessa Morris Suzuki 1998 Debating Racial Science in Wartime Japan Osiris 13 354 375 doi 10 1086 649291 JSTOR 301889 PMID 11640198 S2CID 39701840 Z n a a B a Inoues net Retrieved 2011 09 26 a b Carr Michael March 1992 Wa Wa Lexicography International Journal of Lexicography 5 1 1 31 doi 10 1093 ijl 5 1 1 ISSN 0950 3846 Hou Han Shu tr Tsunoda 1951 2 Wei Zhi tr Tsunoda 1951 13 Robertson 2002 sfn error no target CITEREFRobertson2002 help a b Eiji Oguma 2002 A genealogy of Japanese self images Trans Pacific Press ISBN 978 1876843830 Heinrich Patrick 2012 The Making of Monolingual Japan Language Ideology and Japanese Modernity Channel View Publications ISBN 978 1847696564 Fujiwara Aya 2011 The Myth of the Emperor and the Yamato Race The Role of the Tairiku nippo in the Promotion of Japanese Canadian Transnational Ethnic Identity in the 1920s and the 1930s Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 21 37 58 doi 10 7202 1003042ar Kushner Barak 2007 The Thought War Japanese Imperial Propaganda University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824832087 Chomsky Noam 2015 Year 501 The Conquest Continues Pluto Press ISBN 978 0745335476 Weiner Michael ed 2009 Japan s Minorities The Illusion of Homogeneity 2nd ed Routledge pp xiv xv ISBN 978 0203884997 Levin Mark February 2008 批判的人種理論と日本法 和人の人種的特権について The Wajin s Whiteness Law and Race Privilege in Japan PDF Hōritsu Jihō 法律時報 in Japanese 80 2 6 SSRN 1551462 国籍 地域別 在留資格 在留目的 別 在留外国人 独立行政法人統計センター Retrieved 2019 07 29 崎谷満 2010 DNA 考古 言語の学際研究が示す新 日本列島史 日本人集団 日本語の成立史 in Japanese 勉誠出版 ISBN 9784585053941 王 巍 中国社会科学院考古研究所 副所長 東北アジアにおける先史文化の交流 中国北方新石器文化研究の新展開 in Japanese Cui Yinqiu Li Hongjie Ning Chao Zhang Ye Chen Lu Zhao Xin Hagelberg Erika Zhou Hui 2013 Y Chromosome analysis of prehistoric human populations in the West Liao River Valley Northeast China BMC Evolutionary Biology 13 216 216 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 13 216 PMC 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and Korean populations Hereditas 155 1 19 doi 10 1186 s41065 018 0057 5 ISSN 1601 5223 PMC 5889524 PMID 29636655 Gold Seal Kin in Fukuoka City Museum Retrieved 2007 11 10 Huffman James L 2010 02 04 Japan in World History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 970974 8 魏志倭人伝 Chinese texts of the Wei Zhi Wikisource Karako kagi Archaeological Museum 2007 ヤマト王権はいかにして始まったか Comprehensive Database of Archaeological Site Reports in Japan Retrieved 2016 09 01 最古級の奈良 桜井 3兄弟古墳 形状ほぼ判明 卑弥呼の時代に相次いで築造 Archived 2008 03 08 at the Wayback Machine Sankei Shimbun March 6 2008 Janhunen Juha 2010 Reconstructing the Language Map of Prehistorical Northeast Asia Studia Orientalia 108 there are strong indications that the neighbouring Baekje state in the southwest was predominantly Japonic speaking until it was linguistically Koreanized Vovin Alexander January 2013 From Koguryo to Tamna Slowly riding to the South with speakers of Proto Korean Korean Linguistics 15 2 222 240 doi 10 1075 kl 15 2 03vov ISSN 0257 3784 S2CID 170343892 Whitman John 2011 12 01 Northeast Asian Linguistic Ecology and the Advent of Rice Agriculture in Korea and Japan Rice 4 3 149 158 doi 10 1007 s12284 011 9080 0 ISSN 1939 8433 Furuichi Yu June 11 2019 Jomon woman helps solve Japan s genetic mystery NHK WORLD Archived from the original on 2019 06 11 Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten Sato Takehiro Korneliussen Thorfinn Chuinneagain Blanaid Matsumae Hiromi Koganebuchi Kae Schmidt Ryan Mizushima Souichiro March 15 2019 2019 Jomon genome sheds light on East Asian population history PDF bioRxiv 3 5 doi 10 1101 579177 S2CID 92004848 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jared Diamond June 1 1998 Japanese Roots Discover Magazine 19 6 June 1998 Retrieved 2008 05 12 Unlike Jomon pottery Yayoi pottery was very similar to contemporary South Korean pottery in shape Many other elements of the new Yayoi culture were 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