Chapter 13:
1. East and central asia
2. 7th and 8th century
3. Kami
4. Buddism
5. Taika, nara, Heian
6. Takia reforms
7. Aimed at completely revamping the imperial administration
8. Buddist monks
9. Restored the great aristocratic families
10. .
11. The tale of Genji
12. Pursuit of aesthetic enjoyment
13. The fujiwara
14. Bushi
15. Most rose to power as landowners, estate managers, or local state officials
16. Samurai
17. Hired military body guards and protection
18. They rode into battles that hinged on the duels of champions, represented heroic warfare
19. Frustrated all hopes of creating a free peasantry
20. They depended on alliances with regional lords to support them with their rivals
21. .
22. Bakufu(military government)
23. The feudal age
24. Heavenly mandate and centralized power, scholar gentry elite stilfled
25. The decline of the tang
26. 838
27. Shoguns
28. Hojo
29. The hojo family claimed to rule in the name of the emperor
30. Ashikaga shogunate
31. Emperor refused to recognize the usurper and was driven from kyoto
32. Centralized authority collapsed
33. Japan dived into 300 kingdoms
34. Spying, sneak attacks, ruses, and timely betrayals became order of the day
35. Economic and cultural growth
36. They were treated as defenseless appendages of their warrior fathers or husbands
37. Zen buddism
38.
39. 109
40. silla
41.
42.
43. buddhism
44.
45. Vietnamese peasantry, frustrated Chinese hopes assimilating the viets
46.
47.
48.
49. Civil service exams were introduced, and an administrative elite schooled in the Confucian classes sought the emperors favorite and commanded deference from the common people
Chapter 14:
1.
2. Nomadic society and culture
3. Herds of goats and sheep
4. Elected by the freemen of the group
5.
6. Led a mongol alliance that won glory by defeating a qin army
7. He was taken prisoner
8. 1206
9. They were entirely cavalry