Topic 3 Lesson 5
Topic 3 Lesson 5
Topic 3 Lesson 5
Learning Objectives
A Mountainous Land
• Too mountainous to farm, early people settled in the valleys and
plains
The Sea Sets Japan Apart
• Japan is far away from China to be conquered but close enough
to learn from Korea and China. This allows them to choose what
they learn from China
• The seas also provide food and also served as a link with the
other Japanese islands. It also helped with trade
The Pacific Ring of Fire
• This area is subject to frequent earthquakes and volcanoes
• Underwater earthquakes can cause tsunamis which are tidal
waves
• The Japanese will come to fear and respect the dramatic forces of
nature
Japan’s Geography
Japan is located on an archipelago. In addition to its four main islands, Japan includes over 3,000
smaller ones. Analyze Maps Explain how two geographic features might have influenced Japanese life.
Japan’s Geography
Japan has experienced many tsunamis, which are caused by earthquakes in the sea floor that send out
huge surges of water that come ashore with destructive force.
Early Japan
Since A.D. 500, the Japanese emperor has traced his lineage through one clan. Here, the Japanese royal
family poses around 1900.
Chinese Influence in Japan
Japan Imports Ideas from Tang China
• Japanese are sent to China to learn, bring back Chinese
thoughts, technology, arts, and government
• They set up a bureaucracy like the Chinese and a law code
• In 710 a new capital is built following Tang design. They will do
all of these things like Chinese: eat, dress, speak, drink tea,
write, dance, and garden
• Buddhist and Confucian ideals will also take root
Selective Borrowing
• In time the enthusiasm for everything Chinese will die down and
the Japanese will keep some ways but discard others
• They will not choose officials based on merit like the Chinese but
will keep their method of inherited status
• When the Tang begin to decline Japan will turn away and begin
to modify what they borrowed. They will revise the Chinese
system of writing and artist will develop their own style
Chinese Influence in Japan
Prince Shotoku was an advisor to Empress Suiko. He revolutionized Japan by creating a government
based on Chinese practices and Buddhist teachings.
Japanese Culture in the Heian Period
An Elegant Court
• An elegant and sophisticated culture blossomed that had
elaborate rules of etiquette
• Courtiers dressed in fine silk
• In 900’s Sei Shonagon, a lady in waiting to the empress, wrote
“The Pillow Book” with vivid details about court manners,
amusements, décor, and dress
Lady Murasaki Writes the World’s First Novel
• She is Shonagon’s rival, the name of the book is “The Tale of
Genji” written in 1010
• She was also a lady in waiting, observing court
Heian Poetry
• The novel also includes 800 poems about the Heian court
• They provide a detail portrait of life in the Japanese court
• Romances like Genji lament that love does not last and beauty is
soon gone
Japanese Culture in the Heian Period
During the Heian period, the wealthy aristocracy established a refined world that led to achievements
in art and literature.
Japan’s Feudal Age
A Feudal Society Emerges
• The emperor was only a figurehead. Real power was held by the
Shogun, supreme military commander
• Shoguns only held a small parcel of land, dividing other parcels
of lands among other vassal lords named daimyo
• Daimyos in turn granted smaller parcels of lands to samurai
Bushido: Way of the Warrior
• Samurai were heavily trained warriors who followed a code that
emphasized honor, bravery, and absolute loyalty to one’s lord.
• Bushido came from Zen Buddhism, Confucianism, and Shintoism
• Samurai who betrayed the code or failed had to commit seppuku
Women in Feudal Society
• During the age of samurai the position of well born women
declined. Unlike chivalry, in Japan women were not placed on a
pedestal. She had to accept the same hardships as her husband
and owe the same loyalty to his overlord
Japan’s Feudal Age
Other Classes
• After the nobility there was peasants, artisans, and merchants
• Peasants were 75% of the population
• Artisans such as armorers and sword makers provided goods for
samurai
• Merchants had the lowest status of all but was more wealthy
than peasants.
Mongol Invaders Threaten Japan
• In 1274 Kublai Khan launches an invasion of Japan after the
Japanese refuse to submit to his rule.
• 30,000 troops arrive but a typhoon arrives shortly and destroys
most of the ships
• In 1281 a much larger invasion force arrives but yet again
another typhoon destroys it, making the Japanese believe that a
divine wind ‘kamikaze’ saved them
Japan’s Feudal Age
In the 1100s, daimyo Yoshitsune Minamoto (center) appeals to the shogun for forgiveness after being
defeated in battle. The shogun refused.
A United Japan
Warriors Gradually Unite Japan
• A commoner by birth, General Toyotomi Hideyoshi in 1590 takes
over most of Japan
• He will then try and fail to take over Korea
• After his death Daimyo Tokugawa Ieyasu will take over Japan
Centralized Feudalism
• In 1603 Tokugawa will be named Shogun and his shogunate will
last until 1868
• The shogunate will impose a central govt. control on Japan but
keep the outward forms of feudal society. This is called
centralized feudalism
• In order to control the daimyo they will require that they live in
the capital for a year every other year
• The daimyo families must live in the capital all year long
• Only samurai could hold military position
• Peasants could not leave the land
A United Japan
A Booming Economy
• With peace coming back trade and agriculture improve
• New techniques will increase the food supply
• Edo (Tokyo) the capital will grow because artisans will be needed
to supply the needs of all the daimyos
• With daimyos traveling every year a demand will appear for food
and lodgings for them on the way to the capital
• Merchants will gain influence among the nobility by lending
money to them, some even marrying their daughters to samurai
so that their grandchildren will be samurai
A United Japan
After the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, Tokugawa Ieyasau seized control of central Japan. He used strict
administrative regulations to control anyone who challenged his power.
Japanese Feudal Culture Evolves
Zen Beliefs
• Zen has contradictory traditions
• Great scholars, but valued the uncluttered mind and the
moment on “non-knowing”
• They stressed compassion but samurais fought to kill
• Zen believe enlightenment could be reached through
meditation and precise performance of everyday tasks
Artistic Traditions Change
• Under the Tokugawas sophisticated nobles will mix with urban
middle class in Edo and Osaka. The urbanites will emphasize
luxuries and pleasures and be different from feudal culture that
dominated Japan
New Drama Develops
• 1300’s had Noh plays, ritualized slow plays where movements
had meaning, actors wore masks and stories were of fairy tales,
Buddhist themes, or daimyo struggles between each other
Japanese Feudal Culture Evolves
This painting, Flowers of the Four Seasons (ink and watercolor on gold leafed paper), by Shiko
Watanabe (1683–1755) demonstrates the Zen ideal of subtle suggestion.
Quiz: Japan’s Geography
How did the Yamato clan affect Japan in the long term?
Why did the shogun hold all the real power in the
1400s?