Part 1: Introduction

Map of Japan
The Japanese people of today seem to have had ancestors that came from several places. Although in antiquity the mountainous islands were once connected to the mainland, after the last Ice Age, the waters rose, isolating the island group. Whatever the origins of the earliest inhabitants were, some groups may have come from nearby Siberia, the Korean peninsula, the Yellow River and Yangzi River areas of present-day China and the southern chain of islands that lead down into Polynesia. By at least 300 BC, significant populations with advanced metal technology, rice agriculture, and horses began arriving from the Korean peninsula, and the dates of such migrations may yet be pushed back farther.
As culture developed in Japan, there were several periods when archaeological and historical evidence point to the rapid introduction of cultural elements from other places. These cultural borrowings were subsequently “re-made” in Japan to fit local needs and tastes. In some periods, cultural borrowing proceeded in a systematic matter, with definite goals in mind. This process of controlled selection and adaptation was enhanced by the island nature of the country. The Age of Reform (552-710 AD), the Meiji Period (1868-1912), and the decades right after WWII are three prominent examples. In studying modern Japanese culture, it is still possible to see “layers” of these influences from the past. At various times in history, the major sources of these influences have been states on the Korean peninsula, Silk Road cultures, China, Europe, and the United States. After periods of intense borrowing, Japan has often withdrawn into itself and the foreign cultural influences have become Japanese, sometimes taking new and creative directions. A good example would be certain styles of Japanese art and architecture that were once based on Chinese models.
It is interesting to note that in some instances the successes at borrowing and remaking were wildly successful—the modern auto industry, for example. Other experiments in cultural borrowings sometimes took unexpected directions. A good example is the attempt to introduce the Chinese-style of imperial government starting in the 7th century AD. Although certain codes and reforms were established for several centuries, the grand experiment was largely abandoned by the late 12th century, when a form of Japanese feudalism arose. In this new system, the emperor became a divine figurehead, while real power lay in the hands of the paramount military leader known as the shogun. This era gave way to a culture of warrior-aesthetes, quite distinct from the clearer separation between civil and military cultures in the Chinese state.
Today, Japan is a super-modern and developed country that is still able to hold onto selected vestiges of its rich cultural heritage. Tokyo and Osaka are highly cosmopolitan cities that feature cultural elements from all over the globe. Yet, a “Japanese” aesthetic prevails as past and present cultural influences continue to interweave in one of the most powerful engines of popular culture on earth.
Part 2: Prehistory
Jomon c. 8,000-300 BC
The evidence of chipped stone tools suggests that humans inhabited Japan at least 30,000 years ago. "Neolithic" cultures called “Jomon” (that still retained stone tool traits of earlier periods), date to at least 10,000 BC. The Jomon people were hunters and gatherers who lived upon the rich resources of game, fish, and wild plants native to post-Ice Age Japan. One of the unusual features of Jomon culture is pottery—the oldest reliably dated on earth. By 8,000 BC a type of cord-wrapped pottery—with decorated lines made by wrapping or laying cords on wet clay – developed. Other clay objects are the so-called dogu ("earth god") figurines. These are small statues that look something like “extra-terrestrials” (or Pokemon cartoon figures!) that may have been used in fertility worship. Always few in number, the Jomon peoples seem to have been centered on the Kanto plain area of Honshu island.
A dogu "earth god" figurine

Jomon pottery with rope design
Yaoyoi Period c. BC 300- AD 300

Queen Pimiko

The Sun Goddess Amaterasu emerges from her cave and dances

Wet rice field
Part 3: Early Kingdoms and Classical Age
Tomb Period c. AD 300-552
By the Tomb Period population centers had grown up in several parts of the islands and the roots of city culture had taken place. Contact with cultures in China and especially the Korean peninsula continued. With the exception of the northern wilderness of Hokkaido and parts of southern Kyushu, clans known as uji controlled many portions of the islands.
Key-hole shaped kofun
The Yamato Plain region is the site of the oldest tomb mounds in Japan. These tomb mounds (kofun) are in some ways similar to earlier ones found in China and those on the Korean peninsula from around the same time frame. A number of huge mounds are in the shape of an old-fashioned key-hole, though many smaller ones were hemispherical in shape.

Haniwa sculpture: bust of a warrior
Age of Reform AD 552-710

Prince Shotoku

A painting depicting the Taika Reform era
During the Age of Reform, the Japanese set in place the foundations for an experiment in Chinese-style rule that would bear fruit in an elite culture unrivaled in Japanese history, lasting until the late 12th century. The next two eras, the Nara and Heian, are known as the “classical age” of Japan.
Nara Period AD 710-794
Nara is regarded as the first permanent capital in Japan. Before that time the capital was relocated at the demise of each ruler due to taboos involving pollution of the living site by death. Following the Chinese model of a permanent seat of government, the new capital was modeled on the capital of Tang China, Chang’an (today's Xi'an city).The earliest part of the city (which was on a much smaller scale than Chang’an and without a wall) was based on a rectangle of eight squares, built on a north to south axis with streets running through them in a neat grid pattern. The city was divided into two halves: the Left Capital and the Right Capital. The new palace was placed to the north. A major causeway, called the Scarlet Phoenix Avenue, ran down the middle of the city, leading to the palace.

Nara was layed out in a grid pattern like ancient Chinese cities. The map notes several important sites.

The Todaiji Buddhist temple is the largest wooden structure on earth. It is an important landmark in Nara.
Although the capital city and other upper-class echelons were developed under the influence of imported Chinese culture, the rural villages and farmsteads were much more conservative. Farmers in some areas lived in pit houses partially underground and farmed wet-rice. Dry land fields were still cleared by swidden agricultural techniques that involved burning off brushy and forested areas and planting in the ash-rich soil.
The Nara period was characterized by continued importation of Chinese culture and the spread of Buddhism. In the next period, the Heian period, the Chinese influences would be “re-made” with Japanese characteristics, in some cases preserving aspects of Chinese culture that were long out of fashion in China. Let's take a look at a famous street in Nara today.
Heian Period AD 794-1185

Genji
The capital itself was situated in beautiful country, encircled on three sides by thickly forested hills and mountains, often delicately wreathed with trails of mist; in the autumn evenings one could hear the deer’s cry in the distance and the desolate call of the wild geese overhead; the landscape abounded in streams and waterfalls and lakes; and into its green slopes and valleys the countless shrines and monasteries blended as if they too had become a part of nature. (Morris, p. 34)
Life at the courts became insulated from the rest of the world and the relative peace of most of the era allowed for a flowering of culture. New forms of writing called kana were created that easily reflected the sounds of the Japanese language. Although much easier than learning classical Chinese, scholars and bureaucrats preferred Chinese and its elite associations, while the new written language was soon used by court women as a new medium for writing prose.
Court women such as Sei Shonagon and Murasaki Shikibu contributed to the creation of a “women’s” literature that rivaled any prose writings in the world of that time—though of course it was entirely unknown outside of a tiny audience in Japan. One of the aesthetic principles reflected in the literature of the period was that of miyabi, or “courtly elegance.” The term appears hundreds of times in the Tale of Genji and refers to the gentle, often ritualized, and sensitive manners cultivated by the elite of the time. Another important aesthetic element, that evolved further with introduction of Zen Buddhism in later centuries, is the concept of mono no aware, or “sensitivity to things.” Enhanced by the natural beauty of Japan, the aesthetic was based on the idea that the heart/soul is stimulated by images of the sublime in nature. Thus, a falling cherry blossom or an autumn leaf circling in a pool creates subtle and indescribable feelings that can only be expressed by poetry or other arts.
A related concept is that of wabi, the effect of construed naturalness exhibited in an artwork such as the cracks or irregularities in the glaze on a tea bowl that reflect the effects of primitive firing techniques. These aesthetics are also part of the appreciation of Japanese garden architecture. Cultivation of the aesthetics, linked with meditation, became an important dimension of the warrior samurai culture in later eras of Japanese history.

Front and back images of a high-ranking noblewoman in Heian
Elite women were educated in calligraphy, poetry, music, and customs such as incense preparation, which allowed them some intellectual parity with men of their class with similar training. Although most upper class women spent their days in secluded leisure at home, possibly engaging in embroidery and dyeing cloth, women of the court like Sei Shonagon, had somewhat more public lives. Interactions between the sexes (other than close family members and lovers) were rarely direct. Communication, when necessary, was often through carefully crafted letters delivered by go-betweens or servants. Elite men led much more public lives, involved in politics and the running of their estates. Although the power of Buddhism was not allowed to increase to the point it had in Nara, a new form of Buddhism that offered salvation to all believers was imported from China by a monk named Saicho (767-822 AD). The new Tendai (Tiantai) beliefs soon became widespread among the nobles and the populace. Many great temples and monasteries of several sects of Buddhism remain in Kyoto today, as living testaments of the great Buddhist tradition in Japan.
During the Heian period, the experiments with centralized Chinese rule and taxation gradually faded into a situation with a weak central government ruled by an emperor that was increasingly a figurehead. Large clan families like the Fujiwara, Minamoto, and Taira increased their power and holdings and came into conflict with each other and other families over control of the realm.
Part 4: Feudal Era in Japan
Kamakura Period AD 1185-1333
The turmoil of the Kamakura period contrasts sharply with the refined atmosphere associated with the classic age of Heian culture. During this period, attempts were made at ruling Japan through a centralized Imperial Chinese model, backed by civil codes, that evolved into a system similar in spirit and substance to feudalism in Europe. In this epoch, the warrior class of samurai takes the stage, and militancy becomes the social and political norm. The role of the emperor becomes almost wholly ceremonial, as the military side of the government, under the leadership of the shogun (generalissimo of the Imperial Army), took actual control of policy and implementation. By the end of the era, Japan would become an island nation filled with warring armies associated with rival family domains struggling for political and military dominance.
Yoritomo Minamoto

Samurai in daily wear and armour

Second Mongol invasion of Japan in 1281
Kemmu Restoration AD 1333-1336

Emperor Go-Daigo
Ashikaga Period AD 1336-1573
Although fate intervened to save Japan from the Mongols, the Mongol invasions brought instability to the emerging Japanese feudal system, which eventually descended into a state of turmoil and incessant fighting between local warlords. No one leader managed to gain firm control over the entire realm at this time. Though Kyoto continued as a grand capital, the base of military power was in Kamakura.During this period feudalism developed further. The emperor (dwelling in Kyoto) was the divine leader of the land, though functioned more as a figurehead who gave legitimacy to the rule of the shogun. The shogun, who usually resided in the court at Kamakura (near modern-day Tokyo), held the reigns of true power over the regional lords. The regional lords all employed armies of samurai, and below them were the townspeople and peasant farmers. The samurai code of service demanded loyalty to lord and one’s family name as well as self-discipline and perfection in the martial arts. Dishonor was the occasion for ritual suicide by sword.
During this period a new literature emerged, often on martial themes. The aesthetic of such works is that of sabi, which reflected a deep melancholy or sadness over the brevity of existence. The Tale of Heike is the best-known of these martial works. In this era a samurai might contemplate the beauty of a meadow flower in one instant, and engage in mortal combat in another (as exemplified in a famous scene in the Akira Kurosawa film, Seven Samurai).
More popular forms of Buddhism like the Pure Land (Jodo) and Nichiren sects were spread throughout the populace. Zen Buddhism, which arrived from the mainland in 1191 via a monk named Eisai (who also introduced the tea ritual), became of great interest to the samurai warrior class in part because of its stress on the exacting discipline of the meditation process.
The Onin Wars (1467-77 AD) was the most bloody and chaotic moment of the period, and destruction was widespread. Kyoto was largely destroyed in the feuds between two great families that spilled into other parts of the realm. The devastating war signaled the beginning of over a hundred years of chaos and strife. Due to a breakdown in what central control there was, social mobility increased between classes and regional overlords competed for soldiers and labor to further their interests. Armies of foot soldiers amassed from the peasantry were now used in warfare. At first armed with spears and pikes, by the end of the era massed contingents of foot soldiers with firearms were used decisively in battle.

Oda Nobunaga
Oda Nobunaga was known as a fierce and relentless warrior whose armies were equipped with matchlock firearms introduced by shipwrecked Portugeuse sailors around 1543. Oda managed to extend his rule over a number of the contending daimyo until his assassination at the hands of a rival whom he light-heartedly struck on the head with a fan at a banquet.
Known as the namban (“southern barbarians”), the Portuguese were later followed by the Spanish. The newcomers had similar goals: trade and conversion of souls to Christianity—an attitude different from the Dutch and British who wanted only trade and plunder. Jesuit priests from Portugal and Spain soon brought Christianity to Japan where it had a mixed reception. Although at one point a following of an estimated two million was gained, unlike Buddhism, the new faith demanded the forsaking of all other beliefs and required allegiance to a foreign and far away leader in the Vatican. Some Japanese leaders like Oda Nobunaga attempted to use Christianity as a political force (in his case, against the rich Buddhist factions), while others like Tokugawa Ieyasu saw it as a destabilizing force. The new religion was virtually eliminated from Japan in a series of intense purges around 1630 when thousands of leaders and followers were crucified. Some aspects of the contradictions between these competing foreign and native forces were included in the plot of the novel Shogun, and the film of the same name.

Hideyoshi
In an attempt to display his power, in the late 1500s Hideyoshi twice sent forces up the Korean peninsula in attempts to conquer the declining Ming dynasty in China that had been constantly pestered by attacks from Japanese pirates. The Japanese fleet was devastated by the armored turtle boats of Korean General Yi Soon-sin and huge numbers of Chinese soldiers that were sent across the northern borders of Choson Korea during the second attack. The mad plans to invade China ended (for the time being) with Hideyoshi’s sudden death in 1598. As the 16th century came to a close, a great battle between contending daimyo took place at Sekigahara in 1600 on the southwest coast. The forces of the patient and methodological Tokugawa Ieyasu won the day, and he soon unified the contending daimyo realms under a new form of centralized feudal state.

Battle of Sekigahara
Part 5: Tokugawa (Edo) Period AD 1600-1867

Tokugawa leyasu
In order to retain control over the realm, Tokugawa Ieyasu created a centralized bureaucracy, again inspired by the Chinese form of government, including ministries to oversee the administration of the state. He also instituted a number of policies to control the daimyo, who had been given lands close to the capital (the inner daimyo) or on the fringes (the outer daimyo) in accord to their allegiance (or lack of) during the late Ashikaga wars. These policies included regular service to the realm, required upkeep of local castles and other assets, and visits to the capital every other year. This policy was enforced by requiring the local daimyo to lodge their immediate families in Edo. Thus there was a constant coming and going of great processions from the realms of the daimyo along the roadways linking parts of the islands. All this travel was good for the economy, however, and service and supply industries arose along the routes to the capital to feed, lodge, and provide necessities such as footwear, to the retinues.

The Dutch traders from Nagasaki to on their way to Edo

Kabuki drama performance
The merchant class, which had been slowly rising since the end of the Ashikaga period, became economically dominant as middle-classes composed of traders, shopkeepers, money-lenders, and transport agents arose in cities like Edo and Osaka. Enterprises combining production and distribution run by wealthy merchant families like Mitsui and Mitsubishi were precursors of modern multi-national companies. A strong money economy, (rooted in the Ashikaga period when coinage was actually imported from China), was supported by banking and lending institutions. Huge entertainments districts featured boisterous kabuki theater, lively bunraku puppet shows (with wooden puppets 2/3 life-size), and comic storytellers, as well as drinking and delights of the flesh. The milieu of this “floating world” of entertainment was reflected in thematic painting and woodblock prints of the age.

Bunraku puppet show
Part 6: Modern to Present Japan
Meiji Period AD 1868-1912 to Early 21st Century

Perry's Monument in Put-in-Bay, Ohio for Admiral Perry's grandfather

Japanese 1854 print relating Perry's vist

Emperor Meiji
Within a few years, Western-styled navy (copying Britain), army (copying Prussia), industry, banking, legal, and parliamentary systems were eventually introduced. The government also moved to set up railroads, textile mills, and other industries that were in some cases later turned over to the private sector. These changes were largely financed by increasing the tax burden on the peasants and merchants, rather than taking out huge foreign loans. Though Neo-Confucianism was for a time influential in promoting the role of the emperor, Shinto was adopted as a state religion in that the emperor was literally seen as descending from the early kami.

Saigo Takamori statue in Ueno park
By 1895 Japan had defeated China in a series of land and sea battles around the Korean peninsula known as the Sino-Japanese War. The victory allowed Japan to gain a foothold in Korea and influence on the nearby Liaodong Peninsula of China. In 1905, the Japanese won a major war against imperial Russia on the Liaodong Peninsula, fought over a new railroad, timber, and seaports in Manchuria—a very strategic corner of East Asia. Casualties were extremely high (over 20,000 in some battles) on both sides due to mechanized firearms and mass, suicidal charges by Japanese troops still motivated by samurai ethics that regarded surrender as dishonorable. Beginning with a surprise attack on the Russian navy, the deciding battle in the Tsushima straits between Korea and Japan resulted in a crippling Russian loss of 33 out of 35 ships sunk—effectively neutering Russian naval influence in East Asia. In many ways this war was a harbinger for Japanese military actions up through the end of World War II and in part explains the calculation to attack Pearl Harbor.
As a result of their 1905 victory and the impending collapse of the Qing dynasty in China, Korea was colonized by the Japanese in 1910. Although a democratic, parliamentary society was being created in Japan in the early decades of the 20th century (universal male suffrage was established in 1925), the Great Depression in the early 1920s helped a radical wing of the Japanese military rise to power. Powerful government-supported companies called zaibatsu aided in creating an effective and modern war machine, unlike anything seen outside of Europe and the United States in World War I.
By the mid-1920s, imperial Japan had extended itself further into Manchuria, and a full-scale invasion in China was underway by the mid-1930s. By the early 1940s the powerful Japanese navy, army, and air forces had enabled Japan to secure most of the former European colonies in East Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands. They were also positioned to threaten Australia. Repeating a miscalculation reminiscent of Hideyoshi’s attempted invasions of China in the 16th century, during late 1941 Japan launched a surprise naval and aerial attack on the United States territory at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The attack was triggered in response to US embargos over oil and the materials that fueled Japan’s war machine.

Pearl Harbor attack, December 7, 1945

The city of Hiroshima after the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb in August 1945 (U.S. government photo)

Logos of several well-known Japanese companies

Japan has become a powerful force in global pop culture
Japan’s growth became a model and stimulus for Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Southeast Asia, and eventually the People’s Republic of China (and possibly North Korea, in the future). Although old wounds sometimes still surfaced, a new age of growth and prosperity had arrived in East Asia by the late 1980s.
Though plagued with a stagnant economy since the burst of the “economic bubble” in 1989 and increasingly cognizant of the problems of a “graying society” in which over 21% will soon be over age 65, Japan remains a unique and vibrant culture, now dealing with the dynamic cultures of China and Korea as the history of East Asia continues to unfold.

Downtown Tokyo in the evening
Source : http://people.cohums.ohio-state.edu/bender4/eall131/EAHReadings/module02/m02japanese.html
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