In the period between 1450 and 1750, Japan underwent many changes in its political and social structure. After a period of chaos, a powerful family rose up and took control of the nation, establishing a new Shogunate and bringing a period of peace and stability to Japan.…
with the industrialized world, but throughout this process, many aspects of Japanese policy and culture…
Japan’s cultural and political structure changed from being a weak isolated nation to a modern imperialist country. Before Japan westernized, it was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate. This was an agricultural economy with a population of 13 billion. Japan did not associate with any other country because they believed foreign influence was a destabilizing factor. This resulted in overcrowded farms and scarce minerals. In 1853, Commodore Perry came to japan with his big black ships. The technological advancements of the ships shocked the japanese. They ended isolationism and opened trade ports in order to avoid destruction. Failure of success, in 1868 the Tokugawa shogun was overthrown and emperor Meiji had complete power. During this time, Japan was very decentralized. There were several semi-independent feudal lords. The emperor saw how Japan was at a great disadvantage from being in isolation for so many years. He knew that in order to strengthen Japan, change was needed. This resulted in the Meiji Restoration. By 1912…
19. Japan's success in modernization has created great interest in why and how it was able to adopt Western political, social, and economic institutions in so short a time. One answer is found in the Meiji Restoration…
Since Japan had an emperor, feudalism developed because the emperor united the clans. Before feudalism, Japan was inhabited by many different clans. Clans fought each other frequently. Lives were lived in fear of attack. People were unhappy before feudalism and they started fighting for land. Feudalism gave samurai land. Rich landowners gave land for labor and crops. Feudalism is the bond of loyalty between a lord and those to whom he has given land.…
This source created change as it lessened the spread of the Christian faith into Japan. Moreover, this source is able to show the viewer that Japan was a country that wanted to protect its traditional beliefs from outside influence. The fact that the country was willing to keep trade open also shows the belief of the economy’s importance alongside faith. The Great Learning for Women was a less significant source. This source shows us the belief that women were inherently lesser than men, and that they should be treated in such a way that reflects this belief.…
The impeccable Christian influence wasn’t great. After the additional adoption of the religion it centers the Japanese power and later declined and eventually became prohibited.…
During WWII however, Japan takes Nazi Germany's side and as a result in 1945, the United States drop two bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This leads Japan to surrender and to disband its military and naval forces. During the war Japan lost 25% of its national wealth, its production levels were 10% of what the were before the war and this all caused hyper-inflation as well as commodity shortage. The West tried to democratize Japan politically and economically and this led to things such as the dissolution of the Zaibatsu, large conglomerates of major companies which lead to the more even spreading out of the country's wealth. In 1947 American fair market rules were introduced, securing market competition and transparency. Furthermore, labor movements were legalized and the compulsory education was extended from 6 to 9 years. However high inflation persisted and so to rapidly reconstruct the economy, the government implemented a strategy to concentrate resources in priority industrial sectors such as steel, coal mining, electricity, marine and railway transportation, and chemical fertilizer. Due to this industrial production rapidly recovered and in just two years, production levels increased from 31% of prewar levels to 80%. In 1949, a series of policies were conducted by Joseph Dodge, a US banker who came to Japan as an economic adviser to the Allied force General Headquarters…
While Japan may still have some problems at the time, they moved forward in such a huge way. The Meiji restoration boomed throughout and modernized Japan by the end of the 1890’s. The Meiji restoration may not have effected other many countries with it’s own internal revolution, but it did revolutionize the entirety of Japan in less than a hundred years. If you ask me, thats incredibly…
1. Discuss how the Internal Revenue Code, the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, the Hobbs Act and the RICO Act are used against organized crime. Give historic details of the ACTS and its effect on organized crime.…
The Japanese were kept within Japan’s boundaries, if the Japanese tried to escape the country, they would receive the penalty of death. Catholicism was forbidden. If anyone associated with Catholics or practiced the religion they would be punished. Missionaries were absolutely forbidden in Japan. Restrictions and limitations on trading goods were set to limit the ports, and only merchants would be allowed to engage in trade. The Portuguese were blocked entirely; the Dutch East India Company, mere parts of Nagasaki; China, the kingdom of the Ryukyus; and Korea, the Tsushima Domain.…
Tenrikyo is the largest and most successful of the modern Shinto sects in Japan. At first it was considered a branch of the Yoshida sect of the Shinto. But then in 1980 it changed its affiliation to Buddhism and from 1980 has been recognized as one of the 12 groups that compose Kyoha Shinto. It is considered one of the “new religions” of contemporary Japan.…
Shintoism is a purely Japanese religion. It is also one of the oldest religions. Shintoism shows that the Japanese Islands are one of the first god made creations, and that Japan is one of the most unique places in the world. The religion has no founder, no sacred writings, and no authoritative set of beliefs. Shintoism is not very popular outside of Japan. It is a religion that respects the land of Japan. There are many gods in this religion, but the most admired is the sun goddess, Amaterasu.…
Shinto is an original religion of Japan, which implies the worship of kami, or spirits. Kami divides two different approaches, local kami, represents the spirit of a specific location, and the other kami stands for substantial natural extraordinary Amaterasu, the Sun of God, or Fuji mountain. The Shinto beliefs and characteristics respect nature which are related to the complication of environmental conservation include shrines in groves, the relation between nature, kami, and human beings, and the idea of purification is a principal feature of all ritual activity in Shinto.…
The Shinto religion is an ancient Japanese religion. It started around 500 BCE. The Shinto name was originally from the Chinese words “shin tao” which means “The Way of the Gods”(Reader 23). During that time it was the Yamato dynasty and its origins were to the imperial family.…