Unit 6: Japan
What did Japan adopt for Music in China?
- Koto was like Chin - Japanese court music Gogaku was adopted form Buddhists chants, Indian, Korean, and Native Japanese music (some were Chinese)
What did Japan adopt for Painting in China?
- Nara and Heian cultures imitate Tang techniques - made water colors of nature scenes - Zen monks created images using black ink
What did Japan adopt for City Planning in China?
- Nara built based on Chinese city Changan City Plan - Kyoto and Tokyo had features also borrowed but not all because of limited space
What did Japan adopt for Architecture in China?
- buildings used China's techniques in order to make buildings stable for earthquakes - multiple roofs symbolize different levels of awakening (from Buddha) - beauty of gardens and courtyards are just as impt. as buildings
What did Japan adopt for Attire in China?
- during Nara, clothing were similar to Tang - Aristocrats carried fans and parasols and wore silk - working class wore clothes of hemp linen and cotton
What did Japan adopt for Confucianism in China?
- emphasis on family ties - women entered into political marriages for their families -merchants @ bottom of social class - Filial respect & honor elders
What did Japan adopt from Buddha in China?
- shrines & temples merged over time - Dogen Modified Chan- Zen Buddhism which appealed to Samurai b/c of emphasis on concentration & meditation - adopted many principal Shinto gods as Buddhist gods
What happened during the Taika Reforms?
-Chinese style changes in organizing power - emperor owns All land -Land is divided up among clans to govern -taxes get paid to the emperor and not to the clans -emperor gets more control over clans -no effect on lives of the peasants
What did Japan adopt for Written Language in China?
-Kanji adopted -Hiragana=each symbol represents the sound of a single syllable which led to more literacy - Katakana also developed for foreign words
What did Japan adopt for Government in China?
-Prince Shotoku used bureaucratic system to rank advisors -Taika reform of land distribution like Tang -Bureaucracy never fully developed (exam had to do with examining a person's geneology)
Guns forced the samurai to build what?
100s of large strong castles
About how many gates would an attacker have to go through just to get to a castle's command center?
11-12
What percentage of Japan's land is good for living and farming?
16%
How many volcanoes are active?
60 out of 150
Why was Japan's capital moved from Nara to Kyoto?
Because the power of the government was overwhelmed by that of the Buddhist clergy.
What religion was mixed with the Shinto?
Buddhism
What was religion like in the Kyoto Court?
Buddhist temples and monasteries were limited in Kyoto so that they would not interfere with the emperors government.
What mountains are on Honshu?
Chugoku Mountains and Mount Fuji
What did shoguns compete for?
Control of land
How well were courtiers of the Kyoto Court connected to the rest of Japan?
Courtiers preferred to ignore provinces and leave them in the hands of provincial nobles
What was another name for pottery?
Earthenware
What kinds of natural disasters are common in Japan?
Earthquakes, tsunamis, typhoons, floods, and volcanoes
What were the Jomon's?
Fisher's and hunter gatherers
What mountain range is on Hokkaido?
Hidaka Mountains
What city is right under the Chugoku Mountains?
Hiroshima
What island is Sapporo on?
Hokkaido
Noh drama
Japanese style dance (dance drama) where a masked dancer performs a slow dance-drama
What culture was the first recorded culture of Japan?
Jomon
What island is Nagasaki on?
Kyushu
Why was the culture that replaced the Yayoi named the Tomb Culture?
Named after the big mounded keyhole shaped tombs surrounded by moats
What does the Shinto religion teach?
Natural world is filled with divine spirits, or Kami
How many times was Himeji castle attacked?
Never
What was another name for courtier?
Noble/advisor
What city is under Kyoto?
Osaka
What was literature like in the Kyoto Court?
Poetry was Japanese courtiers favorite form of writing. Diaries and tales were another courtier favorite. These helped understand value of time.
Where did the Japanese get guns from in the first place?
Portuguese traders
What does Buddhism teach?
Promised rewards to the faithful and good
What did they introduce?
Rice in water
What was the lowest class in the Samurai?
Ronin
Who were the only people allowed to have swords?
Samurai
What city is right next to the Hidaka Mountains?
Sapporo
What would a warlord do if he was about to lose a battle or be captured?
Seppuku
What are the four main islands?
Shikoku, Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Honshu
In the 13th-16th centuries, where did power lay in the hands of in Japan?
Shogun
What clan was Prince Shotoku in?
Soga clan
What is Japan's biggest geography problem?
Space
When did they start to fade away, and why?
Started to fade away in 1870's due to guns that came from Portugal
Which clan held most of the power in Japan? How did they keep that power? What happened to the emperor?
The Fujiwara Clan held the most power in Japan. They kept their power by continuing to marry into the imperial family. The emperor became a more religious symbol rather than a government leader.
What was the Writing System like in the Kyoto Court?
The Japanese created a set of characters called Hiragana. The symbols represented syllables instead of words. Before this, Japan borrowed China's writing system.
What were they also known as and why?
The Tree Culture because trees were an important element in building construction, ceremonial ornaments, and for use as daily implements
What was dress like in the Kyoto Court?
The longer the women's hair the lovelier the women, it was thought. Light skin was admired, so white powder covered their faces. Some had black teeth as well. Eyebrows were shaved for fake ones were drawn. Clothing had gold, silver, and multi-colored thread. 2+ silk robes worn at once, different length sleeves with rainbow of colors.
Shogun
The name Yoritomo was given, means great general
How did courtiers afford this rich lifestyle?
They were in a highly refined social class
What does Japan's high elevation mean?
They're mountainous
Which warlord was able to reunify Japan and bring an end to samurai warfare?
Tokugawa Ieyasu
What city is to the right of Mt. Fuji?
Tokyo (Edo)
What did the sea provide for them?
Transportation, trade, food, protection, and electrical power
What culture replaced the Jomon?
Yayoi
What culture was the first metal using culture?
Yayoi
Kami
a sacred power or force
Japan is an island country that means it is an?
archipelago
What were the Samurai's primary occupation?
as warriors to protect the nobles
Samurai students are taught to keep what moving at all times?
blade of sword
What did Earthenware have?
cord patterns/markings
Samurai swords had to be hard enough to hold a sharp edge, but soft enough to be able to do what?
cut without breaking
Samurai swords and European swords weighed the same. So what was different about samurai swords?
cutting edge was harder and sharper
Denominatons
different religious groups
According to Mr. Ozawa, Japanese armor was made for what?
easy movement
What did Prince Shotoku encourage?
encouraged japanese to learn form China (BUddhism, Art, and Confucianism)
Regent
exercises power in the emperors name
tenant farmer
farmer who payed rent in crops crops for the priviledge of farming land owned by the nobles
What is the most difficult step for a sword maker?
hardens metal, fusing steel together
What does Japan have because of its limited space?
high population density
Where did the Yayoi settle?
in Honshu
When did the Samurai first come around?
in the 9th century
How did they accumalate wealth?
land ownership and the storage of grain
What combination of things were a samurai's armor made out of?
leather, iron, silk, and bamboo
What is the most important thing to learn about samurai sword fighting?
making the first move
It is made up of how many island?
more than 3,000
What did samurai carpenter not use to hold their structures together?
nails
Daimyo
nobles who supported the shogun
What positions did Samurai often hold?
officials
How many earthquakes happen each year?
over 1500
What temperature does the fire reach for this last step?
over 1500 degrees F
Provincial nobles
people who took over more land and took advantage of Japan's reduced power
Courtier
people who took part in the highly refined social life of the court
Where did they live?
permanent farming villages and constructed buildings of wood and stone
What did the samurai act as?
police
What was Japan's most important crop?
rice
isolation
set apart from others
Carpenters spent at least 1/3 of their day doing what?
sharpening tools
What kind of motion do the samurai make with their swords?
slashing motions
What did Samurai warriors treat with reverence (respect,honor) and ritual?
swords
How did clans gain back land ownership?
taking over more and more land
Bushido
the code of honor and morals developed by the Japanese samurai
Shinto
the indigenous religion of Japan
What has always been Japan's greatest resource?
the sea
The series of walls surrounding a castle were designed to do what to possible invaders?
trap and confuse
Samurai
warrior, mans those who serve
Meditation
written or spoken discourse expressing considered thoughts on a subject