"Edo period" Essays and Research Papers

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    Tokugawa Japan

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    Meji Restoration (1603 – 1868). During the Tokugawa period‚ Japan was governed by a feudal system to create a stable state known as the Bakufu. The Shogun was the military ruler of Japan and governed over ¼ of Japan. The Daimyo‚ feudal landlords‚ controlled various parts of Japan and to impede their increasing power‚ various restrictions were placed among them such as where they lived and how they dress. The Daimyo were forced to go and live in Edo every second year. This left their families as hostages

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    Police System In Japan

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    so called keisatsu seido consists of approximately 220‚000 police officers who are organized into prefectural forces coordinated and partially controlled by the National Police Agency in Tokyo. Concerning the historical development‚ during the Edo period - we are talking about the years 1600 - 1868 here‚ the Tokugawa Shogunate ( the form of those days governing the country ) developed elaborate police system based on town magistrates who held samurai status and served as chiefs of police‚ prosecutors

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    Barnes HIST 130-01 March 2‚ 2014 The differences between the state structure of Tokugawa Japan and Qing China In the 18th century‚ the Qing founded by the Manchus was a large and very powerful empire between 1644-1912. During this period‚ the Qing was strong and prosperous. And the population kept growing. In the two outstanding emperors’ rule‚ the national territory got the widest range in history. But with the increasing of population‚ the Qing was without progress in basic technology

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    “nihonjin” which means “Japanese”. Its history began in 300 years B.C. with the Jōmon period. Divided in numerous parts‚ the eras are as following: Ancient Japan (-300 to 538)‚ Classical Japan (538-1185)‚ Feudal Japan (1185-1868)‚ the Tokugawa Period (1603-1868)‚ the Empire of Japan (1868-1945) and finally Post War Japan (1945-present). I will be focusing more on the Tokugawa Period or commonly known as the Edo period‚ one of the most influential time for Japan. Under the Tokugawa Shogunate‚ shoguns

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    Japan Imperialism

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    in Japan’s economic standings. The period from 1868 to 1912 was responsible for the start of Japan as a modernized nation in the early twentieth century. The country’s new rulers adopted the slogan “Rich Country‚ Strong Army‚" because they wanted Japan to become economically and militarily powerful‚ so it could retain its independence. During the time Japan entered‚ was during the time that exploration and imperialism had already taken place for a long period of time; however‚ Japan still entered

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    Cloud of Sparrows by Takashi Matsuoka 1. The book takes place in 1861‚ after Perry opens the door to Japan. After centuries of isolation‚ Japan is lagging behind in ways of science and weaponry. The main character‚ Lord Genji‚ is Lord of the Okumichi Clan. He and his family are cursed with visions of the future. His uncle‚ Lord Shigeru‚ sees the coming bloodshed and massacre in Japan’s future and slaughters his wife and children to prevent them from suffering through

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    Tokugawa Japan

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    Midterm Question—1 Tokugawa Ieyasu was a great samurai fighter and cunning politician. In battle of Sekigahara Tokugawa defeated his major rivals and established Tokugawa government. His headquarter was established in village of Edo away from the imperial families in Kyoto. Ieyasu and successors choose to rule as shoguns‚ or feudal lords‚ demanding loyalty from the daimyo and exercising direct control only over their own territorial domains. The people saw the emperor as divine descent of sun goddess

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    Ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. Olenik‚ W. S. (2005). Japan: Its History and Culture (4th Ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. Sansom‚ G. (1963). A History of Japan 1615-1867. Stanford‚ California: Stanfrd University Press. Tokugawa‚ T. (2009). The Edo Inheritance. Tokyo‚ Japan: Intertional House of Japan. Morton‚ W. S. & Olenik‚ J. K. (2005). Japan: It’s History & Culture (4th Ed.). McGraw-Hill. Nakane‚ C. & Oishi‚ S. (Eds.) (1990). Tokugawa Japan: The Social and Economic Antecedents

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    Chapter20

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    Among those thrown out of his job as an appren■ To what extent was Russia’s expanding empire tice ironworker was one Li Zicheng (lee ZUH-cheng). influenced by relations with western Europe in By 1630 Li Zicheng had found work as a soldier‚ but he this period? and his fellow soldiers mutinied when the government failed to provide needed supplies. A natural leader‚ Li soon headed several thousand Chinese rebels. In 1635 he and other rebel leaders gained control over much of Manchu Federation of Northeast

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    The Meiji Restoration

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    this date in a “relatively tranquil coup (Huffman)” that overthrew the previous administration‚ the Tokugawa regime (Huffman). The Tokugawa Era‚ begun by shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu after a lengthy period of war between the samurai‚ lasted about two hundred and fifty years‚ from 1600 to 1868 (Huffman). This period is sometimes called the “pax Tokugawa‚” or the “Tokugawa peace (Huffman).” One of the main areas of opposition to the Tokugawa government approaching the mid-seventeenth century was the lower-ranked

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