12.4: Emergence of Japan and Feudal Age

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Vocab/notecards
Katie Harmeyer
Flashcards by Katie Harmeyer, updated more than 1 year ago
Katie Harmeyer
Created by Katie Harmeyer over 8 years ago
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Uji Clans by which early Japanese society was divided -each had own chief & special god or goddess -some clan chiefs/leaders were women
Honshu The largest island of Japan
Yamato Clan A clan of Japan that dominated a corner of Honshu -Became the only Japanese dynasty -Japanese emperor still traces roots to this clan -claimed direct descent from sun god, Amaterasu
Shinto Worship of the forces of nature -means "way of kami" (kami is the superior natural or divine powers) -still a religion in Japan -shrines dedicated to special sites or objects, such as mountains
selective borrowing the term used to describe the way in which the Japanese adopted some Chinese culture, modified some Chinese culture, and discarded some
The Tale of Genji Considered the world's first novel, by Murasaki Shikibu (a woman), written from the male perspective Tells of the adventures and romance of Prince Genji and his son, set in an imperial court, depicts life of an artistocrat
samurai Lesser warriors in Japanese feudal system -means "those who serve" -had their own code of values
Bushido means "the way of the warrior" code of samurai in which they pledge honor, bravery, and absolute loyalty to their country
Zen a Buddhist sect from China that became very popular -emphasized self reliance, meditation, and devotion to duty -somewhat contradictory values -reverence for nature -elaborate tea ceremony
Daimyo Under the shogun in the feudal system, considered vassal lords; shogun would distribute land to them, they would distribute to samurai
Shogun the supreme military commander in feudal Japan, had the most power
Archipelago a chain of islands -Japan's consists of 4 islands: Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, and Shikoku
Based on what we read of The Tale of Genji, how did Japanese men expect Japanese women to behave? What significance does this hold in relation to Japanese culture and the treatment of women? Women.... -shouldn't require "training" (should have all of these qualities already -shouldn't complain, should work diligently, should be calm -should not give herself attention or demand attention from others -if there is a "crises" (affair), woman should overlook the incident, be quiet and generous, but may give subtle hints that she knows what happened this says that in Japanese culture (in this time period): -women were not given much freedom at all and were expected to be submissive to their husbands no matter what -women also had little social/political/economic power -women were servants to men
How did the age of the samurai affect Japanese culture? -samurai were the fighting aristocracy, and behaved according to bushido ***affected women's status*** -previously could have some power by being trained in military arts or supervising their family's estates -as age of samurai progressed, women were not able to inherit from their family (only sons could), were stripped of other powers they previously could have -however, bushido did not put women on a pedestal as chivalry did; women had to do house chores and serve their husbands ***age of samurai also brought about the feudal system, with classes of the shogun, daimyos, samurai, peasants & artisans, and merchants
Why did the Japanese begin to believe that they were a special people, chosen by the gods? Kublai Khan and the Mongols tried to invade Japan by sea twice, but a typhoon destroyed a large part of their fleet each time. The Japanese credited this to the kamikaze, or divine winds
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