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    generation. Being regarded as one of the great founders of modern Japan from the nineteenth century‚ Fukuzawa Yukichi was a Japanese author‚ teacher‚ a translator of Western thoughts and customs‚ and broke the restrictive bonds of the Tokugawa samurai system. He was the founder of Keio-Gijuku University. Fukuzawa was an early Japanese civil rights activist. His thoughts about government and social institutions made a

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    vigorous leaders took control of the government of Japan forcing a dramatic reconstruction of the nations polices‚ administration‚ class structure‚ economy‚ technology and culture. These leaders tended to be young samurai warriors in the han (feudal estates) of Choshu and Satsuma. The samurai were able to employ some of the technological information introduced by the Dutch from their station in Nagasaki harbor (the shogunate had established an office for translating Dutch material in 1811) and by 1840

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    #1. The Emperor’s Decree to the Outer Barbarians and Letter to the English Ruler are both sent from Qing Dynasty to Great Britain. The emperor’s Decree to the Outer Barbarians was written to Britain during the flourishing period of Qing Dynasty. The emperor sent a decree to Britain as a respond to requests of Britain on trade regulations. On contrary‚ Letter to the English Ruler‚ written before Opium War occurs‚ includes “warnings” of Qing Dynasty to Britain to no longer harm their people with

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    need for income also contributed as many of them began to promote the sale of local goods from their domains. Most of the commercial expansion took place in the major cities and the caste towns‚ where the merchants and artisans lived along with the samurai‚ who were cluttered in neighborhoods surrounding the daimyos castle. Baking flourished and paper money became the normal medium exchange in commercial transactions. Merchants formed guilds not only to control market conditions but also in facilitate

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    ancient traditions have been lost. The fading of the ancient sword making traditions is a symbolic end to the way of the samurai and the beginning of the stifling western influence. The samurai class began a slow decline during the 1800s; one of the defining moments in Japan ’s history that signified the end of the samurai reign was in 1867 when Emperor Meiji abolished the samurai class (Transition from Edo period to Meiji period) and banned the possession of swords in urban areas. These events caused

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    and east are different about their view on women; also the two are different about how they believe in sacrificial ceremonies. Feudal Europe and feudal Japan are similar in ways as they both have a warrior class. Japan’s class of warriors is the Samurai while the Europeans count on Knights. This shows that feudal Japan and Europe have both similarities and differences that express each way of life. Feudal Japan’s view on women was much greater than feudal Europe’s view on women. Which is what makes

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    The Meiji Restoration

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    of the West. Japan’s coast was not protected nor did the nation possess a navy capable of defending their marine food supply which helped feed Edo’s one million people. The Japanese reacted to their vulnerability by renewing the old spirit of the samurai warrior code‚ and championing the slogan sonno joi‚ “revere the emperor‚ expel the barbarians.” As a result of Perry’s arrival‚ Japan was headed in a new direction despite political turmoil and national disorganization. The Choshu and Satsuma daimyo (a

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    turmoil and unrest. Angered by the high rents they had to pay‚ peasants began revolting against their lords. To quell this chaos‚ the lords began hiring samurai to put down the rebellions. Taking advantage of the situation‚ the samurai began making demands of these lords so that by the end of these revolts‚ most of the new daimyo were former samurai. With these new daimyo in power‚ they began to clash with one another. This infighting erupted into a civil war that eventually ended with no apparent

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    To what extent was socialism involved in the Meiji Restoration? The Meiji Restoration was one of the fastest and most effective political‚ social and economic overhauls of an entire country. In merely one generation Japan as a country unified and became one of the most powerful countries in the world. Yet were the changes fundamentally socialist or just incorporated aspects of socialism? When viewing it at as a whole‚ the Meiji Restoration did exhibit ideas from the majorly state socialism but

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    Feudal Systems

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    peasants‚ samurais‚ daimyos‚ shoguns and emperors. Then there was the European feudal system. It was composed of serfs‚ knights‚ church officials‚ nobles‚ kings and queens. In Japan‚ there was an emperor. The emperor did not do much‚ he was more like a figure head and he did not make any laws. He was just there to represent the country. The shogun was the person who not only make and pass laws‚ but controlled finances and the daimyos. The daimyos were lords that controlled samurai‚ which were

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