Today in class we began to examine the Bushido code in Japan. Reminder you have a current event on Cuba due on Monday the 5th of November.
Hierarchy In Feudal Japan
Society was divided into two classes in Feudal Japan,
the nobility and the peasants. The noble class made up roughly twelve percent
of the population with peasants making up the rest.
Emperor and Shogun
The Emperor and the Shogun were the highest ranking nobles. During Japan's feudal period the Shogun held the most power while the Emperor was more of a puppet figure with little actual power. As the Shogun was a military leader his sword, or Nihonto in Japanese (katana came later in the Mid-Muromachi period), was an important part of his attire.
Daimyo
Daimyo were powerful warlords and the most powerful rulers under the Shogun from the 10th century to the early 19th century. Within their province the Daimyo had complete military and economic power. Daimyo had vast hereditary land holdings and armies to protect the land and its workers. The most powerful warlords sometimes achieved the status of Shogun.
Samurai
The Daimyo armies were made up of Samurai warriors. Samurai worked under Daimyo, but they had additional privileges and held a higher social status than common people. These privileges included being able to have a surname, a family crest, and carry two swords. People with Samurai family names are still treated with great respect in Japan today. Although most samurai were not well educated, they had a strict code of honor or the "way of the warrior", known as bushido in Japanese. If a Samurai broke the bushido code and brought dishonor to him/herself they would be expected to commit seppuku, or ritual suicide. Women were allowed to serve as samurai but always served under a male leader.
Peasants
Peasants were divided into several sub-classes. The highest ranking of the peasants were farmers. Farmers who owned their own land ranked higher than farmers who did not. Craftsmen, or artisans, were the second highest ranking after the farmers. They worked with wood and metal and some became well-known as expert Samura sword makers. Merchants were the lowest ranking because it was felt they made their living off of other people's work. However, in later times when Japan began to use money more as currency merchants became more wealthy.
Emperor and Shogun
The Emperor and the Shogun were the highest ranking nobles. During Japan's feudal period the Shogun held the most power while the Emperor was more of a puppet figure with little actual power. As the Shogun was a military leader his sword, or Nihonto in Japanese (katana came later in the Mid-Muromachi period), was an important part of his attire.
Daimyo
Daimyo were powerful warlords and the most powerful rulers under the Shogun from the 10th century to the early 19th century. Within their province the Daimyo had complete military and economic power. Daimyo had vast hereditary land holdings and armies to protect the land and its workers. The most powerful warlords sometimes achieved the status of Shogun.
Samurai
The Daimyo armies were made up of Samurai warriors. Samurai worked under Daimyo, but they had additional privileges and held a higher social status than common people. These privileges included being able to have a surname, a family crest, and carry two swords. People with Samurai family names are still treated with great respect in Japan today. Although most samurai were not well educated, they had a strict code of honor or the "way of the warrior", known as bushido in Japanese. If a Samurai broke the bushido code and brought dishonor to him/herself they would be expected to commit seppuku, or ritual suicide. Women were allowed to serve as samurai but always served under a male leader.
Peasants
Peasants were divided into several sub-classes. The highest ranking of the peasants were farmers. Farmers who owned their own land ranked higher than farmers who did not. Craftsmen, or artisans, were the second highest ranking after the farmers. They worked with wood and metal and some became well-known as expert Samura sword makers. Merchants were the lowest ranking because it was felt they made their living off of other people's work. However, in later times when Japan began to use money more as currency merchants became more wealthy.
Extra
Info
Women
Women who belonged to the aristocracy were allowed to take part in politics. Women could also become samurai warriors but this was not allowed if they were in the aristocratic class. Although women were allowed to become samurai, a male samurai of equal rank could give orders to a female samurai. Female samurai were able to give orders to men of lower social classes like farmers and craftsmen. In the beginning of the Kamakura period women were also allowed to inherit land estates. However, this changed later as the amount of available land decreased towards the middle of Kamakura period.
Women who belonged to the aristocracy were allowed to take part in politics. Women could also become samurai warriors but this was not allowed if they were in the aristocratic class. Although women were allowed to become samurai, a male samurai of equal rank could give orders to a female samurai. Female samurai were able to give orders to men of lower social classes like farmers and craftsmen. In the beginning of the Kamakura period women were also allowed to inherit land estates. However, this changed later as the amount of available land decreased towards the middle of Kamakura period.
Answer the following questions.
Why do you think women were treated more equally to
men in Feudal Japan as opposed to Feudal Europe?
If Pembroke Academy now is Feudal Japan break down the
Hierarchy as it would apply to the classes of people within the school. Create a one to three sentences in
justification for why you chose to apply this label to each group.
Emperor and Shogun
Daimyo
Samurai
Peasants
Seppuku
Often called “hara-kiri” in the West, “seppuku” is a form of
ritual suicide that originated with Japan’s ancient samurai warrior class. The
grisly act typically involved stabbing oneself in the belly with a short sword,
slicing open the stomach and then turning the blade upwards to ensure a fatal
wound. Some practitioners of seppuku allowed themselves to die slowly, but they
usually enlisted the help of a “kaishakunin,” or second, who would lop off
their head with a katana as soon as they made their initial cut. The entire
process was accompanied by great ceremony. Among other rituals, the doomed
individual often drank sake and composed a short “death poem” before taking up
the blade.
Seppuku first developed in the 12th century as a means for
samurai to achieve an honorable death. Swordsmen performed the ritual to avoid
capture following battlefield defeats, but it also functioned as a means of
protest and a way of expressing grief over the death of a revered leader.
Beginning in the 1400s, seppuku evolved into a common form of capital
punishment for samurai who had committed crimes. In each case, it was
considered an act of extreme bravery and self-sacrifice that embodied Bushido,
the ancient warrior code of the samurai. There was even a female version of
seppuku called “jigai,” which involved cutting the throat using a special knife
known as a “tanto.”
Seppuku fell out of favor with the decline of the samurai in
the late-19th century, but the practice didn’t disappear entirely. Japanese
General Nogi Maresuke disemboweled himself in 1912 out of loyalty to the
deceased Meiji Emperor, and many troops later chose the sword over surrender
during World War II. Perhaps the most famous case in recent history concerns
Yukio Mishima, a renowned novelist and Nobel Prize nominee who committed ritual
seppuku in 1970 after leading a failed coup against the Japanese government.
The samurai, members of a
powerful military caste in feudal Japan, began as provincial warriors before
rising to power in the 12th century with the beginning of the country’s first
military dictatorship, known as the shogunate. As servants of the daimyos, or
great lords, the samurai backed up the authority of the shogun and gave him
power over the mikado (emperor). The samurai would dominate Japanese government
and society until the Meiji Restoration of 1868 led to the abolition of the
feudal system. Despite being deprived of their traditional privileges, many of
the samurai would enter the elite ranks of politics and industry in modern
Japan. More importantly, the traditional samurai code of honor, discipline and
morality known as bushido–or “the way of the warrior”–was revived and made the
basic code of conduct for much of Japanese society.
During the Heian Period
(794-1185), the samurai were the armed supporters of wealthy landowners–many of
whom left the imperial court to seek their own fortunes after being shut out of
power by the powerful Fujiwara clan. The word “samurai” roughly translates to
“those who serve.” (Another, more general word for a warrior is “bushi,” from
which bushido is derived; this word lacks the connotations of service to a
master.)
Beginning in the mid-12th century, real political power in
Japan shifted gradually away from the emperor and his nobles in Kyoto to the
heads of the clans on their large estates in the country. The Gempei War (1180-1185)
pitted two of these great clans–the dominant Taira and the Minamoto–against
each other in a struggle for control of the Japanese state. The war ended when
one of the most famous samurai heroes in Japanese history, Minamoto Yoshitsune,
led his clan to victory against the Taira near the village of Dan-no-ura.
RISE OF THE SAMURAI & KAMAKURA PERIOD
The triumphant leader Minamoto Yoritomo–half-brother of
Yoshitsune, whom he drove into exile–established the center of government at
Kamakura. The establishment of the Kamakura Shogunate, a hereditary military
dictatorship, shifted all real political power in Japan to the samurai. As
Yoritomo’s authority depended on their strength, he went to great lengths to
establish and define the samurai’s privileged status; no one could call himself
a samurai without Yoritomo’s permission.
Zen Buddhism, introduced into Japan from China around this
time, held a great appeal for many samurai. Its austere and simple rituals, as
well as the belief that salvation would come from within, provided an ideal
philosophical background for the samurai’s own code of behavior. Also during
the Kamakura period, the sword came to have a great significance in samurai
culture. A man’s honor was said to reside in his sword, and the craftsmanship
of swords–including carefully hammered blades, gold and silver inlay and
sharkskin handgrips–became an art in itself.
JAPAN IN CHAOS: THE ASHIKAGA SHOGUNATE
The strain of defeating two Mongol invasions at the end of
the 13th century weakened the Kamakura Shogunate, which fell to a rebellion led
by Ashikaga Takauji. The Ashikaga Shogunate, centered in Kyoto, began around
1336. For the next two centuries, Japan was in a near-constant state of
conflict between its feuding territorial clans. After the particularly divisive
Onin War of 1467-77, the Ashikaga shoguns ceased to be effective, and feudal
Japan lacked a strong central authority; local lords and their samurai stepped
in to a greater extent to maintain law and order.
Despite the political unrest, this period–known as the
Muromachi after the district of that name in Kyoto–saw considerable economic
expansion in Japan. It was also a golden age for Japanese art, as the samurai
culture came under the growing influence of Zen Buddhism. In addition to such
now-famous Japanese art forms as the tea ceremony, rock gardens and flower
arranging, theater and painting also flourished during the Muromachi period.
SAMURAI UNDER THE TOKUGAWA SHOGUNATE
The Sengoku-Jidai, or Period of the Country at War finally
ended in 1615 with the unification of Japan under Tokugawa Ieyasu. This period ushered in a
250-year-long stretch of peace and prosperity in Japan, and for the first time
the samurai took on the responsibility of governing through civil means rather
than through military force. Ieyasu issued the “ordinances for the Military
Houses,” by which samurai were told to train equally in arms and “polite”
learning according to the principles of Confucianism. This relatively
conservative faith, with its emphasis on loyalty and duty, eclipsed Buddhism
during the Tokugawa period as the dominant religion of the samurai. It was
during this period that the principles of bushido emerged as a general code of
conduct for Japanese people in general. Though bushido varied under the
influences of Buddhist and Confucian thought, its warrior spirit remained
constant, including an emphasis on military skills and fearlessness in the face
of an enemy. Bushido also emphasized frugality, kindness, honesty and care for
one’s family members, particularly one’s elders.
In a peaceful Japan, many samurai were forced to become
bureaucrats or take up some type of trade, even as they preserved their
conception of themselves as fighting men. In 1588, the right to carry swords
was restricted only to samurai, which created an even greater separation
between them and the farmer-peasant class. The samurai during this period
became the “two-sword man,” wearing both a short and a long sword as a mark of
his privilege. The material well-being of many samurai actually declined during
the Tokugawa Shogunate, however. Samurai had traditionally made their living on
a fixed stipend from landowners; as these stipends declined, many lower-level
samurai were frustrated by their inability to improve their situation.
MEIJI RESTORATION & THE END OF FEUDALISM
In the mid-19th century, the stability of the Tokugawa
regime was undermined by a combination of factors, including peasant unrest due
to famine and poverty. The incursion of Western powers into Japan–and
especially the arrival in 1853 of Commodore Matthew C. Perry of the U.S. Navy,
on a mission to get Japan to open its doors to international trade–proved to be
the final straw. In 1858, Japan signed a commercial treaty with the United
States, followed by similar ones with Russia, Britain, France and Holland. The
controversial decision to open the country to Western commerce and investment
helped encourage resistance to the shogunate among conservative forces in
Japan, including many samurai, who began calling for a restoration of the power
of the emperor.
The powerful clans of Choshu and Satsuma combined efforts to
topple the Tokugawa Shogunate and announce an “imperial restoration” named for
Emperor Meiji in early 1868. Feudalism was officially abolished in 1871; five
years later, the wearing of swords was forbidden to anyone except members of
the national armed forces, and all samurai stipends were converted into
government bonds, often at significant financial loss. The new Japanese
national army quashed several samurai rebellions during the 1870s, while some
disgruntled samurai joined secret, ultra-nationalist societies, among them the
notorious Black Dragon Society, whose object was to incite trouble in China so
that the Japanese army would have an excuse to invade and preserve order.
Ironically–given the loss of their privileged status–the
Meiji Restoration was actually engineered by members of the samurai class
itself. Three of the most influential leaders of the new Japan–Inoue Kaoru, Ito
Hirobumi and Yamagata Aritomo–had studied with the famous samurai Yoshida
Shouin, who was executed after a failed attempt to kill a Tokugawa official in
1859. It was former samurai who put Japan on the road to what it would become,
and many would become leaders in all areas of modern Japanese society.
BUSHIDO IN MODERN JAPAN
In the wake of the Meiji Restoration, Shinto was made the
state religion of Japan (unlike Confucianism, Buddhism and Christianity, it was
wholly Japanese) and bushido was adopted as its ruling moral code. By 1912,
Japan had succeeded in building up its military strength–it signed an alliance
with Britain in 1902 and defeated the Russians in Manchuria two years later–as
well as its economy. By the end of World War I, the country was recognized as
one of the “Big Five” powers alongside Britain, the U.S., France and Italy at
the Versailles peace conference.
The liberal, cosmopolitan 1920s gave way to a revival of
Japan’s military traditions in the 1930s, leading directly to imperial
aggression and Japan’s entrance into World War II. During that conflict,
Japanese soldiers brought antique samurai swords into battle and made suicidal
“banzai” attacks according to the bushido principle of death before dishonor or
defeat. At war’s end, Japan again drew on its strong sense of honor, discipline
and devotion to a common cause–not the daimyos or shoguns of the past, but the
emperor and the country–in order to rebuild itself and reemerge as one of the
world’s greatest economic and industrial powers in the latter 20th century.
Create a modern Pembroke Academy-esque version of
these concepts.
Seppuku
Bushido
Zen
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