World History – Mr. O’Donnell
Timeline of Japanese History
Note: Many dates are approximate. Some developments emerged over a period
of years, and precise dates for events before A.D. 600 have not been
determined. Notice how long the prehistorical era was
compared to other periods.
JOMON (10,000 - 300 B.C.) Prehistoric period of
tribal/clan organization.
Stone Age hunters and gatherers who make jomon
(rope-patterned) pottery inhabit Japan.
660 B.C. Mythological Jimmu ("Divine
Warrior"), descendant of sun goddess Amaterasu Omikami, founds empire.
YAYOI (300 B.C. - A.D. 300) Rice cultivation, metalworking, and the
potter's wheel are introduced from China
and Korea.
Era named "Yayoi" after the place in Tokyo
where wheel-turned pottery was found.
In Shinto, Japan's
oldest religion, people identify kami (divine
forces) in nature and in such human virtues as loyalty and wisdom. 100-300:
Local clans form small political units.
KOFUN (YAMATO) (300 - 645) Unified state begins with emergence of
powerful clan rulers; Japan
establishes close contacts with mainland Asia.
Clan rulers are buried in kofun (large tomb
mounds), surrounded by haniwa (clay
sculptures). Yamato clan rulers, claiming descent from Amaterasu
Omikami, begin the imperial dynasty that continues to
occupy the throne today. Japan
adopts Chinese written characters. Shotoku Taishi (574-622) begins to shape Japanese society
and government more after the pattern of China.
He seeks centralization of government and a bureaucracy of merit. He also calls
for reverence for Buddhism and the Confucian virtues.
ASUKA (645 -710) A great wave of reforms called the Taika
no Kaishin (Taika
Reforms) aims to strengthen the emperor's power.
New aristocratic families are created. Especially powerful is that of Fujiwara
no Kamatari, who helped push the reforms.
NARA (710 - 794)
Imperial court builds new capital, modeled upon Chang-an in China,
at Nara. Though
emperors are Shinto chiefs, they patronize Buddhism in the belief that its
teachings will bring about a peaceful society and protect the state.
Legends surrounding the founding of Japan
are compiled as history in the Kojiki
(Record of Ancient Matters) and the Nihon shoki
(Chronicle of Japan).
With the adoption of Buddhism as the state religion, its monasteries gain
political power.
HEIAN (794-1185) Imperial court moves to Heiankyo
(now Kyoto) to escape
domination of Nara's
Buddhist establishment. Official contacts with China
stop in 838.
Buddhism, in combination with native Shinto beliefs, continues to flourish. Flowering of classical Japanese culture aided by invention of kana
(syllabary for writing Japanese language).
Court women produce the best of era's literature. Murasaki
Shikibu's Tale of Genji
(ca. 1002) is the world's first novel. Court undergoes decline of power
with rise of provincial bushi (warrior class).
KAMAKURA (185-1333)
Military government established in Kamakura
by Minamoto no Yoritomo.
Emperor, as figurehead, remains in Kyoto
with the court aristocracy.
1192: Imperial court confers on Yoritomo
the title of seii taishogun
("barbarian-subduing generalissimo"). Bushi
become new ruling class.
1274, 1281: Kublai Khan's Mongol invasions are repelled with help of kamikaze
("divine winds," or storms). Defense against these invasions weakens
structure of the military government at Kamakura.
MUROMACHI (1333 -1568) Muromachi district of
Kyoto becomes base for Shogun Ashikaga Takauji's new
military government.
Takauji and his successors become patrons of Zen and
spontaneity in ink painting, garden design, and the chanoyu
(tea ceremony).
1467-1568: The 10 year-long Onin
no Ran (Onin War) brings disintegration of
central government, followed by the Sengoku Jidai
(Era of the Country at War). Firearms introduced by shipwrecked Portuguese
soldiers (1543),Christianity by Francis Xavier
(1549).
AZUCHIMOMOYA MA (1568 -1600) Oda Nobunaga
starts process of reunifying Japan
after a century of civil war; he is followed by Toyotomi
Hideyoshi (1536-1598). Foundation of modern Japan
is laid.
Hideyoshi's ambition to conquer Korea
and China is
thwarted by local resistance. Arts such as painting, monumental decorative
designs, and the tea ceremony continue to flourish.
EDO (TOKUGAWA) (1600 -1868) Japan
enters an age of peace and national isolation.
Tokugawa leyasu founds new shogunate
at Edo (now Tokyo).
In 1635 national isolation policy limits Chinese and Dutch traders to Nagasaki.
Christianity is suppressed. Establishment of rigid social hierarchy ensures
peace and stability throughout Japan.
(Samurai are ranked highest, followed by farmers, artisans, and merchants.) By
the early 1700s, cities and commerce flourish. A growing merchant class
enjoys Kabuki and Bunraku theater.
Printing and publication of books increase; education becomes available to the
urban population. Commodore Matthew C. Perry and his steam frigates arrive in Japan
(1853); the United States
wants to use Japanese ports as supply bases for its commercial fleet. Japan
accepts the U.S.
demands and opens its door for the first time in two centuries.
MEIJI (1868 -1912) The emperor is restored; Japan
makes transition to nation-state.
Dispossessed bushi become soldiers, policemen,
and teachers with fall of feudal system and political reform. New national
policy is to make Japan
a rich and powerful country, to prevent invasion by Western powers. Emphasis is
on building a strong military and strengthening industries.
Japan becomes
world power through victories in Sino-Japanese (1895) and Russo-Japanese
(1904-05) wars. Korea
annexed (1910-45).
TAISHO [1912-1926] Japan
expands economic base within Asia and the
Pacific.
Prospering businessmen support Liberal party government, broadening political
participation. Universal manhood suffrage begun in 1925.
SHOWA [1926 -1989] Japan
experiences World War II and its aftermath, as well as economic recovery.
Japan's liberal
rulers replaced; military-run cabinets make imperialistic inroads in China.
Manchuria
taken over in 1931.
1937-1945: World War II; war in China
followed by invasion of Southeast Asia.
1940: Japan
joins the Axis powers.
1941: Pearl Harbor brings United
States into war in the Pacific.
August 1945: first atom bomb is dropped on Hiroshima,
the second on Nagasaki. The emperor
airs by radio a statement of unconditional surrender.
1945-1952: Allied occupation of Japan;
democratic party government restored; women gain legal
equality and right to vote. Enactment of the new (democratic) constitution
transforms Japan's
political life, making it a truly parliamentary state. With a peace treaty
signed in 1951, Japan
regains its independence.
The late 1950s to the early 1970s is called the "High Growth
Age" in Japan
because of the booming economy. Highlights of the era are the Tokyo Olympic
Games in 1964 and Expo '70 in Osaka.
In 1972 relations with China
are normalized.
HEISEI (1989- ) Global issues foster debate.
In 1989 Prince Akihito succeeds to the throne.
In1991 the gulf War ignites controversy over Japan's
role in the international community. Should Japan
strictly protect the "peace" constitution of 1947, a major
cause of its prosperity? Or should it contribute troops as well as financial
support to United Nations operations? In 1993, after Japanese troops are
pulled out of a United Nations operation in Cambodia,
the arguments go on: Should japan become more
internationally minded? Or should domestic peace and prosperity be the main
priority?
Crystal ball gazing: What will you be doing
25 years from now? As Americans, how will your lives be affected by Japan?
Draw on your knowledge of Japan's
geography, history, and cultural values to predict how its influence will be
modified by other peoples and nations.